Chanady Tara
Université de Montréal, Montréal, QC, Canada.
J Lesbian Stud. 2022;26(2):121-132. doi: 10.1080/10894160.2021.1975357. Epub 2021 Sep 25.
This article addresses current tensions around identity and spatial boundaries within Montreal's lesbian and sexual diversity networks, underlining generational and linguistic questions framing identity politics. Based on phenomenological walking interviews (Kusenbach, 2003; Collie, 2013) with 21 variously identified women in Montreal, I posit the participants' situated experiences as valuable horizons of perception to understand sociocultural transformations (Lee, 2015; Weiss et al., 2019). For the purpose of this piece, I look at political lesbianism's history in Montreal from the 1970s to today through the lens of two self-identified political lesbians, exploring what it means politically for once-exclusive "lesbian-only" or "women-only" spaces to move forward in a context of shifting inclusions within lesbo-queer communities.
本文探讨了蒙特利尔女同性恋和性取向多元网络中当前围绕身份认同和空间界限的紧张关系,强调了构成身份政治的代际和语言问题。基于对蒙特利尔21名身份各异的女性进行的现象学步行访谈(库森巴赫,2003年;科利,2013年),我将参与者的情境体验视为理解社会文化变革的宝贵认知视野(李,2015年;韦斯等人,2019年)。在本文中,我通过两位自认为是政治女同性恋者的视角,审视了20世纪70年代至今蒙特利尔政治女同性恋的历史,探讨了曾经专属的“仅限女同性恋者”或“仅限女性”空间在女同性恋-酷儿社区包容性不断变化的背景下向前发展在政治上意味着什么。