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THE 1956 IMAGE OF SUNNY AND DORIS (figure 1) is a typical one when conjuring images of butch-femme lesbianism in the post-World War II era: a femme looking glamorous in a dress, makeup, and heels, and a dapper butch sporting a man's suit and tie and a slick D.A. haircut with a pompadour and one casual curl in front.1 The butch's masculine appearance and the sharp gendered contrast between the two make their queerness highly legible, a standard feature in images of postwar butch-femme lesbians in both the public and scholarly imagination.2 Indeed, lesbian visibility at midcentury was almost entirely dependent on gender transgressions in the form of "mannishness," demarcating hutches as the public face of lesbianism -a role that scholars such as Joan Nestle, Elizabeth Lapovsky Kennedy, Madeline Davis, and Donna Penn argue had powerful political implications. Butches not only challenged normative conceptions of gender and claimed lesbian social space, they also defiantly announced their queerness through their looks, thereby expressing women's sexual autonomy and acting as vehicles for introducing others to gay life. Alongside them, femmes, while generally undetectable by themselves, proclaimed their own lesbianism and contributed to these modes of visual resistance.3
In these analyses, femmes are incorporated into lesbian rebellion by association with hutches - their willingness to stand beside hutches and be read as queer and to provide love and support for their partners who bore the brunt of homophobic abuse because of their overt gender expression. Butch visibility remains the foundation of butch-femme resistance, and legible butch masculinity remains an idealized icon of subversive lesbian power. But what if hutches in postwar America were not as visible as commonly believed?
Consider Miriam Wolfson and May Brown, for example (figure 2), both hutches in New York City in the 1950s. Wolfson sees herself as a shy-but-aggressive butch who has always felt masculine, and she sees her friend May Brown as "the butch of the century."4 Yet, the image shows two women in skirts with feminine hairdos and hints of lipstick. Photographs such as this one demonstrate the visual disconnect between what one might expect butchness to look like and what it did look like for some women during this era. While New York City's hutches certainly employed the classic suit-and-tie...