Friday, 31 March 2023 to Sunday, 2 April 2023

1990s Lesbian Journals and Ancient Greece: Seeking a Russian Queer Aesthetic

Sun2 Apr09:00am(15 mins)
Where:
Gilbert Scott Room 356
Presenter:

Authors

Georgina Barker11 UCL, UK

Discussion

The lesbian journals that started up in Russia in the 1990s – Arabeski (1993), Adelfe (1995-96), Labris (1998-99), Sofa Safo (1998-99), Organicheskaia Ledi (1998-2000), and Ostrov (1999-2014) – all use Ancient Greece in their titles and/or presentation. The journals’ references are to Sappho in particular, but also to the Amazons. In my paper, I ask why the lesbian journal editors wished to associate themselves with Greek antiquity during this formative period for Russian gay culture, when lesbian journals started in the 2000s – VolgaVolga (2000-06?), Pinx (2006-11), and Agens (2013) – did not. I look for the answer in the poetry of Sofiia Parnok, who constructed a lesbian identity through identification with Sappho in Rozy Pierii; in Western second-wave feminist lesbianism, which heavily associated itself with Sappho; in the works of the journals’ contributors, contemporary lesbian writers such as Elena Tsertlikh, Nadezhda Grigor’eva, Elena Novozhilova, and Elena Troianovskaia, who reference various lesbian figures from Greek antiquity (primarily Sappho); in contemporary Russian politics, which was working to construe homosexuality as ‘Westernised’ and ‘anti-Russian’; and, finally, in Russia’s long history of self-identification via classical reception. I formulate the concept of the ‘queer aesthetic’, which meant different things for different generations of Russian lesbians, but which consistently entailed a search outside of Russia for a Russian queer identity.

Hosted By

Event Logo

Get the App

Get this event information on your mobile by
going to the Apple or Google Store and search for 'myEventflo'
iPhone App
Android App
www.myeventflo.com/2462