Casa Susanna

the story of the first trans network in the United States 1959-1968

Casa Susanna

the story of the first trans network in the United States 1959-1968
Isabelle Bonnet & Sophie Hackett ; translator Bernard Schutze
Conference Proceeding Book - 2023

"In 2004, two antique dealers discovered 340 photographs from the 1950s-60s at a flea market in New York City. What made these images singular was that they depicted men dressed as women, whose feminine identity was that of the "respectable" housewife, the girl next door, or the kind matron. Here we find neither the feathers nor the extravagant make-up of cabaret, just perfect housewives in the privacy of their homes. Behind the photographs lay a vast, hidden network of crossdressers. They were married, loving fathers of the American white middle class. They were engineers, pilots, and civil servants. They embodied the American dream, and its nightmare, in a time of racial, sexual, and political segregation in a Cold War America that censored, repressed, excluded, and hunted down those who violated the gender norms of the time, from crossdressers to homosexuals. Susanna, Virginia, Doris, Fiona, Gail, Felicity, Gloria, and their friends, created a unique collective identity. Despite the risks, they corresponded with each other, got together, organized, and managed to alleviate their isolation through an underground magazine: Transvestia. Their haven was the home of Susanna and her wife Marie, tucked away in the Catskill Mountains, a few hours away from New York City. There they were able to live freely en femme. Photography was essential to their identity as crossdressers; in a quasi-sacred ritual, photographs circulated widely within their community. Despite their now outdated female identities, the Casa Susanna crossdressers broke with the gender prescriptions of their time and defiantly refused to submit to an archaic cult of masculinity. Defiant and determined, they organized the first known trans network in the United States. In their day, the crossdressers of Casa Susanna called themselves "transvestites" or "TVs" for short. This term is today deemed pejorative, and we have avoided it wherever possible. In French, however, the only available term is "travesti". We have used it here both for historical accuracy, and because most of the members of the Casa Susanna network made a clear distinction between their identities as crossdressers and other trans identities. There are three cases where we have opted to give a crossdresser's masculine identity: for Felicity, Susanna and Doris. Either they were well-known in their lifetime or their families have given us permission to disclose their identities as part of making visible the difficult conditions that cross-dressing and trans individuals continue to face and the ongoing impact of this discrimination. As historians, we have tried to strike a balance between historical facts, the ways the individuals in the Casa Susanna circle self-identified, and our contemporary awareness of a spectrum of gender identities. Thus, in our view, this community stands as the first known trans network in the United States."--rencontres-arles.com

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Barcode Status Material Type CallNumber
37413326631704 उपलब्ध New Adult Non-Fiction 779.2097 BONNET
ग्रंथसूची विवरण
मुख्य लेखकों: Bonnet, Isabelle, 1965- (लेखक), Hackett, Sophie, 1971- (लेखक)
निगमित लेखक: Arles, rencontres de la photographie
अन्य लेखक: Stryker, Susan (परिचय का लेखक, आदि।), Schütze, Bernard, 1962- (अनुवादक)
स्वरूप: सम्मेलन की कार्यवाही पुस्तक
भाषा:English
प्रकाशित: London ; New York : Toronto, Ontario : Thames & Hudson ; Art Gallery of Ontario, 2023.
विषय:

