Getting “Down and Dirty” at the Berks: A Conversation about Feminism, Queer Politics, and the Many Meanings of Sexual Performance
Additional Affiliations
Associate Professor, Department of History; Associate Professor, Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Program
Document Type
Journal Article
Publication Date
2012
Originally Published In
Friedman, A. (2012). Gilmore, S. & Wheeler, L. A.(2012). Getting “Down and Dirty” at the Berks: A Conversation about Feminism, Queer Politics, and the Many Meanings of Sexual Performance. Journal of Women's History 24(2), 171-197.
Abstract
In June 2011, the Berkshire Conference of Women’s Historians featured “The Down & Dirty Show,” a drag and burlesque show, on the official conference program. After the show, Stephanie Gilmore and Leigh Ann Wheeler heard provocative comments about it, some enthusiastically supportive and others highly critical. Eager to explore these responses and the politics of staging such a show at an academic conference, we invited several people to participate in an email conversation for publication. Our goal was to reproduce what Joan Scott observed in an earlier JWH email conversation about teaching—a discussion in which email technology encouraged “participants to be tentative, exploratory, and open.” We thank our contributors, Carolyn Bronstein, Kathleen Brown, Andrea Friedman, Matt Richardson, Heather Spear, Susan Stryker, and Heather Wilson, for their honest, engaged, and searching posts. Together, they have produced a conversation that casts a bright light on some of the personal, political, historical, and contemporary meanings of sexual performance to women’s historians. We hope readers will continue this conversation on the JWH website.
Pages
171-197
Recommended Citation
Gilmore, Stephanie; Wheeler, Leigh Ann; and Friedman, Andrea, "Getting “Down and Dirty” at the Berks: A Conversation about Feminism, Queer Politics, and the Many Meanings of Sexual Performance" (2012). Women, Gender & Sexuality Studies Research. 35.
https://openscholarship.wustl.edu/wgss/35
Comments
The Johns Hopkins University Press. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jowh.2012.0021.
Copyright © 2012 Journal of Women’s History