Secondary Sources

Secondary Sources

Secondary Sources A. Bibliographies (alphabetically) 1. ABELL (online through 1997). Includes one secondary source. 2. Academic Search Premier (online). Includes a few primary and secondary sources, but not exhaustive. 3. EJC (online). Includes one secondary source. 4. JSTOR (online). Includes one full-text secondary source. 5. LRC (online). This is a reprint of Feinberg’s entry in the online database Contemporary Authors Online (The Gale Group, 2001). It includes a short biography, a list of Feinberg’s book-length works, and a short list of reviews and scholarly articles, but not exhaustive. 6. MLAIB (online). The most comprehensive, albeit not exhaustive, bibliography of secondary sources in both English and foreign languages. 7. OCLC FirstSearch (online). Includes a fairly comprehensive list of primary sources and a few secondary sources. B. Serial/Genre/National/Period/Topical Bibliographies (alphabetically) 1. Annotated Bibliography: Selected Readings on Transvestism, Transsexualism and Related Subjects. Comp. by JoAnn Roberts and Dallas Denny. Dec. 2000. <http://www.3dcom.com/info/Biblio.html>. [Includes one Feinberg entry.] 2. Denny, Dallas. Gender Dysphoria: A Guide to Research. Garland Gay and Lesbian Studies. New York: Garland, 1994. [Includes two book citations, but in need of updating.] 3. FTM Bibliography. FTM International Website. <http://ftmi.org/Ref/biblio.html>. Cook 2 [Includes entries for Stone Butch Blues, Transgender Liberation, and Transgender Warriors with a brief commentary and short biography of the author.] 4. IFGE Synchronicity Bookstore Bibliography. <http://www.ifge.org/books/bookstore_bibliography.htm>. [Includes two Feinberg entries.] 5. The National Transgender Library and Archives (online). <http://www.gender.org/ntgla/index.html>. [Lists holdings of The National Transgender Library and Archives at The University of Michigan's Hatcher Graduate Library. Includes most of Feinberg's works. Julie Herrada, Curator, Labadie Collection, 7th Floor, Hatcher Graduate Library, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1205, 734/764-9377 (voice), 734/764- 9368 (FAX), e-mail [email protected]]. C. Journals and Newsletters 1. Leslie Feinberg is not the subject of any journal or newsletter. D. Bibliography of Studies Published (alphabetically) 1. Brigham, Cathy. Dissenting Fictions: Identity and Resistance in the Contemporary United States Novel (Russell Banks, Toni Morrison, Leslie Marmon Silko, David Bradley, Leslie Feinberg). Diss. Pennsylvania SU, 1995. Ann Arbor: UMI, 1995. 9600142. 2. Chapin, John Philip. Transforming Subjects: Readings of Toni Morrison, Judy Grahn, Leslie Feinberg, and Leslie Marmon Silko. Diss. U of Nebraska, 1998. Ann Arbor: UMI, 1998. 9902951. 3. Consiglio, Anthony. “Gender Identity and Narrative Truth: An Autobiographical Approach to Bias.” English Journal 88.3 (1999): 71-77. 4. Dews, Carlos L, and Carolyn Leste. "Anti-Intellectualism, Homophobia, and the Cook 3 Working-Class Gay/Lesbian Academic." Radical Teacher 53 (1998): 8-12. 5. Goetz, Laura Ellen. Drowning in Loneliness and Writing the Blues: Creating Lesbian Space in the Novels of Radclyffe Hall and Leslie Feinberg. Diss. U of Northern Iowa, 1997. Ann Arbor: UMI, 1997. 1385242. 6. Grant, Jaime Marie. Coming Clean: Authenticity, Creativity and Activism in the Work and Lives of Contemporary Lesbian Writer/Activists. Diss. Union Institute, 1999. Ann Arbor: UMI, 1999. 9948803. 7. Halberstam, Judith. “Lesbian Masculinity; Or, Even Stone Butches Get the Blues.” Women and Performance: A Journal of Feminist Theory 2.16 (1996): 61-73. 8. Henson, Leslie June. From Abjection to Coalition: Sexual Subjectivities and Identity Politics in Twentieth-Century Lesbian and Gay Novels. Diss. U of Florida, 1996. Ann Arbor: UMI, 1996. 9800119. 9. Kaebnick, Suzanne L. Transgendered Subjects, Refigured Politics: The Prose and Politics of Liberation. Diss. SUNY at Stonybrook, 1997. Ann Arbor: UMI, 1997. 9824684. 10. Lee-Hampshire, Wendy. "Spilling All Over the 'Wide Fields of Our Passions': Frye, Butler, Wittgenstein and the Context(s) of Attention, Intention and Identity (Or: From Arm Wrestling Duck to Abject Being to Lesbian Feminist)." Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy 14.3 (1999): 1-16. 11. Mavrikakis, Catherine. “L’Ethnicite comme piece rapportee et ravaudage du moi dans le roman juif-lesbien americain.” Etudes Litteraires 29.3-4 (1997): 49-59. 12. Moses, Cat. “Queering Class: Leslie Feinberg’s Stone Butch Blues.” Studies in the Novel 31 (1999): 74-97. Cook 4 13. Noble, Jean. Masculinities Without Men: Female Masculinity in Twentieth-Century Fictions (Radclyffe Hall, Leslie Feinberg, Rose Tremain, Kimberly Peirce). Diss. York U, 2000. Ann Arbor: UMI, 2000. NQ59150. 