Bisexual theory

[8] Scholars who have been discussed in relation to bisexual theory include Ibrahim Abdurrahman Farajajé,[9] Steven Angelides,[10] Elisabeth Däumer,[11] Jo Eadie,[12] Shiri Eisner,[13] Marjorie Garber,[14] Donald E. Hall,[15] Clare Hemmings,[16] Michael du Plessis,[17] Maria Pramaggiore,[18] Merl Storr,[19] and Kenji Yoshino.

In 1995, Marjorie Garber released Vice Versa: Bisexuality and the Eroticism of Everyday Life, a monograph that aimed to reveal a 'bi-erotics' observable across disparate cultural locations, which however, drew some criticism due to its alleged ahistoricism.

The Journal of Bisexuality was first published in 2000 by the Taylor & Francis Group under the Routledge imprint, and its editors-in-chief have included Fritz Klein, Jonathan Alexander, Brian Zamboni, James D. Weinrich, and M. Paz Galupo.

In 2000, law scholar Kenji Yoshino published the influential article "The Epistemic Contract of Bisexual Erasure", which argues that "Straights and gays have an investment in stabilizing sexual orientation categories.

[25] Elisabeth Däumer suggests that bisexuality can be "an epistemological as well as ethical vantage point from which we can examine and deconstruct the bipolar framework of gender and sexuality.

By identifying this relation, Storr observes the postmodern themes of indeterminacy, instability, fragmentation, and flux that characterize bisexual theory and parses how these concepts might be reflected upon critically.