Dear LGBTNET Subscribers,
We would like to announce a new publication from Duke University Press, which we hope will be of interest.
My
Butch Career
A Memoir
Esther Newton
https://www.combinedacademic.co.uk/9781478008330/my-butch-career/
Receive a 20% discount online:
CSLS2020
“Newton is not afraid to get personal and offer her mistakes, personality development, and failed relationships for contemplation. After decades of personal and professional
struggle, Newton finds a scholarly community in an evolved culture and helps to create the academic study of gender and sexuality. This book is simultaneously a memoir and an exemplar of this important field.”—Emily Dziuban,
Booklist
“In the tradition of the best memoirs, it is chattily engaging, historically illuminating, and deeply, provocatively ruminative. . . .
My Butch Career feels intoxicatingly, palpably real: It’s a story we can
reach out and touch and one we can also situate ourselves in, even if we’re decades younger than the 78-year-old Newton. What makes
My Butch Career so compelling is that while writing about herself, Newton
is also examining her milieu with the eye of the cultural anthropologist she became. The story she tells is as much our story as it is hers.”—Victoria A. Brownworth,
Curve
“Throughout
My Butch Career, Newton is remarkably candid about the ways that class
has influenced her work and perspective on the historical events unfolding around her. . . . It’s a testament to just how great an anthropologist and chronicler of queer life she is that Newton makes sure to include the kinds of details that paint a more complete
and complex picture of the world as she’s experienced it.”—Alexis Clements,
Los Angeles Review of Books
“Disarming and compelling. . . .
My Butch Career is the humorous and graceful story of a gender outlaw
in the making, blazing the trail in queer academia.”—The Advocate
“The most captivating part of the book sees Newton circulating through second-wave feminist and lesbian circles in New York and Paris, where the debates, social hierarchies,
and tangled affairs she encounters bring her to a late coming of age. In the eighties, her scholarship, once ignored, achieves recognition with the rise of gender and sexuality studies. The book is a thoughtful examination of how personal experiences spur
intellectual progress.”—The New Yorker
“My Butch Career
is an important narrative of liberation that contributes singularly to the growing body of collective LGBTQ history. It covers the first forty-one years of the writer’s life, a time frame that calls out for a sequel. Newton concludes her memoir with a tribute
to the queer writers who have preceded her. With this work, she has secured her place in that pantheon.”—Anne Charles,
Lambda Literary Review
“My Butch Career
joins a distinguished list of lesbian herstories. ... It is for readers interested in the psychological and cultural challenges for an individual who identifies as a butch lesbian, as well as readers who are interested in lesbian herstory within the greater
context of thegay rights movement.”—Cassandra Langer, Gay & Lesbian Review
During her difficult childhood, Esther Newton recalls that she “became an anti-girl, a girl refusenik, caught between genders,” and that her “child body was a strong and capable
instrument stuffed into the word ‘girl.’” Later, in early adulthood, as she was on her way to becoming a trailblazing figure in gay and lesbian studies, she “had already chosen higher education over the strongest passion in my life, my love for women, because
the two seemed incompatible.”
In
My Butch Career Newton tells the compelling, disarming, and at times sexy
story of her struggle to write, teach, and find love, all while coming to terms with her identity during a particularly intense time of homophobic persecution in the twentieth century.
Newton recounts a series of traumas and conflicts, from being molested as a child to her failed attempts to live a “normal,” straight life in high school and college. She discusses
being denied tenure at Queens College—despite having written the foundational
Mother Camp—and nearly again so at SUNY Purchase. With humor and grace, she describes
the influence her father Saul’s strong masculinity had on her, her introduction to middle-class gay life, and her love affairs—including one with a well-known abstract painter and another with a French academic she met on a spur-of-the-moment trip to Mexico
and with whom she traveled throughout France and Switzerland. By age forty, where Newton’s narrative ends, she began to achieve personal and scholarly stability in the company of the first politicized generation of out lesbian and gay scholars with whom she
helped create gender and sexuality studies.
Affecting and immediate,
My Butch Career is a story of a gender outlaw in the making, an invaluable
account of a beloved and influential figure in LGBT history, and a powerful reminder of just how recently it has been possible to be an openly queer academic.
Esther Newton, one of the pioneers of gay and lesbian studies, is formerly Term
Professor of Women’s Studies at the University of Michigan and Professor of Anthropology at Purchase College, State University of New York. She is the author of several books, including
Margaret Mead Made Me Gay: Personal Essays, Public Ideas
and
Cherry Grove, Fire Island: Sixty Years in America’s First Gay and Lesbian Town,
both also published by Duke University Press, as well as the groundbreaking
Mother Camp: Female Impersonators in America.
With all best wishes,
Combined Academic Publishers
Duke University Press
| April 2020 | 288pp | 9781478008330 | PB | £17.99*
*Price subject to change.
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