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The Periscope and The LabyrinthSwain, James January 2009 (has links)
The Periscope and the Labyrinth is an investigation into cultural identity,
consciousness and landscape rooted in the body’s experience of the city.
The modern phenomenon of flânerie is used as a means of examining vari-
ous sites of particular interest to queer mythology within New York and
Rome via the device of personal ‘derives’ or drifts inspired by a legacy of
city writing, whereby the particular relationship between identity, place and
space becomes clear. The flâneur has been essential to previous writings on
the topic of ‘queer space’ in that he is one who ‘relies on the ambiguities
of the modern city, and the uncertainties that linger in the fleeting experi-
ence of a backward glance.’ It is these very ambiguities that associate the
flâneur as the quintessential ‘cruiser.’ Yet the potential of the flâneur lies
in his ‘alchemical’ abilities. A contemporary interpretation of alchemy is
used through out the thesis as both a psychological method for understand-
ing the ‘union of opposites’, as well as a reading of the parallels between
individual and collective identity as they relate to particular sites. These
archetypal opposites are typified by the Greek gods Apollo and Dionysus;
the duality of their characteristics exemplified by the metaphor of the title
in which the conscience of the ‘Apollonian eye’ of the flâneur within the
labyrinth of the Dionysian underworld’ describing the alchemical
teachings which underpin this work.
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Becoming queer : from rhetoric to rhizomes and toward a politics of processLoewen Walker, Rachel S 22 September 2008 (has links)
Being is Becoming: selves are constantly changing, always in process, and never able to arrive at a coherent identity. Contemporary discussions of sexual and gendered identity have replaced the view that heterosexuality is an innate or natural category with views that sexuality is fluid and multiple. Consequently, desire is a creative force in the engendering of sexual subjectivities and new social communities, rather than a negative force that limits gendered development to a heteronormative model. With this in mind, this thesis has three interrelated, yet distinct aims. The first is to explore the concept of sexual subjectivity, asking questions such as do human beings have a knowable sexual identity? And how have Freudian psychoanalysis and Foucauldian poststructuralism contributed to our contemporary understandings of sexuality? My second aim is to clarify Deleuze and Guattaris philosophy of becoming, using the metaphor of the rhizome to link feminist philosophy, queer theory, and subsequent deconstructions of sexual identity. My third project is to identify what is meant by becoming queer, including how it challenges the authority of heteronormative institutions. In order to demonstrate the potentialities of becoming queer, I conduct a case study of Shawna Dempsey and Lorri Millans performance project Lesbian National Parks and Services. Through their performance art practice, Dempsey and Millan challenge dominant narratives of heterosexuality and fixed gender identity, offering a starting point for discussions of the reciprocity between artistic practice, social movements, and academic discourse. In addition, they demonstrate how queer becomings participate in an ethics of accountability, that is, as materially-situated, localized subjectivities they are able to alter and transform their environments.
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"Jamen jag då" : Heterosexualitet och tvåsamhet i Gun-Britt Sundströms MakenAhlner, Thea January 2011 (has links)
This essay is investigating heterosexuality in Gun-Britt Sundströms Maken. With help from the queer theories of formost Judith Butler, but also to some extent the ideas of Michel Foucault, I have tried to answer the question of which norms are becoming clear and which are being broken in the novel. I have also looked at a few of Gayle Rubin’s opposites in her sexual value hierarchy. Some of the norms that are brought to light in the essay revolves around faithfulness, lust towards the ”right” person and for the ”right” reasons. I have shown that even though many of the norm’s that are being articulated in the novel are being crossed still they doesn’t lose their valaue and influence.
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Queere Tracks : subversive Strategien in der Rock- und Popmusik /Leibetseder, Doris. January 2010 (has links)
Zugl.: Diss.
