Skip Nav Destination
Close Modal
Search Results for
academic
Update search
Filter
- Title
- Authors
- Author Affiliations
- Full Text
- Abstract
- Keywords
- DOI
- ISBN
- eISBN
- ISSN
- EISSN
- Issue
- Volume
- References
Filter
- Title
- Authors
- Author Affiliations
- Full Text
- Abstract
- Keywords
- DOI
- ISBN
- eISBN
- ISSN
- EISSN
- Issue
- Volume
- References
Filter
- Title
- Authors
- Author Affiliations
- Full Text
- Abstract
- Keywords
- DOI
- ISBN
- eISBN
- ISSN
- EISSN
- Issue
- Volume
- References
Filter
- Title
- Authors
- Author Affiliations
- Full Text
- Abstract
- Keywords
- DOI
- ISBN
- eISBN
- ISSN
- EISSN
- Issue
- Volume
- References
Filter
- Title
- Authors
- Author Affiliations
- Full Text
- Abstract
- Keywords
- DOI
- ISBN
- eISBN
- ISSN
- EISSN
- Issue
- Volume
- References
Filter
- Title
- Authors
- Author Affiliations
- Full Text
- Abstract
- Keywords
- DOI
- ISBN
- eISBN
- ISSN
- EISSN
- Issue
- Volume
- References
NARROW
Format
Subjects
Journal
Article Type
Date
Availability
1-20 of 517 Search Results for
academic
Follow your search
Access your saved searches in your account
Would you like to receive an alert when new items match your search?
1
Sort by
Journal Article
GLQ (2004) 10 (2): 304–308.
Published: 01 April 2004
... published my first academic article, “My
Words to Victor Frankenstein above the Village of Chamounix: Performing Trans-
gender Rage,” an autobiographically inflected performance piece drawn from my
experiences of coming out as a transsexual.1 The article addressed four distinct...
Journal Article
GLQ (1999) 5 (1): 63–72.
Published: 01 January 1999
Journal Article
GLQ (2009) 15 (4): 624–625.
Published: 01 October 2009
... school as the transitional space between student and teacher,
between disciplines, and among professional practices. Next, we saw a common
process that might be called the finding of voice, evident in negotiations between
the vernacular of graduates’ own experiences and the demands of academically...
Journal Article
GLQ (2009) 15 (2): 199–224.
Published: 01 April 2009
... in particular the relationship of academic feminism and intersex advocacy; proof of and reasons for success in intersex medical advocacy; and intersex identity politics, especially with regard to the nature-nurture debate and terminology ( intersex versus hermaphroditism versus disorders of sex development...
Journal Article
GLQ (2019) 25 (1): 7–10.
Published: 01 January 2019
...David M. Halperin One of the cofounders of GLQ reflects on the origins of the journal, its initial goals, its successes and failures in achieving them, and their continued relevance to queer studies today. GLQ sought to tread a line between the need to achieve academic legitimation for queer...
Journal Article
GLQ (2010) 16 (3): 451–464.
Published: 01 June 2010
... and queer theory has become gender exclusive: homosexuality has come to mean, in common academic usage, male homosexuality; gay history is gay male history; queer sexualities are all-too-often queer male sexualities. Women are not given equal weight to men, and the histories of male and female sexualities...
Journal Article
GLQ (2011) 17 (1): 125–134.
Published: 01 January 2011
... and academic formation. As the title suggests, they are their own kind of sexual healing. Sexual Healing
Lisa Henderson
September 2009, U.S. These are tough times. The thrill of Obama’s election
hangs in the balance, the Iraq and Afghanistan wars carry on, and political bad
faith swells against so...
Journal Article
GLQ (2011) 17 (1): 145–153.
Published: 01 January 2011
...Lisa Duggan Gayle Rubin's reputation as a star academic and public intellectual has been based on her cool brilliance. But her public and professional reception has also been marked, positively and negatively, by the ambivalence generated by strong feeling. This article describes Rubin's affective...
Journal Article
GLQ (2011) 17 (2-3): 365–369.
