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Cheryl Claassen - Whistling Women: A Study of the Lives of Older Lesbians

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Whistling Women: A Study of the Lives of Older Lesbians: summary, description and annotation

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Gain first-hand knowledge of how todays lesbians aged 60 and over survived the 20th century!

I didnt know we were lesbians. We lived together 13 years!

Whistling Women is a unique, candid collection of the life experiences of 44 lesbians between 62 and 82 years of age. This book explores new ground with interviews about their memories, feelings, and thoughts on a diversity of perspectivesfrom growing up during the Depression and World War II, to retirement and old age at the height of the gay liberation movement. This unprecedented resource captures a first-person view of lesbian history and documents the struggles and achievements of the women who lived it.

All my schooling was women-orientedso I was able to see what women and girls could give to each other.

In Whistling Women, these older women share their views on:

  • childhood and young adulthoodfamily, social factors, religion, schooling
  • marriagehusbands, children, divorce
  • lesbian relationshipscoming out/closet relationships, role playing, butch and fem practices
  • conventional politicsparty affiliation, activities, concerns, degree of feminism
  • work and moneyfinancial arrangements, home ownership, investment properties
  • life after 60retirement, health, activities, communities
  • and much more!

I dated. I went along. I did it because basically it was the thing to do. But I had crushes on girls.

Whistling Women offers you unprecedented statistics on these women and comparisons with statistics gathered in other analyses on lesbian and heterosexual women. This research includes studies of:

  • socioeconomic class in childhood, mid-life, and at retirement
  • level of education of participants
  • number and duration of long-term relationshipsboth heterosexual marriages and lesbian lover relationships
  • age of first lesbian relationship
  • retirement statisticsyear retired, age at retirement
  • economic resources after retirement (compared to general US population)

If we had these things in the 1950s [gay bookstores and publications], how different life would be for a lot of people. But we had to pave the way.

This book is significant for sociologists, gay and lesbian researchers, and gerontologists, as well as anyone interested in womens history. It also presents recollections of lesbian/mixed barssome famousstarting in the 1930s, memories of the notorious Greenwich Village, the early development of lesbian social groups, and lesbian friendships with gay men. Whistling Girls identifies many of the organizations that cater specifically to older lesbians, such as OLOC (Old Lesbians Organizing for Change) and SOL (Slightly Older Lesbians).

