The Disintegration of a Critic

Author(s): Jill Johnston; Fiona McGovern (Editor); Megan Francis Sullivan (Editor); Axel Wieder (Editor)

Art

Collected texts by cultural critic, auto/biographer, and lesbian icon Jill Johnston.


Jill Johnston--cultural critic, auto/biographer, and lesbian icon--began her career at the Village Voice as a critic of dance and performance, writing about Merce Cunningham, Martha Graham, the activities at Judson Church, Allan Kaprow and Happenings, Fluxus, and the downtown New York art scene. The column eventually became more personal than critical, allowing her to discuss her life, her sexuality, and her politics. This book brings together thirty texts Johnston wrote for the Voice between 1960 and 1974, beginning with her early dance coverage and continuing though the time when, as she put it, the column moved "from the theatre of dance and happenings toward the theatre of my life."
As Johnston abandoned an objective critical standpoint, her column interwove forms and formats, and political, literary, art-historical, and critical perspectives, taking turns and loops, reflecting its time and contexts--with the one constant being Johnston's unmistakable, witty, intimate voice. As a person and as a writer she pioneered a model that not only challenged notions of writerly appropriateness but also performed and created a new lesbian identity.
T
his collection also includes texts by Ingrid Nyeboe, Johnston's long-time partner and spouse; Bruce Hainley; and Jennifer Krasinski. An appendix collects material related to a 1969 panel discussion organized by Johnston (featuring Andy Warhol, Ultra Violet, and Carolee Schneemann, among others) that gives this volume its title: "The Disintegration of a Critic: An Analysis of Jill Johnston."


Copublished with Bergen Kunsthall


Product Information

“In “The Making of a Lesbian Chauvinist”, Johnston describes “warding off the temptations of monogamy in a society in which the prime unit of its functioning as a warring natioeve it I guess you can I was still disconnected in this way my thinking or my attitudes or prejudices and my true nature were distinctly and neurotically separate from each other... I just couldn’t see myself as a freak.”

In such work, there is collapse of distinction between criticism and performance.   We live in an era when “content” spawns autonomously from predictive-text algorithms. Johnston’s diatribes, by contract, offer a loose, fertile incoherence. “Revolutions are all about language,” she writes, “inventing and distorting your terms to suit the new strategies of survival.”” 

Josie Johnston – Tank Magazine   (JC BookGrocer)

 

This is a fascinating collection of texts by writer and feminist thinker Jill Johnston. Johnston was renowned as a dance critic in the 1960s downtown New York City scene, and then as the author of the radical-feminist classic Lesbian Nation (1973). This is a wonderful window into the mind of a radical thinker who saw blurred lines between the personal, political and creative domains. A great read for anyone interested in feminist history and the 60’s New York arts scene.

Amarina, The Book Grocer

General Fields

  • : 9783956794896
  • : Sternberg Press
  • : Sternberg Press
  • : 0.181437
  • : 01 September 2019
  • : .7 Inches X 4.5 Inches X 7.1 Inches
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Jill Johnston; Fiona McGovern (Editor); Megan Francis Sullivan (Editor); Axel Wieder (Editor)
  • : 224
  • : English
  • : 2001
  • : Paperback