Resisting Monosexism: Representations of Bisexuality in Literature

In a New York Times review of James Baldwin’s 1968 novel Tell Me How Long the Train’s Been Gone, Mario Puzo writes that “A propaganda novel may be socially valuable… but it is not art.” Puzo’s claim is a function of what creative writing pedagogy scholar Janelle Adsit calls “the particular privilege...

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Main Author: Audrey T Heffers
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh 2020-07-01
Series:Forum
Online Access:http://www.forumjournal.org/article/view/4479
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spelling doaj-b183b81d26a54403a3330ff5be3dae422020-11-25T03:26:09ZengUniversity of EdinburghForum1749-97712020-07-013010.2218/forum.30.44794479Resisting Monosexism: Representations of Bisexuality in LiteratureAudrey T HeffersIn a New York Times review of James Baldwin’s 1968 novel Tell Me How Long the Train’s Been Gone, Mario Puzo writes that “A propaganda novel may be socially valuable… but it is not art.” Puzo’s claim is a function of what creative writing pedagogy scholar Janelle Adsit calls “the particular privilege that comes with a denial of marginalization.” Assumptions of rigid binaries that categorise people as either hetero- or homosexual, a phenomenon that scholar Kenji Yoshino calls “the epistemic contract of bisexual erasure,” create and reinforce harmful ideas about bisexuality. Bisexual representation in literature can operate as a creative resistance to the status quo, undermining the alleged necessity for a rigid binary system of sexuality. From James Baldwin’s 1968 Tell Me How Long the Train’s Been Gone to Jen Wilde’s 2017 Queens of Geek, this article traces representations of bisexuality in literature, with special attention to the ways in which bisexuality is demonstrated, described, and labelled in literature. However, while acknowledging the problematic representations of bisexuality in older fiction, such as Radclyffe Hall’s 1928 The Well of Loneliness, this paper resists a narrative of pure progress of bisexual representation, examining both problematic and nuanced representations in contemporary literature.http://www.forumjournal.org/article/view/4479
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Audrey T Heffers
spellingShingle Audrey T Heffers
Resisting Monosexism: Representations of Bisexuality in Literature
Forum
author_facet Audrey T Heffers
author_sort Audrey T Heffers
title Resisting Monosexism: Representations of Bisexuality in Literature
title_short Resisting Monosexism: Representations of Bisexuality in Literature
title_full Resisting Monosexism: Representations of Bisexuality in Literature
title_fullStr Resisting Monosexism: Representations of Bisexuality in Literature
title_full_unstemmed Resisting Monosexism: Representations of Bisexuality in Literature
title_sort resisting monosexism: representations of bisexuality in literature
publisher University of Edinburgh
series Forum
issn 1749-9771
publishDate 2020-07-01
description In a New York Times review of James Baldwin’s 1968 novel Tell Me How Long the Train’s Been Gone, Mario Puzo writes that “A propaganda novel may be socially valuable… but it is not art.” Puzo’s claim is a function of what creative writing pedagogy scholar Janelle Adsit calls “the particular privilege that comes with a denial of marginalization.” Assumptions of rigid binaries that categorise people as either hetero- or homosexual, a phenomenon that scholar Kenji Yoshino calls “the epistemic contract of bisexual erasure,” create and reinforce harmful ideas about bisexuality. Bisexual representation in literature can operate as a creative resistance to the status quo, undermining the alleged necessity for a rigid binary system of sexuality. From James Baldwin’s 1968 Tell Me How Long the Train’s Been Gone to Jen Wilde’s 2017 Queens of Geek, this article traces representations of bisexuality in literature, with special attention to the ways in which bisexuality is demonstrated, described, and labelled in literature. However, while acknowledging the problematic representations of bisexuality in older fiction, such as Radclyffe Hall’s 1928 The Well of Loneliness, this paper resists a narrative of pure progress of bisexual representation, examining both problematic and nuanced representations in contemporary literature.
url http://www.forumjournal.org/article/view/4479
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