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Negotiating Desire and Sexual Subjectivity: Narratives of Young Lesbian Avengers

Jane M. Ussher

University of Western Sydney

Julie Mooney-Somers

University of Western Sydney

This article examines the negotiation and interpretation of first experiences of sexual desire in a group of eight young women who identify as Lesbian Avengers, using in-depth narrative interviews. Accounts of desire and its relationship to sexual subjectivity were organized under four broad themes: The significance of a kiss: Is this desire? describes the difficulty in categorizing first experiences of desire towards another woman as sexual; My desire makes me a dyke examines accounts of desire leading to sudden self-identification as a lesbian or, conversely, to the repression of desire and avoidance of lesbian identity; Lesbian desire is dangerous considers the negative representation of lesbian desire as perverse, sex being seen as central to lesbian identity, and the experience of being subjected to condemnation and abuse; Dealing with dangerous desire looks at the main strategies adopted in response to the above: the positioning of self as outsider, but strong because of it, embracing a transformation of self through becoming lesbian or remaining in the closet.

Key Words: desire • lesbian • narrative • sexuality • subjectivity

Sexualities, Vol. 3, No. 2, 183-200 (2000)
DOI: 10.1177/136346000003002005


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