Litcius/Paper detail

Feminist diagrams

Sam McBean

2021Feminist Theory44 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

On 4 January 1971, Ti-Grace Atkinson delivered a talk entitled ‘Strategy and Tactics: A Presentation of Political Lesbianism’. The talk was later published in her collected essays, Amazon Odyssey. The essay contains thirty-five diagrams: ten ‘Strategy Charts’, three ‘Tactical Charts’ and twenty-two ‘Tactical-Strategy Charts’, which map a strategy of the ‘Oppressor’ (men) and the tactics that the ‘Oppressed’ (women) might develop to lead to a revolution – lesbians, significantly, are the ‘Buffer Zone’ between these two classes. In the only reference I have managed to find to these diagrams, they are referred to as ‘crazy’. This article re-visits these diagrams, exploring the role of the diagram in how Atkinson attempts to map patriarchal relations and also imagine a feminist revolution. Taking Atkinson’s diagrams as a starting point, the article then uses them to begin to narrate a genealogy of the diagram in feminist theory, exploring a diagrammatic imaginary that is an often-used but rarely discussed tactic in feminist writing. Finally, the article opens out to consider how this history of feminist diagrams might be a precursor to more contemporary feminist data visualisations.

Topics & Concepts

Diagrammatic reasoningPresentation (obstetrics)SociologyDiagramFeminist theoryThe ImaginaryPoliticsEpistemologyGender studiesFeminismComputer scienceLawPsychoanalysisPsychologyPhilosophyLinguisticsPolitical scienceMedicineRadiologyDatabaseReproductive Health and TechnologiesHistorical Studies on Reproduction, Gender, Health, and Societal ChangesLGBTQ Health, Identity, and Policy