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Gender & Society
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VIRGINS AND QUEERS

Rehabilitating Heterosexuality?

CELIA KITZINGER

Loughborough University

SUE WILKINSON

Loughborough University

Radical feminism has critiqued heterosexuality both as a primary means through which people are constituted as women and as men, and as inherently oppressive for women. Two recent developments challenge this critique: the concept of "virgin" heterosexuality, a form of heterosexuality in which the performance of heterosexual sex, with or without sexual intercourse, is voluntarily chosen, and "queer" heterosexuality, a concept derived from postmodernist and queer theory, which does not only reinscribe, but also actively subverts and disrupts, oppressive categories of gender ("maleness" and "femaleness") and sexual orientation (e.g., the "gay"/"straight" dichotomy). This article analyzes the attempts made in "virgin" and "queer" theory to rehabilitate heterosexuality, and finds both fundamentally flawed from a radical feminist perspective. It ends by considering why such rehabilitatory attempts are currently being made, and what they reveal about heterosexuality.

Gender & Society, Vol. 8, No. 3, 444-462 (1994)
DOI: 10.1177/089124394008003009


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The Reaches of Heteronormativity: An Introduction
Gender Society, August 1, 2009; 23(4): 433 - 439.
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