Published: 01 June 2011
... reads the inscriptions of her own desire to be read the way he read Barthes. The essay suggests the queer bond between two academics of the same generation whose sexuality informs their work in very different ways. Critical Bonds
Call for Papers
In Memoriam Barbara Johnson
D. A. Miller on Barbara...
Journal Article
GLQ (2011) 17 (4): 487–496.
Published: 01 October 2011
...Michael Moon Lesbian and gay studies was still in its academic infancy when Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick wrote her long-unpublished essay on James Merrill's long poem “The Book of Ephraim” (1976). Sedgwick's essay focuses on what she sees as the poem's fascinated concern with the administration...
Journal Article
GLQ (2012) 18 (1): 159–160.
Published: 01 January 2012
... the festival network and suggest that we should also examine our own position as film scholars writing about queer Israeli cinema to a global academic community. © 2011 by Duke University Press 2011 Moving Image Review
QUEER MEDIA LOCI:
Israel/Palestine
We are pleased to follow our inaugural...
Journal Article
GLQ (2013) 19 (3): 383–403.
Published: 01 June 2013
... (2007, 2009 – 2010), and Zethu Matebeni, cowriter, codirector, and coproducer of Breaking Out of the Box (2011), a documentary that has screened on the film festival, academic, and activist circuits. Shifting focus away from the predominantly European-American context of most media scholarship...
Journal Article
GLQ (2009) 15 (2): 249–260.
Published: 01 April 2009
... is an academic who approaches her research on both transgender and intersex from a social science perspective, informed by queer and feminist theorizing. Although the prior work of the four authors clearly indicates a shared commitment to change the situation of intersex people, the mechanisms for such changes...
Journal Article
GLQ (2009) 15 (2): 267–284.
Published: 01 April 2009
...Vernon A. Rosario The intersex movement in the past two decades has challenged social, medical, and academic conceptions of sex and gender. In the same period, genetic studies of sex determination, largely derived from research on intersex conditions, has revolutionized long-standing theories...
Journal Article
GLQ (2010) 16 (1-2): 41–68.
Published: 01 April 2010
...-opted into providing Native commodities for consumption in the multicultural academic-industrial complex. The subjectless critique of queer theory can assist Native studies in critically interrogating how it could unwittingly re-create colonial hierarchies even within projects of decolonization...
Journal Article
GLQ (2022) 28 (4): 589–616.
Published: 01 October 2022
... Black queer theory is being produced in Brazil, to avoid crediting privileged (in this case, white mestizo) actors within the Brazilian academy for the intellectual production of Black queer theorists who generally do not have access to the transnational academic sphere. saunderstanya@gmail.com...
FIGURES
| View All (6)
Journal Article
GLQ (2018) 24 (2-3): 189–212.
Published: 01 June 2018
... reading within the wider social field from which it emerges. To do so, I turn to Samuel Delany’s experimental AIDS writing. Delany rewrites academic discourses of deconstruction, forcing critics to confront their affective and historical implication in the AIDS crisis. He uses queer experimental...
Journal Article
GLQ (2020) 26 (3): 363–376.
Published: 01 June 2020
.... It speculates on the customary’s reworking of temporality and what that reworking does to historical time and the problems and possibilities in reading the colonial archive in the search for a useable past for both lived African sexual and gendered experience and the academic study of it. The customary is seen...
Journal Article
GLQ (2002) 8 (1-2): 227–240.
Published: 01 April 2002
...John Champagne Academic Outlaws: Queer Theory and Cultural Studies in the Academy William G. Tierney Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Sage, 1997. xxiii + 186 pp.$64.95 cloth, $32.95 paper Poisoned Ivy: Lesbian and Gay Academics Confronting Homophobia Toni A. H. McNaron Philadelphia: Temple...
Journal Article
GLQ (1995) 2 (3): 179–191.
Published: 01 June 1995
...-
tual engagement and support of other scholars in the field of lesbian and gay
or queer studies. And for both academic and public intellectuals, isolation
leads to material as well as to cultural impoverishment and decline.
Academic and intellectual isolation (though not political isolation...
1