Stone Butch Blues

546 pages

French language

Published Sept. 24, 2019 by Hystériques & AssociéEs.

ISBN:
978-2-9567194-0-3
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5 stars (4 reviews)

Stone butch blues raconte l'histoire de Jess, né·e aux États-Unis dans les années 1950 au sein d'une famille juive et prolétaire. De son enfance rythmée par les interrogations des passant·es sur son genre (« c'est un garçon ou c'est une fille ? ») à son adolescence et sa découverte des bars de nuit où se côtoient lesbiennes, drag queens et travailleuses du sexe, de ses premières embauches en usine avec d'autres butchs à sa transition, jusqu'à sa rencontre avec le mouvement LGBT naissant, son parcours traverse les décennies et nous parle d'amour, d'amitié, de politique et de solidarité face à la violence de ce monde.

9 editions

Review of 'Stone Butch Blues' on 'Storygraph'

5 stars

 This semi-autobiographical account follows Jess Goldburg during the 60s and 70s in America. Jess comes out as a butch lesbian in the old gay drag bars with that heavy butch/femme divide* facing regular attacks from bigots and police. 

After an SA at school she drops out and goes into manual work and is involved in the unions but her gender nonconformity leads her to save up for testosterone and top surgery in the hopes that going stealth as a man in the workplace can lead to a more stable life. It also shows the racism, anti-semitism, sexual harassment and transphobia inside and outside of the community at that time as Jess navigates her own feelings and identity.


*= I knew that scene was intensely enforced, but this line struck me in particular: “The more I thought about the two of them being lovers, the more it upset me. I couldn’t …

love, community, and the terrors of queer hatred

5 stars

i knew long before i read this that it would be important to me.

from a historical perspective, it shines a light on the realities of being a lesbian in the 60s and 70s. of being transmasculine and searching for terminology and self-understanding in a culture that didn't even marginally recognize gender outside the binary. or sexuality outside the hetero. it shines a light on surviving abusive parents. on finding community without the internet. of navigating complex queer subcultures. and hatred in its many forms, up to and including bar raids, arrests, and unspeakable abuses by cops.

it also illuminates and speaks to the beauty of love and friendship and comradeship within those queer communities. the intricacies in how butches and femmes and transfemmes interacted. i was able to see myself in the warmth and emotionality and fierce bravery in the face of fear and violence expressed by the femmes …

Solid novel, must read for every queer leftist

5 stars

Content warning I mention the general tone of the ending

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rated it

5 stars