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Queer Orientation in Twentieth-Century American LiteratureParker, Michael G. 13 September 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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Queering Academia: Queer Faculty Mothers and Work-Family EnrichmentStygles, Katherine Newman 22 November 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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The 'monstrous Other' speaks: Postsubjectivity and the queering of the normal / Postsubjectivity and the queering of the normalAdkins, Roger A., 1973- 06 1900 (has links)
x, 197 p. A print copy of this thesis is available through the UO Libraries. Search the library catalog for the location and call number. / This dissertation investigates the cultural importance of the "monstrous Other" in postmodern literature, including novels from Sweden, Finland, and the United States. While the theoretical concept of "the Other" is in wide circulation in the humanities and social sciences, the concept has only recently been modified with the adjective "monstrous" to highlight a special case of the Other that plays an important role in the formation of human subjectivity. In order to better understand the representational legacy of the monstrous Other, I explore some of the principal venues in which it has appeared in western literature, philosophy, folklore, and politics. Using a Foucauldian archaeological approach in my literature survey allows me to trace the tradition of the monstrous Other in such sources as medieval bestiaries, the wild man motif in folklore and popular culture, and the medicalization of intersexual embodiment. In all cases, the monstrous Other is a complex phenomenon with broad implications for the politics of subjectivity and the future of social and political justice. Moreover, the monstrous Other poses significant challenges for the ongoing tenability of normative notions of the human, including such primary human traits as sexuality and a gendered, "natural" embodiment. Given the complexities of the monstrous Other and the ways in which it both upholds and intervenes in normative human identities, no single theoretical approach is adequate to the task of examining its functioning. Instead, the project calls for an approach that blends the methodologies of (post)psychoanalytic and queer theory while retaining a critical awareness of both the representational nature of subjectivity and its material effects. By employing both strains of theory, I am able to "read" the monstrous Other as both a necessary condition of subjectivity and a model of intersubjectivity that could provide an alternative to the positivism and binarism of normative subjectivity. The texts that I examine here reveal the ways in which postmodern reconfigurations of the monstrous Other challenge the (hetero)normativity of human subjectivity and its hierarchical forms of differentiation. My reading of these texts locates the possibilities for a hybridized, cyborgian existence beyond the outermost limits of positivistic, western subjectivity. / Committee in charge: Ellen Rees, Chairperson, German and Scandinavian;
Daniel Wojcik, Member, English;
Jenifer Presto, Member, Comparative Literature;
Aletta Biersack, Outside Member, Anthropology
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Queer indigenous rhetorics: decolonizing the socio-symbolic order of Euro-American gender and sexual imaginariesAllsup, Andrew January 1900 (has links)
Master of Arts / Communication Studies / Timothy R. Steffensmeier / This thesis explores the rhetorical function of creative writing being written by queer/two-spirit identified indigenous authors. The rhetorical function being the way these stories politicize the various ways gender and sexuality were foundational tools of settler colonialism in de-tribalizing and assimilating indigenous folks. The literary perspective often elides politics in favor of deconstructing aspects of creative writing such as genre, syntax, and themes instead of the socio-political potential such works produce. The three works I examine all have something to teach rhetorical scholars about the need to politicize the socio-sexual and gendered imaginaries of settler colonialism in discourses of the founding fathers, manifest destiny, westward expansion, land purchase. statehood, American exceptionalism, democracy promotion, and many more. They fundamentally challenge rhetorics that posit static notions of American identity and/or purpose that represses the historical and ongoing genocide of indigenous culture and life. In this way, they intervene in the very notion of communicability itself within the socio-symbolic economy of settler colonialism and its attendant hetero-patriarchal gendered and sexual imaginaries.
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Researching FOSTA/SESTA and the Professional and Personal Impact on Sex WorkersNepomuceno, Rebecca January 2021 (has links)
No description available.
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Unruly: Essays from a Woman EvolvingBechtel, Abigail A. January 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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The Transformation of Silence into Storytelling: An Analysis of Meaning and Structure in Narratives About MastectomyGrande, Dana Maria-Lucia 26 January 2022 (has links)
No description available.
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THEY LIVE! Reclaiming `Monstrosity’ in Transgender Visual RepresentationVicieux, Mitch E. January 2021 (has links)
No description available.
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Transgender male patients and hereditary breast cancer risk: broaching difficult topics to reduce healthcare disparitiesColtri, Julia Anne 30 July 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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Applying An Intersectional Framework to the Experiences of Low-Income, First-Generation, Sexual Minority College StudentsGonzales, Sabrina Marie 19 November 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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