Queering the Underworld: Slumming, Literature, and the Undoing of Lesbian and Gay History
Autor Scott Herringen Limba Engleză Paperback – 17 ian 2008
At the start of the twentieth century, tales of “how the other half lives” experienced a surge in popularity. People looking to go slumming without leaving home turned to these narratives for spectacular revelations of the underworld and sordid details about the deviants who populated it.
In this major rethinking of American literature and culture, Scott Herring explores how a key group of authors manipulated this genre to paradoxically evade the confines of sexual identification. Queering the Underworld examines a range of writers, from Jane Addams and Willa Cather to Carl Van Vechten and Djuna Barnes, revealing how they fulfilled the conventions of slumming literature but undermined its goals, and in the process, queered the genre itself. Their work frustrated the reader’s desire for sexual knowledge, restored the inscrutability of sexual identity, and cast doubt on the value of a homosexual subculture made visible and therefore subject to official control.
Herring is persuasive and polemical in connecting these writers to ongoing debates about lesbian and gay history and politics, and Queering the Underworld will be widely read by students and scholars of literature, history, and sexuality.
In this major rethinking of American literature and culture, Scott Herring explores how a key group of authors manipulated this genre to paradoxically evade the confines of sexual identification. Queering the Underworld examines a range of writers, from Jane Addams and Willa Cather to Carl Van Vechten and Djuna Barnes, revealing how they fulfilled the conventions of slumming literature but undermined its goals, and in the process, queered the genre itself. Their work frustrated the reader’s desire for sexual knowledge, restored the inscrutability of sexual identity, and cast doubt on the value of a homosexual subculture made visible and therefore subject to official control.
Herring is persuasive and polemical in connecting these writers to ongoing debates about lesbian and gay history and politics, and Queering the Underworld will be widely read by students and scholars of literature, history, and sexuality.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780226327914
ISBN-10: 0226327914
Pagini: 272
Ilustrații: 13 halftones, 1 line drawing
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.4 kg
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press
ISBN-10: 0226327914
Pagini: 272
Ilustrații: 13 halftones, 1 line drawing
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.4 kg
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press
Notă biografică
Scott Herring is assistant professor of English at Indiana University.
Cuprins
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Queer Slumming
Underworld Unknowing
The Hermeneutics of Sexual Suspicion
The Suspicion of Sexual Hermeneutics
Rotten Politics
Chapter One Terra Incognita: Jane Addams, Philanthropic Slumming, and the Elusive Identity of Hull-House
Disappearing Acts
Spinster Panic
Queered Cosmopolitanism
Twenty Years in Cedarville
The Limbo of Forgotten Spectators
Chapter Two Willa Cather’s Experiment in Luxury
Cather’s Case History
In the Company of Tramps
Decadent Movements
The Miseries of Pittsburgh
Fairy Worlds
Slumming on Park Avenue
Capitalism and the Erasure of Gay Identity
Chapter Three “Slightly Known Territory”: Renaissance Admixture and the So-Called Van Vechten School
A Caucasian Storms Harlem
The Signifying Slummer
Parties and Mixers
Friendship beyond Understanding
Nugent’s Shtick
“Just a Case of Mixed Signs”
Chapter Four Antisapphic Modernism
Les mystères de Djuna Barnes
Looking for Bohemia
Stephen Gordon’s Slumming Tour
Lost in transition
Watchman, What of the Night?
Hidden from History
The Obscure Life
Epilogue: Secrets of the African-American Bisexual Man; or, Double Lives on the Down Low
Straight Outta Compton
Never Apologize, Never Explain
Undetectability
Beyond Subcultural Studies: A Manifesto
Notes
Works Cited
Index
Recenzii
“Why read slumming narratives if not to get the lowdown on low life? With brilliant perversity, Scott Herring celebrates a group of American writers—among them, Willa Cather, Jane Addams, and Djuna Barnes—who remystified what slumming literature had appeared to demystify, thereby undermining the genre's promise of subcultural legibility. In this original and important work of cultural history, Herring makes a very timely argument for what he calls ‘sexual unknowing’—an argument, essentially, for saving our underworlds by renouncing our fierce and destructive desire to reduce them to objects of knowledge.”
“Scott Herring’s bravely searching book deserves wide and careful attention. At once a compelling account of modern U.S. slumming literatures and a persuasive polemical intervention in contemporary queer studies, Queering the Underworld is original in conception, efficient in execution, and consistently engaging.”
“Beautifully written and boldly argued, Queering the Underworld makes an invigorating contribution to the fields of American studies and queer studies. In agile readings of varied sources, Herring not only resituates ‘slumming’ as a genre that could sometimes jam the signals of sexual modernity in the U.S., but also demonstrates the larger stakes of an unflinchingly queer approach to the history of sexuality.”
"Powerfully researched, passionately argued and often beautifully written. . . . Herring is scrupulous—and excellent—in setting his chosen texts in dialogue with each other, with the historical forces that produced them."—Denis Flannery, Times Higher Education
"In this original, accessible, and important work of US cultural history, Herring contributes to scholarship on the anomalous position of slumming literature (sordid narratives about the underworld and its bizarre inhabitants) in the early 20th century."
"This sprightly, informative book does a rare thing: it covers entirely new territory in gay literary studies. . . . A fine, compelling, and original work."
“Scott Herring’s Queering the Underworld stages a different departure from identity, whose strength is not its subtlety but its bravado—offering, perhaps, the most original conceptual account of queer identity since Epistemology of the Closet.”