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Radical possibilities : anti-racist performance / practice in 900 GallonsGurgel, Nicole Leigh 28 June 2012 (has links)
This thesis centers around my autoethnographic performance 900 Gallons; it explores the importance of re-membering oppressive family histories and white supremacist legacies in particular. First, I explore the theoretical frame that whiteness studies offers this project, considering the ways in which performance can disrupt hegemonic whiteness, with specific attention to white invisibility, cultural appropriation and supremacy. Next, I discuss the project’s primary methodologies: performance autoethnography and queer genealogy. Performance autoethnography, I argue, illuminates the discursive potential of privileging both critical distance and critical intimacy. Queer genealogy foregrounds the importance of historiographical descent as well as dissent. Together, these methods reveal the resistant possibilities of embodied scholarship. Finally, I investigate the risks and possibilities of re-performing oppressive histories, arguing that when these narratives are performed with a critical difference, they can create radical possibilities. The Appendix includes the complete 900 Gallons script, as it was performed at the University of Texas on November 3 and 4, 2011. / text
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Exceptional feelings, ordinary violencePascual, Michael Aaron 14 January 2014 (has links)
Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act (2009) and the work of LGBTQ activists in the U.S. I argue that the act consolidates the U.S. nation-state’s monopoly on violence by relying on criminal law as a cognitive apparatus and stifles the work of LGBTQ activists and cultural labor to expand or challenge sensibilities regarding violence. I look to the work of trans and queer activists and how they frame “minor” hate crime cases in relationship to space and systems of criminalization. The activism surrounding Sakia Gunn, the New Jersey 7, Chrissy Lee Polis, and CeCe McDonald broaden theoretical account of violence provided by hate crime protections by attending to affect, the body, and space, and make political demands that move beyond criminal law. This thesis attempts to follow those trajectories and provide alternative grammars and methods for addressing violence. / text
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To(o) queer the Chican@s : disrupting genders in the post-borderlandsCuevas, Teresa Jackqueline 01 February 2012 (has links)
“To(o) Queer the Chican@s: Disrupting Genders in the Post-Borderlands" examines
representations of non-normative genders and sexualities in Mexican American literature. / text
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Queer Muslim Women: On Diaspora, Islam, and IdentityAlsayyad, Ayisha January 2008 (has links)
In this thesis, women who identify as both queer and Muslims living in North America tell their stories of family, religion, and home. These immigrants and first generation Westerners describe their identities in an effort to acknowledge the difficulties that can accompany being both Muslim in the diaspora in a time when religious and political tensions are aimed at the Middle East. While each has a unique life history, the participants represented here challenge assumptions about the "inherent" contradictions that are assume to exist for those who are both Muslim and queer due to constructions of Islam as sexually and socially conservative. They also offer insight into the usefulness of the current international LGBTQ movement for Muslim lesbians. Using the in-depth interviews from eight women, as well as several first-person published narratives, the aim of this research is to explore how each of these individuals to experience their identities in the diaspora.
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Politics of minority interest / politics of difference and antinormativity : "positive change" and building "queer-friendly" schools in Vancouver, British ColumbiaHansman, Glen Philip 11 1900 (has links)
This project examines “positive change” with regard to queer/LGBTTITQetc.
education-activism in Vancouver, British Columbia directed at building what has been
described as “queer-friendly schools” through the development and implementation of
policy, as well as activist work connected to those efforts. I employ elements of
autoethnography and participatory research by documenting and analyzing my education-activist
work in this context and that of others with whom I have done this work. I situate
this project within the broader context of the education system and queer/LGBTTITQetc.
education-activist efforts in British Columbia.
In the process, I problematize what is meant by or capable of activism and
“positive change.” As demonstrated in the literature review, various understandings of
sexuality, gender, activism, educational leadership, and “positive change” are available to
inform queer/LGBTTITQetc. education-activism. This thesis examines how these
understandings sit in tension with the practicalities, limitations, and contradictions of
activist engagement at the school district level of a complex, politicized public school
system.
My engagement with the literature, documentation of the practical work, and
exploration of a number of guiding questions with the project’s participants comprise the
bulk of this project.
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”Horan, knarkaren och fettots fortsättning…” : En queerfeministisk analys av de normbrytande personligheterna i romanen EldInez, Haider January 2014 (has links)
Engelfors Trilogy is a three-part fantasy novel consisting of Circle, Fire and The key, written by Mats Strandberg and Sara Bergmark Elfgrens. Circle was nominated for the August Prize award 2011, which is a literary prize awarded each year. The book has also been translated into 25 different languages. Fire came out in August 2013 and is the part of the novel that I will concentrate on in these theses. What I will do in this paper is a queer feminist analysis of the novel's main characters in the book Fire. A similar analysis has been done of the first novel Circle, with few differences, by Anna Bergengren 2012. The purpose of this analysis is to with the help of the major analytical concepts of queer as sexuality, gender, class and ethnicity find standards and standard beliefs in the text that creates the various personalities. By means of the close reading and main character portraits find current standards. The results show a wide range of standards creation in terms of sexuality, gender, class and ethnicity, but also standard changes. These creations of standards express themselves clearly and emphasize gender stereotypes. For example of how a normal woman should be and behave in order to be considered feminine, such as that a woman should dress feminine and wear make-up. A sexual standard in the form of heterosexuality is the only acceptable sexual norm, and different standards depictions in the form of class and ethnicity for the sake of the advantages and disadvantages in society. These standards beliefs are clearly depicted in the story while they criticized and thereby changing.
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