noun phrase General Slang

lavender menace

· noun phrase · lesbian

1970 slur for lesbians in feminism, flipped into a battle cry within a year.

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Definitions

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Started as an insult and got worn as a badge. The phrase is tied to Betty Friedan, who saw lesbians as a 'lavender menace' that would discredit second-wave feminism. So in 1970 a group of lesbian radical feminists stormed the Second Congress to Unite Women in tie-dyed lavender tees reading exactly that, handed out the manifesto 'The Woman-Identified Woman,' and took the stage. They reclaimed the slur on the spot. Now it reads as a founding moment of lesbian feminism, not a smear.

“She showed up to the panel in a hand-dyed Lavender Menace shirt — knew her history and wanted everyone else to.”
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lavender menace In A Sentence

She showed up to the panel in a hand-dyed Lavender Menace shirt — knew her history and wanted everyone else to.

Origin & Usage

Phrase associated with Betty Friedan / NOW c. 1969–70; reclaimed by lesbian radical feminists at the Second Congress to Unite Women, New York, May 1970.

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