Monique Wittig: Difference between revisions
mNo edit summary |
(link) |
||
| (6 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown) | |||
| Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
=== Novels === | === Novels === | ||
* ''[[The Opoponox]]'' (1966) ([[ | * ''[[The Opoponox]]'' (1966) (tr. [[Helen Weaver]], ([[1976]])) ([[Daughters Inc.]], Plainfield, Vt., 1966) | ||
* ''[[Les Guérillères]]'' (1969) ( | * ''[[Les Guérillères]]'' (1969) (tr. David Le Vay, ([[1973]])) | ||
* ''[[The Lesbian Body]]'' ([[ | * ''[[The Lesbian Body]]'' (tr. [[David Le Vay]]) ([[1976]]) | ||
* ''[[Across the Acheron]]'' (1985) ( | * ''[[Across the Acheron]]'' (1985) (tr. David Le Vay and [[Margaret Crossland]], ([[1989]]); Peter Owen, London, 1987) | ||
=== Nonfiction === | === Nonfiction === | ||
* ''[[The Straight Mind]]'' ([[1992]]) | * ''[[The Straight Mind]]'' ([[1992]]) (Boston: Beacon) | ||
== External Links== | == External Links== | ||
| Line 28: | Line 28: | ||
[[category:1935 births]] | [[category:1935 births]] | ||
[[category:2003 deaths]] | [[category:2003 deaths]] | ||
[[ | [[category:Women writers by name]] | ||
[[category:Writers by name]] | |||
Latest revision as of 20:20, 10 November 2010
Feminist novelist, activist, and theorist; born in Alsace, educated at the Sorbonne, immigrated to the US in 1976.
Monique Wittig’s first novel, L’Opoponax, was published with great critical acclaim when she was 28 and was awarded the Prix Médicis. Her next novel, Les Guérillères, a classic of second-wave feminism, declared war on gender itself, and urged women, when lacking historical precedent or role models, to invent the history they need. As a theorist, she expanded on Simone de Beauvoir’s dictum that “one is not born a woman” to insist that she was a lesbian, not a woman, and that lesbians are not women because they live in defiance of the heterosexual “contract” that defines “woman.” The prose poems of her third work, Le Corps Lesbien, which “lesbianized” key mythic and historical figures of the Western tradition, assumed for its lesbian narrator the subject position of the lover desiring a beloved, a narrative position that has traditionally been reserved for males. Lesbian Peoples, her fourth work, written with Sande Zeig, invents a new history, presented in the form of a work of reference. And her last novel, Virgile, Non, recasts Dante’s Divine Comedy for a lesbian living in modern-day San Francisco.
Monique Wittig died on January 3, 2003, in Tucson, Arizona.
Bibliography
Novels
- The Opoponox (1966) (tr. Helen Weaver, (1976)) (Daughters Inc., Plainfield, Vt., 1966)
- Les Guérillères (1969) (tr. David Le Vay, (1973))
- The Lesbian Body (tr. David Le Vay) (1976)
- Across the Acheron (1985) (tr. David Le Vay and Margaret Crossland, (1989); Peter Owen, London, 1987)
Nonfiction
- The Straight Mind (1992) (Boston: Beacon)
External Links
For more about Wittig and her work, see the following:
- Julia Creet, “Monique Wittig” http://www.glbtq.com/literature/wittig_m.html
- L. Timmel Duchamp, “In Memoriam: Monique Wittig” http://www.fantasticmetropolis.com/show.html?ed,wittig,1
- Liz Henry, "Building a Digital Feminary: Notes on the names in Monique Wittig's Les Guérillères" http://www.darkshire.net/lizhenry/annotatrix/