Dyke Ideas is a passionate and insightful contribution to lesbian philosophy. The main value is wimmin—women separate from men and men's inventions. "Craziness," guilt, competition, sex, and other topics are explored in ways that reject male values and move toward wimmin-identified cultures.
Method is central. The authoritarian, God's-eye stance typical of academic writing is disavowed in favor of an approach that denies that others "should" accept the author's beliefs. Persuasion is tyranny, Joyce Trebilcot thinks, so she tries not to interfere with a reader's processes of creating/discovering her own ideas. This book suggests that lesbian philosophy is like a wimmin bring their own contributions and also help themselves to the offerings of others.
Dyke Ideas is written in a candid, clear, jargon-free style that makes it accessible to a wide range of readers. The writings (which include essays, poetry, a dialogue, and forms without names) resonate with the feelings and thoughts of many wimmin.
some interesting things to say and a great grasp on poetry, but a lot of it reads as outdated. also i'm never going to hop on the political lesbianism train, sorry
i think there should be more easily digestible feminist writings like this
i really enjoyed how she presented her ideas so clearly as her own and told the reader to take only what they wanted from it. i did, and i took a lot from this book. recommend!