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Book SynopsisTrade ReviewThis book is an important and timely intervention into current debates within queer and feminist theory on the respective limits of these scholarly fields. By recuperating a rich sense of 'ethics,' Lynne Huffer argues we must rethink the false boundaries between these two fields to arrive at a more robust understanding of the ethics of sexuality, sexual difference, and gender. -- Shannon Winnubst, Ohio State University Are the Lips a Grave? is unique in its careful presentation of an ethics that does not fall squarely in either the queer camp or the feminist but negotiates significant contributions of both. In this sense, it offers something very important and original to theory debates heated along just these lines. -- Cynthia Willett, author of Maternal Ethics and Other Slave Moralities Against the persistent rumor that feminism and queer theory can never be friends, Lynne Huffer recovers a wide-and at times wild-range of shared political and critical lineages. Provocative, impassioned, and at times deeply personal, Are the Lips a Grave? is the first full-length defense of 'queer feminism.' It is about time! -- Robyn Wiegman, Duke University Finally, a queer feminist reading that will return us to the healthy art of disagreement. Lynne Huffer joins other queer feminists who argue against the queer subject's radical instability and regrounds our theorizing in feminist practices and discourses surrounding the ethical. At one point, she observes, 'Every snapshot is a singular story; at the same time, each story is another story retold.' The stories are (re)told here in often brilliant readings, not the least of which is a thoroughgoing remapping of the place of Lawrence v. Texas in the narrative of queer freedom. As I read this book, I began to unravel some of the most persistent narratives of queerness, reimagining a place for feminist and queer practice along the way. -- Sharon Holland, Duke University Beautifully written and stimulating for the theorist and non-theorist alike...New Books in Gender Studies New Books in Gender Studies
Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Introduction: Claiming a Queer Feminism 1. Are the Lips a Grave? 2. There Is No Gomorrah: Narrative Ethics in Feminist and Queer Theory 3. Foucault's Fist 4. Queer Victory, Feminist Defeat? Sodomy and Rape in Lawrence v. Texas 5. One-Handed Reading 6. Queer Lesbian Silence: Colette Reads Proust 7. What If Hagar and Sarah Were Lovers? 8. After Sex Afterword: Queer Lives in the Balance Notes Bibliography Index