POLITICAL INVERSIONS: HOMOSEXUALITY, FASCISM, AND THE MODERNIST IMAGINARY

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Stanford University Press, 1996 - 346 páginas

Political Inversions attempts to understand the forces at play in conflations--both theoretical and cultural--of homosexuality and fascism. Taking its cue from Adorno's assertion that "totalitarianism and homosexuality belong together," the book examines how "aberrant" political and sexual economies have been equated across a variety of literary, visual, and theoretical discourses in contemporary debate.

At the same time, the author explores the ways in which queer theory and historiography have responded defensively to such conflations, thereby excluding from current discussions much important material. Thus, for example, Political Inversions reassesses the work of German "masculinist" writers of the early part of the century-- thinkers whose definitive (but politically troubling) contributions to the construction of homosexual identity have been overlooked by a history heavily invested in the liberal Weimar tradition represented by figures such as Hirschfeld. Rather than reconstructing a history of gay identity, the book reads its texts as interventions in the broader political crises besetting democratic institutions in the first half of this century.

 

Contenido

The Construction of HomoFascism
1
The Frankfurt School and the Political
38
The Philosophy of Masculinism
79
Wyndham Lewis
171
Difference and Identity
199
Homosexual
245
Notes
289
Bibliography
317

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Acerca del autor (1996)

Andrew Hewitt is Associate Professor of Comparative Literature at SUNY, Buffalo, and the author of Fascist Modernism: Aesthetics, Politics, and the Avant-Garde (Stanford, l993).

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