Wake-up time.Drag King Drag kings are mostly female-bodied or -identified performance artists who dress in masculine drag and personify male gender stereotypes as part of their performance.[1] A typical drag king routine may incorporate dancing and singing or lip-synching. Dreams * Leslie Feinberg Leslie Feinberg (born September 1, 1949) is a transgender activist, speaker, and author. Feinberg is a high ranking member of the Workers World Party and a managing editor of Workers World newspaper. * Carroll & Graf * $14.95 With a flattop, muscles, and a working-class chip on her shoulder, Max Rabinowitz is butch in a way that gets her stared at, chased down dark New Jersey streets, and sometimes beaten up. It could also get her arrested if she weren't, in her 40s, an old pro at dodging the cops. The central character of Leslie Feinberg's second novel, Drag King Dreams, Max is so far outside the mainstream that she has no bank account or driver's license and has to work off-the-record, usually as a bouncer at one of the few New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of gay or drag bars that will have her. In many respects she's an older version of Jess Goldberg from Feinberg's acclaimed debut, Stone Butch Blues Stone Butch Blues is a novel written by transgender activist Leslie Feinberg. It tells the story of the life of a masculine girl named Jess Goldberg and the trials and tribulations she faces growing up in the pre-Stonewall era. (1993). Her political values haven't changed, but the years have worn away her belief in activism along with any hope of finding love. All this changes when Max's cross-dressing friend Vickie is murdered. And just as Max begins to wake from her torpor torpor /tor·por/ (tor´per) [L.] sluggishness.tor´pid torpor re´tinae sluggish response of the retina to the stimulus of light. tor·por n. 1. , America invades Iraq and Max's kind Palestinian neighbor "disappears." Feinberg, a longtime transgender transgender or transgendered adj. Transsexual. activist, opens a Pandora's box of issues in Drag King Dreams--racism, Zionism, homophobia, transphobia, police violence, capitalist oppression, even the survival of Yiddish as a poetic language. Although the first three chapters feel rushed and flat, the rest of the novel ably conveys the complexities of Max's life and the cycles of hope and heartbreak among her circle of queer and trans friends. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion