Description
Book SynopsisDevelops some of the issues brought to the fore during the 1987 International Conference on Latin American Women's Literature in Santiago. This book theorizes on why the feminist movement has been crucial not only to the liberation of women but also to understanding the ways in which power operated under the military regime in Chile.
Trade Review“At last, Nelly Richard’s work is available for English-language readers. A leading figure in the theater of Latin American critical debate, Nelly Richard has written with unorthodox brilliance about the Chilean transition to democracy, North-South cultural relations, and the value of aesthetic intervention to rethinking the politics of difference.”—Francine Masiello, author of
The Art of Transition: Latin American Culture and Neoliberal Crisis“The Chilean publication of this book and of its companion volume (
The Insubordination of Signs) confirmed and advanced Nelly Richard’s reputation as one of the foremost critical voices of the age. Richard’s brand of cultural critique, informed by a thorough attention to contemporary forms of subjectivity, is unmatched in the force of its theoretical articulation, its aesthetic sensitivity, and its sharp deployment of political strategies. Nelly Richard is today an essential reference for intellectual work in Latin America and beyond.”—Alberto Moreiras, author of
The Exhaustion of Difference: The Politics of Latin American Cultural Studies"Nelly Richard wrestles with the materiality of critique so that it maintains the inscriptions of antagonism, making it an indispensable instrument for an effective democratic culture. In
Masculine/Feminine, that antagonism is explored through a consideration of gender and how authority and power weave their apparent neutrality and objectivity in the masculine register. The disruptive feminist strategies deployed by the writers and artists considered here beckon to an elsewhere where creativity, fantasy, pleasure, taste, and style mingle in the ‘figural and strategic repertoires of seduction and sedition.’”—George Yúdice, author of
The Expediency of Culture: Uses of Culture in the Global EraTable of ContentsTranslator’s Acknowledgments vii
Translator’s Preface ix
Note on This Translation xiii
ONE Spatial Politics: Cultural Criticism and Feminist Theory 1
TWO Does Writing Have a Gender? 17
THREE Politics and Aesthetics of the Sign 29
FOUR Gender Contortions and Sexual Doubling: Tranvestite Parody 43
FIVE Feminism and Postmodernism 55
Notes 69
Bibliography 81
Index 87