14. Noble, Jean. “’Passionate Fictions’: Portraits of Female Masculinity in The Well of Loneliness and Stone Butch Blues.” RFR/DFR: Resources for Feminist Research/Documantation sur la recherché feministe 25.3-4 (1997): 92-101. 15. Ormiston, Wendy. “Stone Butch Celebration: A Transgender-inspired Revolution in Academia.” Harvard Educational Review 66 (1996): 198-215. 16. Owen, Sally. "Trans Forming History." On the Issues 5.4 (1996): 48-9. 17. Pernal, Mary C. Explorations in Contemporary Feminist Literature: The Battle Against Oppression for Multicultural, Lesbian and Transgender Communities. Diss. SUNY at Binghamton, 2000. Ann Arbor: UMI, 2000. 9971822. 18. Prosser, Jay. “No Place Like Home: The Transgendered Narrative of Leslie Feinberg’s Stone Butch Blues.” MFS: Modern Fiction Studies 41 (1995): 483-514. 19. "Search for Identity." Written by Ryan L'epicier. Dir. Jenni Matz. American Passages: A Literary Survey. Videocassette series. Annenberg/CPB, 2003. 20. Stockton, Kathryn Bond. “Christ’s Queer Wound, or Divine Humiliation among the Unchurched.” Writing the Bodies of Christ: The Church from Carlyle to Derrida. Ed. John Schad. Aldershot, England: Ashgate, 2001. 21. Stockton, Kathryn Bond. "Cloth Wounds, or When Queers Are Martyred to Clothes: The Value of Clothing's Complex Debasements." Women: A Cultural Review 13.3 (2002): 289-321. Cook 5 22. Stolen Moments. Dir. Margaret Wescott. First Run/Icarus Films, 1997. 23. Tagore, Proma. The Shapes of Silence: Contemporary Women’s Fiction and the Practices of Bearing Witness. Diss. McGill U, 2000. Ann Arbor: UMI, 2000. NQ69938. E. Law Review Articles (alphabetically) 1. Albright, Jennifer Marie. "Gender Assessment: A Legal Approach to Transsexuality." SMU Law Review 55 (2002): 593. 2. Arriola, Elvia R. "The Penalties for Puppy Love: Institutionalized Violence Against Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgendered Youth." The Journal of Gender, Race & Justice 1 (1998): 429. 3. Arriola, Elvira R. "Queering the Painted Ladies: Gender, Race, Class, and Sexual Identity at the Mexican Border in the Case of Two Paulas." Seattle Journal for Social Justice 1 (2003): 679. 4. Becker, Mary. "Strength in Diversity: Feminist Theoretical Approaches to Child Custody and Same-sex Relationships." Stetson Law Review 23 (1994): 701. 5. Becker, Mary. Symposium: Queer Matters: Emerging Issues in Sexual Orientation Law: Women, Minority, and Sexual Orientation." UCLA Women's Law Journal 8 (1998): 165. 6. Broad, K.L. “Critical Borderlands & Interdisciplinary, Intersectional Coalitions." Denver University Law Review 78 (2001): 1141. 7. Brown, Shana. "Sex Changes and 'Opposite-Sex' Marriage: Applying the Full Faith and Credit Clause to Compel Interstate Recognition of Transgendered Persons' Amended Cook 6 Legal Sex for Marital Purposes." San Diego Law Review 38 (2001): 1113. 8. Cain, Patricia A. "Toward Intersexionality: Stories from the Gender Garden: Transsexuals and Anti-Discrimination Law." Denver University Law Review 75 (1998): 1321. 9. Case, Mary Anne. "Constructing Marginality: Unpacking Package Deals: Separate Spheres Are Not the Answer." Denver University Law Review 75 (1998): 1305. 10. Chang, Helen Y. "My Father Is a Woman, Oh No!: The Failure of the Courts to Uphold Individual’s Substantive Due Process Rights for Transgender Parents under the Guise of the Best Interest of the Child." Santa Clara Law Review 43 (2003): 649. 11. Cruz, David B. et al. "Disestablishing Sex and Gender." California Law Review 90.7 (2002): 997. 12. Cunningham, E. Christi. et al. "Preserving Normal Heterosexual Male Fantasy: The "Severe or Pervasive" MissedInterpretation of Sexual Harassment in the Absence of a Tangible Job Consequence." The University of Chicago Legal Forum (1999): 199. 13. Dasti, Jerry L. "Advocating a Broader Understanding of the Necessity of Sex- reassignment Surgery under Medicaid." New York University Law Review 77 (2002): 1738. 14. deManda, Janine M. "Our Transgressions: The Legal System's Struggle with Providing Equal Protection to Transgender and Transsexual People." University of Missouri at Kansas City Law Review 71 (2002): 507. 15. Drobac, Jennifer Ann. "Pansexuality and the Law." William and Mary Journal of Women and the Law 5 (1999): 297. Cook 7 16. Franke, Katherine M. et al. "The Central Mistake of Sex Discrimination Law: The Disaggregation of Sex from Gender." University of Pennsylvania Law Review 144 (1995): 1. 17. Franklin, Kris., and Sarah E. Chinn. "Book Review: Lesbians, Legal Theory and Other Super Heroes." Review of Law and Social Change 25 (1999): 301. 18. Frye, Phyllis Randolph. "The International Bill of Gender Rights vs. The Cider House Rules: Transgenders Struggle with the Courts over what Clothing They Are Allowed to Wear on the Job, which Restroom They Are Allowed to Use on the Job, and the Very Definition of Their Sex." William and Mary Journal

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