MARC

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100 1 |a Bonnet, Isabelle,  |d 1965-  |e author.  |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no2024082896 
245 1 0 |a Casa Susanna :  |b the story of the first trans network in the United States, 1959-1968 /  |c Isabelle Bonnet & Sophie Hackett ; translator, Bernard Schutze. 
246 3 0 |a Story of the first trans network in the United States, 1959-1968 
264 1 |a London ;  |a New York :  |b Thames & Hudson ;  |a Toronto, Ontario :  |b Art Gallery of Ontario,  |c 2023. 
300 |a 478 pages :  |b illustrations (some color), facsimiles, portraits (some color) ;  |c 26 cm 
336 |a still image  |b sti  |2 rdacontent 
336 |a text  |b txt  |2 rdacontent 
337 |a unmediated  |b n  |2 rdamedia 
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380 |a Exhibition catalogue 
500 |a Chiefly illustrations. 
500 |a Publication information from colophon. 
500 |a Original edition: Edition Textuel, Paris, 2023. 
500 |a "Published on the occasion of the exhibition 'Casa Susanna' presented at Recontres d'Arles from July 3, to September 24, 2023, and at Art Gallery of Ontario from December 23, 2023 to April 14, 2024."--Colophon. 
504 |a Includes bibliographical references. 
520 |a "In 2004, two antique dealers discovered 340 photographs from the 1950s-60s at a flea market in New York City. What made these images singular was that they depicted men dressed as women, whose feminine identity was that of the "respectable" housewife, the girl next door, or the kind matron. Here we find neither the feathers nor the extravagant make-up of cabaret, just perfect housewives in the privacy of their homes. Behind the photographs lay a vast, hidden network of crossdressers. They were married, loving fathers of the American white middle class. They were engineers, pilots, and civil servants. They embodied the American dream, and its nightmare, in a time of racial, sexual, and political segregation in a Cold War America that censored, repressed, excluded, and hunted down those who violated the gender norms of the time, from crossdressers to homosexuals. Susanna, Virginia, Doris, Fiona, Gail, Felicity, Gloria, and their friends, created a unique collective identity. Despite the risks, they corresponded with each other, got together, organized, and managed to alleviate their isolation through an underground magazine: Transvestia. Their haven was the home of Susanna and her wife Marie, tucked away in the Catskill Mountains, a few hours away from New York City. There they were able to live freely en femme. Photography was essential to their identity as crossdressers; in a quasi-sacred ritual, photographs circulated widely within their community. Despite their now outdated female identities, the Casa Susanna crossdressers broke with the gender prescriptions of their time and defiantly refused to submit to an archaic cult of masculinity. Defiant and determined, they organized the first known trans network in the United States. In their day, the crossdressers of Casa Susanna called themselves "transvestites" or "TVs" for short. This term is today deemed pejorative, and we have avoided it wherever possible. In French, however, the only available term is "travesti". We have used it here both for historical accuracy, and because most of the members of the Casa Susanna network made a clear distinction between their identities as crossdressers and other trans identities. There are three cases where we have opted to give a crossdresser's masculine identity: for Felicity, Susanna and Doris. Either they were well-known in their lifetime or their families have given us permission to disclose their identities as part of making visible the difficult conditions that cross-dressing and trans individuals continue to face and the ongoing impact of this discrimination. As historians, we have tried to strike a balance between historical facts, the ways the individuals in the Casa Susanna circle self-identified, and our contemporary awareness of a spectrum of gender identities. Thus, in our view, this community stands as the first known trans network in the United States."--rencontres-arles.com 
505 0 0 |g (from captions)  |g About the photographs /  |r Isabelle Bonnet, Sophie Hackett --  |g Introduction /  |r Susan Stryker --  |t The story of the first trans network in the United States, 1959-1968 /  |r Isabelle Bonnet --  |t Performing authenticity : Casa Susanna's crossdressers and photography /  |r Sophie Hackett --  |t "Transvestia" magazine --  |g [Photographs]. 
586 |a Paris Photo-Aperture Foundation PhotoBook Awards. 2023 Photography Catalogue of the Year Shortlist. 
650 0 |a Cross-dressers  |z New York (State)  |v Portraits  |v Exhibitions. 
650 0 |a Transgender women  |z New York (State)  |v Portraits  |v Exhibitions. 
650 0 |a Portrait photography  |v Exhibitions. 
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700 1 |a Hackett, Sophie,  |d 1971-  |e author.  |4 aut  |1 https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PCjGHP9gGDwPvG9rgPhmYbm  |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no2011111343 
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