Sydney Pokorny

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sydney Pokorny is a lesbian-American writer and activist based in New York. She graduated from Vassar College in 1988 with a degree in art history. She has published numerous articles on topics ranging from "Madonna Studies" to art criticism and the AIDS epidemic. In addition to articles, she co-published a humor book with Liz Tracey, called So You Want to be a Lesbian? (St. Martin's/Griffin). The book was nominated for a Lambda Literary Award.[1]

In 1989, she joined the newly formed Women's Caucus of ACT-UP after nearly a year in the group protesting housing issues, governmental policy, and lack of action by city and state agencies. As part of the Women's Caucus of ACT-UP she and other Caucus members put together a "teach-in" on the politics and problems faced by women with AIDS. This was the first public forum to specifically address the spectrum of issues faced by women living with AIDS. Her contribution, an essay on the epidemiological differences observed by researchers studying the presenting symptoms and progression of AIDS in men and women was included in the Women and AIDS Handbook that documented the teach-in. The Handbook was, until the early 90s, the only document to focus on all the issues faced by the growing number of women infected with HIV and living with AIDS. The Handbook was translated into nearly 90 different languages. Later published in a revised and expanded form as Women, Aids & Activism by South End Press in 1990, Pokorny's essay provided the impetus for a lengthier treatise on the subject of epidemiological issues and her essay, while not appearing in the book provided the research for the expanded and revised essay on the issue that did appear. She was given credit in the book's introduction.

Pokorny published numerous articles in Boston's Gay Community News. One of her contributions, cultural criticism on Madonna and "the lesbian gaze" called "Obsess Yourself" was published in the Gay Community News in 1989. It became an oft-cited work in the then growing field of "Madonna Studies." "Obsess Yourself" attempted to blend autobiography, cultural studies, minority cultures, issues of identity and Madonna. Quotations from "Obsess Yourself" may be found in essay collections as diverse as: AIDS and the National Body by Thomas E. Yingling and Robyn Wiegman, Acting Out: Lesbian Performances by Lynda Hart and Peggy Phelan, The Madonna Connection: Representational Politics, Subcultural Identities, and Cultural Theory, edited by Cathy Schwichtenberg and I Dream of Madonaa, edited by Kay Turner.

Following her contributions to the Gay Community News, Pokorny began contributing articles on gay and lesbian culture to the fledling publication, Outweek. There she wrote humorous articles about everything from her passion for Coco Chanel to her admiration for drag queens. Eventually, she teamed up with writer Liz Tracey to contribute a weekly nightlife column called "Out on the Town."

Pokorny worked as a production assistant on the film "Paris is Burning" and is credited as "Sidney Porknoy." Through her work on the film, she became interested in some of the ideas raised in the film and attempted to work them out in her writing. When Outweek ceased publication, Tracey and Pokorny continued their writing collaboration and produced a self-published zine called "Dead Jackie Susann Quarterly" which was heavily influenced by the house balls and the way that fame and celebrity was lived out in the ball rituals. Two issues of the zine were produced by Pokorny and Tracey in 1992-93. One issue of the zine is also in New York Univerity's Fales Collection of Papers by Contemporary writers. The issue is contained in a collection of papers donated by Dennis Cooper. The zine gathered press attention, for its humor and wit which was aimed at everything from pop culture to the election of Bill Clinton. The zine was mentioned in the Village Voice, was selected as an editor's choice in the 'zine guide Factsheet Five, and written up in People magazine.

She has contributed art reviews, topical essays, film reviews and record reviews for numerous publications such as the British art journal Frieze, the Boston Phoenix, Artforum,[2] Bookforum, Time Out, LGNY, and Rockgirl. Pokorny also worked for Artforum. She started as an editorial intern in 1990 and by the time she left the magazine she held two titles: Associate Editor in charge of coordinating book reviews and Editorial Coordinator of the magazine's spin-off publication, a quarterly review of books related to art and culture, called Bookforum.

[edit] References