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Tracer l'absence : les représentations contemporaines d'identités abjectes sur la scène artistique canadienneRoy, Cassandre 03 1900 (has links)
L’art abject est entré comme terme et comme concept dans le dictionnaire du monde de l’art
dans les années 1990. Son utilisation a été consacrée par l’exposition Abject Art : Repulsion and
Desire in American Art du Whitney Museum en 1993 qui a, de surcroît, influencé les critères
établis pour déterminer si une œuvre est considérée, dans l’imaginaire collectif, comme étant
abjecte. Cette exposition a ainsi véhiculé une compréhension de l’art abject comme étant, d’un
point de vue matériel, à la fois dégoûtant et fascinant. Lors de la recherche menée pour ce mémoire,
il a notamment été question d’élargir le concept d’art abject pour qu’il recouvre dorénavant des
œuvres représentant des identités appartenant à des communautés marginalisées par un pouvoir ou
une identité dominante. Plus précisément, nous nous sommes penchés.es sur des œuvres exposant
des identités abjectes par rapport à une identité dominante allégoriquement hétéro-homo-normative
masculine et occidentale s’exprimant par l’entremise du tableau de 1814 peint par Jean-Auguste Dominique Ingres, La grande odalisque. Ce tableau est devenu le dénominateur commun d’analyse
pour nos trois études de cas, soit les œuvres Do women have to be naked to get into the Met.
Museum? des Guerrilla Girls, Tapestry de J J Levine et La Grande Intendante de 2Fik. Ces œuvres
– toutes trois ayant été exposées au Canada depuis l’an 2000 – ont permis de questionner la
définition dominante de l’art abject. Elles font conjointement parties d’un grand dialogue, à la fois
contemporain et transhistorique, visant à explorer le potentiel didactique de l’abjection, afin de
comprendre le pouvoir subversif et transformateur contenu dans ce type de création. En effet, en
utilisant les techniques d’autoreprésentation et de réappropriation de motif, les artistes issus.es de
communautés abjectées neutralisent ultimement leur abjection, leur déshumanisation et leur
aliénation politique contemporaine et produisent une culture dont les représentations sont plus
inclusives. / Abject art is a term and concept introduced in the art dictionary in the 1990s. Its use was enshrined
in the Whitney Museum's 1993 exhibition Abject Art: Repulsion and Desire in American Art, which
further established the criteria for work to be considered in the collective imagination as abject.
This exhibition thus conveyed an understanding of abject art as being, from a material perspective,
both disgusting and fascinating. Part of the research for this study is focussed on expanding the
concept of abject art to include works that represent identities that have been marginalized by a
dominant identity. Specifically, we examine works that expose abject identities in relation to an
allegorical dominant hetero-homo-normative Western male identity expressed in Jean-Auguste Dominique Ingres' 1814 painting La grande odalisque. This painting became the common
denominator of analysis for our three case studies: the Guerrilla Girls' Do women have to be naked
to get into the Met. Museum?, J J Levine's Tapestry and 2Fik's La Grande Intendante. These works
- all of which have been exhibited in Canada since the year 2000 - have allowed us to question the
dominant definition of abject art. Their analysis also sparks a larger contemporary and
transhistorical dialogue that explores the didactic potential of abjection in which these types of
creation contain a subversive and transformative power. By using techniques of self-representation
and motif reappropriation, artists from abjected communities ultimately neutralize their abjection,
dehumanization and contemporary political alienation to produce a culture that is more inclusive
in its representations.
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Exploring Queer Possibilities in Jeanette Winterson's The Stone GodsJohnston, Jennifer H. 10 December 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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Relationship Literacy and Polyamory: A Queer ApproachTrahan, Heather Anne 02 April 2014 (has links)
No description available.
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"I Won't Let Anyone Come Between Us" Representations of Mental Illness, Queer Identity, and Abjection in High TensionWise, Krista Michelle 10 April 2014 (has links)
No description available.
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Cuties Killing Video Games: Gender Politics and Performance in Indie Game Developer SubcultureHiggins, Alexander 24 April 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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MuscleboundGehring, Trey D. 04 May 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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Growing Tribes: Reality Theatre and Columbus' Gay and Lesbian CommunitySavard, Shannon N., Savard 14 August 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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IMPOSSIBLY HERE, IMPOSSIBLY QUEER:CITIZENSHIP, SEXUALITY, AND GAY CHICANO FICTIONde la Garza Valenzuela, José A. 15 April 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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Til Ære for queer : Netflix-serien She-Ra og repræsentationen af queer / For the Honor of Queer : Netflix series She-Ra and the representation of queerNielsen, Ida January 2021 (has links)
This paper will examine, how queer is represented in the animated tv-serie She-Ra and the princesses of powerfrom 2018-2020. To understand this work, the paper will define representation, gender and queer, and examine the visual and narrative elements in the tv-serie. Through a visual analysis, the paper can understand if the serie represent queer values. Then the paper will look at some characters from the serie, to see if their visual design and the narrative structure reflects queer characteristics. This means the paper will define what are queer values and how is it shown in the characters of the show. It will be supplied with theory about queer and gender, for examples Raewyn Connell and Stuart Hall. The theory will supply characteristics, which have defined the social norms about genders through history. This paper concludes that the tv-serie reflects queer values through it’s visual and narrative structure. The characters have queer personalities. I need this paper with a discussion of the effects of queer representation and other ways to look at the serie from a perspective of gender.
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In This UniverseVoet, Sofia Catharina 26 July 2022 (has links)
No description available.
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