Strabismus Books
Showing 1-8 of 8

by (shelved 3 times as strabismus)
avg rating 4.09 — 927 ratings — published 2009

by (shelved 1 time as strabismus)
avg rating 4.80 — 5 ratings — published 2001

by (shelved 1 time as strabismus)
avg rating 3.60 — 5 ratings — published 1995

by (shelved 1 time as strabismus)
avg rating 4.00 — 11 ratings — published 2012

by (shelved 1 time as strabismus)
avg rating 0.0 — 0 ratings — published 1999

by (shelved 1 time as strabismus)
avg rating 0.0 — 0 ratings — published 2013

by (shelved 1 time as strabismus)
avg rating 4.17 — 12 ratings — published 2013

by (shelved 1 time as strabismus)
avg rating 4.41 — 29 ratings — published 2010

“The coming of the problematic of gender, now taking over from that of sex, illustrates this progressive dilution of the sexual function. This is the era of the Transsexual, where the conflicts linked to difference -- and even the biological and anatomical signs of difference -- survive long after the real otherness of the sexes has disappeared.
When the sexes eye each other up, squint out through each other's eyes. The male eyes up the female, the female eyes up the male. This is no longer the seductive gaze but a generalized sexual strabismus, reflecting that of moral and cultural values: the true eyes up the false, the beautiful eyes up the ugly, good eyes up evil, and vice versa. They each `lock on to' the other in an attempt to misappropriate its distinctive signs. But both are in fact in league to short-circuit difference. They function like communicating vessels, according to the new machinic rituals of switching or commutation. The utopia of sexual difference ends in the switching of sexual poles, and in interactive exchange. Instead of a dual relation, sex becomes a reversible function. In place of alterity, an alternating current.”
― The Perfect Crime
When the sexes eye each other up, squint out through each other's eyes. The male eyes up the female, the female eyes up the male. This is no longer the seductive gaze but a generalized sexual strabismus, reflecting that of moral and cultural values: the true eyes up the false, the beautiful eyes up the ugly, good eyes up evil, and vice versa. They each `lock on to' the other in an attempt to misappropriate its distinctive signs. But both are in fact in league to short-circuit difference. They function like communicating vessels, according to the new machinic rituals of switching or commutation. The utopia of sexual difference ends in the switching of sexual poles, and in interactive exchange. Instead of a dual relation, sex becomes a reversible function. In place of alterity, an alternating current.”
― The Perfect Crime