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Whistling Women
A Study of the Lives of Older Lesbians
Cheryl Claassen, PhD
2005 by The Haworth Press Inc All rights reserved No part of this work may - photo 1
2005 by The Haworth Press, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this work may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, microfilm, and recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
First published by
The Haworth Press, Inc., 10 Alice Street, Binghamton, NY 13904-1580.
This edition published 2012 by Routledge
RoutledgeRoutledge
Taylor & Francis GroupTaylor & Francis Group
711 Third Avenue2 Park Square, Milton Park
New York, NY 10017Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN
Cover design by Marylouise E. Doyle.
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
Claassen, Cheryl, 1953-
Whistling women : a study of the lives of older lesbians / Cheryl Claassen.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-7890-2412-8 (hard : alk. paper)ISBN 0-7890-2413-6 (soft : alk. paper)
1. Older lesbiansUnited States. 2. Older lesbiansUnited StatesInterviews. I. Title.
HQ75.6.U5C577 2004
305.26'086'6430973dc22
2004012953
Contents
Chapter 1.
Chapter 2.
Chapter 3.
Chapter 4.
Chapter 5.
Chapter 6.
Chapter 7.
Chapter 8.
Chapter 9.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Cheryl Claassen, PhD, is Professor in the Department of Anthropology at Appalachian State University in North Carolina. She received her PhD in Anthropology (Archeology) from Harvard in 1982 during her radical lesbian separatist years. She has received commendation from the American Association for State and Local History for her study of the U.S. shell button industry. She authored numerous articles in archeology and two books: Dogan Point the results of her seven-year excavation in Westchester County, NYand Shells. She is the editor of Exploring Gender Through Archeology, Women in Archeology, and Women in Prehistory, and is also the editor of the UPenn Press Series titled Regendering the Past.
Chapter 1
Narrators and Friends
In early August 1995 my partner and I were reveling in our freedom. We were both beginning our sabbaticals and planning a trip from our home in Boone, North Carolina, to the Santa Fe Indian Art Market held the third weekend in August every year. Two days before we were to leave, I received a letter from my friend Kay, who lives in Sarasota, Florida. She and my mother had been a couple when I was in kindergarten and first grade in Tulsa in 1959-1960, and I had re- made her acquaintance in 1980. I was accustomed to a Christmas letter from her each year, but what could this summer letter be about?
Dear Cheryl,
I hope all is well with you and Marilyn. I am fine. I am writing to tell you that two friends of mine have bought property in Boone and just moved into the house they had built on it. I gave them your phone number but I hope you will call them. Their address is {} and their phone number is {}. They are both lovely people.
Kay
Boone, North Carolina, and Watauga County are in the Tennessee- Virginia corner of North Carolinain the Appalachian Mountains, that islying between 2,300 and 5,700 feet elevation. Watauga County and Avery County, particularly the town of Blowing Rock, have been popular summering locations for over 100 years for people from Winston-Salem, Charlotte, and Florida. The building of six ski slopes starting in the 1960s in Watauga County and neighboring Avery County, only a minor industrial success, if not a failure, has created an enthusiastic but usually frustrated potential winter tourist. I moved to Boone to teach at Appalachian State University in the anthropology department in July 1983. Gay women on campus were pretty easy to identify using my criteria developed during the previous year in Cincinnati, the prior eight years living in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and the four years before that living in Fayetteville, Arkansas. But those were younger women. I was certain there were older, retired gay women in the mountains and the summer homes all around me and that there might even be a network of older lesbians. Occasionally Id catch a summertime glimpse of one or two at a town grocery store or an area plant nursery, but I grew increasing frustrated that I knew none of them nor how to crack their barrier of disinterest in me and in things in Boone.
My partner and I are social animals, feminists, academics, and younger than sixty. She helped organize a noncampus group of gay Wataugans. She did what she could to get domestic partner rights for faculty and students. We often hosted potlucks or parties and we adopted (always temporarily it seemed) new gay women faculty. We knew there were other women out therelike a fourth dimension. I resigned myself to mere glimpses of the pixies, and a game of cat and mousewhat did their car look like, which way did they drive off, what was the tag? The excitement that Kays letter generated in me eclipsed that for our pending trip to Santa Fe. I clutched it like a winning lottery ticket and ran upstairs to read it to Marilyn. Within five minutes I was on the phone to them, but the game of cat and mouse would continue: I got a phone machine. I told the machine that we had gotten a letter from Kay and wed love to have them over when we returned to Boone. That night, when they called back, the barrier was broken. We discussed where each of us lived in Boone, and then the pixies were named. Did we know Claire who lives on Sugar Mountain or Cindy who lives two houses down, or Ann and Pat in Blowing Rock, or Charlotte and Gail or Betty and Betty or...?I was writing down names as fast as I could.
Two weeks later we four went out to lunch and hatched a plan for a monthly social. They called the women they knew, and I called the Boone nonstudent women we knew. A month later we had the first of many Florida-Boone potlucks on our deck. A calling list was created. The Florida women made plans to go golfing, or out to eat, or to play poker. Someone volunteered for the next potluck. And so we have continued. The few Boone women who come are staff or part-time faculty at the university, lingering undergraduates, or nonuniversity related folks. The Florida contingent and the calling list have grown longer, and computerized.
Half of the women I have met have second homes here and come as early as April every year and stay as late as mid-October, and half of the women are their guests, from New York City, or Michigan, or Florida, or their neighbors in Florida who rent for two weeks or a month in Watauga or Avery County. After several summers of meeting these women, most of whom are retired, most of whom are at least fifty-five, and most of whom live the other half of the year in Florida, I approached several of them with the idea of interviewing them about their lesbian life history, their retirement, and their communities now. Thus, this project was launched in the summer of 1997.

Why a focus on middle- and upper-class women?
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