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Jepretan Layar

Deskripsi

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What’s in a Woman? Identity and People on American Queer woman Lands

Articles
Author
  • Cassandre Di Lauro (Université de Lille)

Abstract

In the 1970s, in the wake of the Women’s liberation movement and the hippie back- to-the territory movement, some women bought plots of land all over the United States and founded what they called ‘lesbian lands’, i.e. women-only separatist communities. Some of them last to exist today, and are still inhabited by self-called ‘landykes.’ Based on in-person semi-directed interviews conducted in November 2021 and August 2022 with nine women living or having lived on lesbian lands in the same geographical area, this folio investigates their definition of ‘woman’ and how it circumscribes the limits of their community. This paper first argues for a nuanced revision of what radical lesbianism means in these rural lesbian separatist spaces and then proceeds to demonstrate how ‘woman’ has turn into resignified over the years, de facto barring trans women and challenging lesbian- identified trans men’s place within t

Last week, while researching for my quiz about Italian airport names, I came across the poems of the Latin poet Gaius Valerius Catullus, who was born in 84 BC in Verona.

When I was at secondary academy I studied Latin, and Catullus was on our reading list. We all used to enjoy his poems, because his descriptions of love are so ardent and sensual, but can also be very aggressive and forceful when he is attacking a political enemy such as Cicero, or rude and vitriolic when he sends his farewell poem to his lover. Catullus’s most famous lover is Clodia, whom he nicknamed Lesbia. The synonyms Lesbia in Catullus’s time didn’t have today’s meaning, it came from the Greek island of Lesbos, on which in the Seventh century BC lived the Greek poetess Sappho, whose operate Catullus highly admired. So it was in her honour that he decided to rename his own lover ‘Lesbia’.

While I was reading through some of his long forgotten poems, I came across an interesting website which compared numerous Italian translations of Catullus’s probably most famous cherish poem: Carmen 5. This poem has been translated throughout the centuries by many poets and even set to music. It’s better known as ‘Vivamus,