A genealogy of lesbian feminisms in New Zealand: Some implications for young lesbian health and wellbeing

In the 1970s, radical lesbian feminists identifi ed heterosexuality as a socially glorifi ed state of being, and organised to resist social pressure to conform to heteronorms. Decentring of radical feminist discourse has been linked to a ‘shrinking lesbian world’, with implications for the health a...

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Main Authors: Katie Palmer du Preez, Deborah Payne, Lynne Giddings
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Ottawa 2020-01-01
Series:Aporia
Online Access:https://uottawa.scholarsportal.info/ottawa/index.php/aporia/article/view/4595
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spelling doaj-f91d8234541d47fbae2a2a1e5cac5e9c2020-11-25T01:58:29ZengUniversity of OttawaAporia1918-13452020-01-0111210.18192/aporia.v11i2.4595A genealogy of lesbian feminisms in New Zealand: Some implications for young lesbian health and wellbeingKatie Palmer du PreezDeborah PayneLynne Giddings In the 1970s, radical lesbian feminists identifi ed heterosexuality as a socially glorifi ed state of being, and organised to resist social pressure to conform to heteronorms. Decentring of radical feminist discourse has been linked to a ‘shrinking lesbian world’, with implications for the health and wellbeing of young women who identify as lesbian. This article employs a poststructural feminist perspective, and Foucault’s notions of discourse and genealogy. Two sets of data were analysed: issues of Aotearoa New Zealand feminist periodical Broadsheet published 1972-1976, and interviews with 15 young lesbian women conducted in 2012. Findings explore how radical lesbian discourse was marginalised, and some of the implications for the health and wellbeing of young lesbian identifi ed women. Compulsory heterosexuality persists as a health and wellbeing issue which produces ‘sexual minority stress’ and legitimises discrimination, violence and harassment. Marginalisation of radical lesbian discourse via compulsory family status operates to limit opportunities for collective and public lesbian resistance. https://uottawa.scholarsportal.info/ottawa/index.php/aporia/article/view/4595
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Katie Palmer du Preez
Deborah Payne
Lynne Giddings
spellingShingle Katie Palmer du Preez
Deborah Payne
Lynne Giddings
A genealogy of lesbian feminisms in New Zealand: Some implications for young lesbian health and wellbeing
Aporia
author_facet Katie Palmer du Preez
Deborah Payne
Lynne Giddings
author_sort Katie Palmer du Preez
title A genealogy of lesbian feminisms in New Zealand: Some implications for young lesbian health and wellbeing
title_short A genealogy of lesbian feminisms in New Zealand: Some implications for young lesbian health and wellbeing
title_full A genealogy of lesbian feminisms in New Zealand: Some implications for young lesbian health and wellbeing
title_fullStr A genealogy of lesbian feminisms in New Zealand: Some implications for young lesbian health and wellbeing
title_full_unstemmed A genealogy of lesbian feminisms in New Zealand: Some implications for young lesbian health and wellbeing
title_sort genealogy of lesbian feminisms in new zealand: some implications for young lesbian health and wellbeing
publisher University of Ottawa
series Aporia
issn 1918-1345
publishDate 2020-01-01
description In the 1970s, radical lesbian feminists identifi ed heterosexuality as a socially glorifi ed state of being, and organised to resist social pressure to conform to heteronorms. Decentring of radical feminist discourse has been linked to a ‘shrinking lesbian world’, with implications for the health and wellbeing of young women who identify as lesbian. This article employs a poststructural feminist perspective, and Foucault’s notions of discourse and genealogy. Two sets of data were analysed: issues of Aotearoa New Zealand feminist periodical Broadsheet published 1972-1976, and interviews with 15 young lesbian women conducted in 2012. Findings explore how radical lesbian discourse was marginalised, and some of the implications for the health and wellbeing of young lesbian identifi ed women. Compulsory heterosexuality persists as a health and wellbeing issue which produces ‘sexual minority stress’ and legitimises discrimination, violence and harassment. Marginalisation of radical lesbian discourse via compulsory family status operates to limit opportunities for collective and public lesbian resistance.
url https://uottawa.scholarsportal.info/ottawa/index.php/aporia/article/view/4595
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