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domesticity
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Journal Article
GLQ (2024) 30 (4): 409–426.
Published: 01 October 2024
...Ariel M. Dela Cruz This article examines the site of the home in Baby Ruth Villarama's 2016 documentary Sunday Beauty Queen to better understand how tomboy migrant domestic workers in Hong Kong mess up and queer domesticity. By focusing on the appearances in the film of the home of Leo Selomenio...
FIGURES
Journal Article
GLQ (2024) 30 (4): 361–368.
Published: 01 October 2024
...Lauren Jae Gutterman; Martin F. Manalansan, IV; Stephen Vider This essay serves as the introduction to a special issue of GLQ , “Queering the Domestic.” The essay both summarizes the interventions of the essays in this special issue and introduces readers to the concept of queer domesticity...
Journal Article
GLQ (2024) 30 (4): 485–503.
Published: 01 October 2024
...René Esparza The reproduction of the American home hinges on a clear public/private distinction, wherein the private sphere is traditionally viewed as domestic — a space for interpersonal care and social reproduction, distinct from the abstract political culture of the public. Due to American legal...
FIGURES
Journal Article
GLQ (2024) 30 (4): 527–529.
Published: 01 October 2024
...—the domicile of the self. The trans domestic, specifically, is a condition of possibility for thinking queer sexuality and gender writ large. The cover of Michael Warner's foundational book Publics and Counterpublics (2002) is a slightly grainy 1962 photograph of five transvestites in someone's home, all...
Image
in “But on Sunday, They Are Free”: Tomboy Domesticity and Home Time in Sunday Beauty Queen
> GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies
Published: 01 October 2024
Figure 2. Selomenio and another unnamed tomboy domestic helper riding a bus after a pageant in Villarama's ( 2016 ) Sunday Beauty Queen . Selomenio receives a call notifying him of Acosta's termination.
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Journal Article
GLQ (2024) 30 (4): 369–389.
Published: 01 October 2024
...Rasel Ahmed; Efadul Huq This article expands the notion of queer domesticity from the vantage point of the global South. Drawing on autoethnography, ephemeral archives, and secondary sources, the authors examine Nanur Basha, the residence of a Bangladeshi queer activist and community mentor, which...
FIGURES
| View All (4)
Journal Article
GLQ (2024) 30 (4): 447–463.
Published: 01 October 2024
... demonstrates how transborder commuters negotiate white Euro‐American renditions of home and domesticity that emphasize privacy and fixity as the “proper” ideal vis‐à‐vis the home. It argues that transborder commuters enact several life‐making or queer tactics — practices not necessarily enacted by LGBTQ...
Journal Article
GLQ (2012) 18 (1): 71–85.
Published: 01 January 2012
...Lisa Marie Cacho Carla Trujillo's novel What Night Brings , set in the mid- to late 1960s, critiques Chicano cultural nationalist narratives for too easily entangling racial emasculation with economic exclusion and domestic violence. Considering how this critique of male violence can also...
Journal Article
GLQ (2024) 30 (4): 391–408.
Published: 01 October 2024
... marriage as the organizing institution of care work under capitalism, but the monstrous menáge à trois revealed at the novel's end suggests only the multiplication of domestic duty and the expansion of marriage and the private home rather than their abolition. Both in its sexual utopianism and its calls...
FIGURES
Journal Article
GLQ (2020) 26 (2): 273–301.
Published: 01 April 2020
... in 1924. Even at the apex of suburbanization in the 1960s, many people refused to comply with the demand for suburban domesticity, staying in the city, joining countercultural groups, or adopting what came to be called alternative lifestyles. But in that act of dissent, urban planners, real estate...
Journal Article
GLQ (2024) 30 (4): 519–520.
Published: 01 October 2024
...Lauren Jae Gutterman; Martin F. Manalansan IV; Stephen Vider This forum brings together five scholars who were all asked to reflect on the following questions: How does the space of home figure in your work? How does thinking about the queering of domesticity help us to understand home better...
Journal Article
GLQ (2024) 30 (4): 521–525.
Published: 01 October 2024
...Shoniqua Roach [email protected] Copyright © 2024 by Duke University Press 2024 Blackness queerness domesticity Black queer domesticity Black queer homemaking When I sat down to start my book Black Dwelling: Home-Making and Erotic Freedom in the summer of 2020...
Journal Article
GLQ (2024) 30 (4): 531–535.
Published: 01 October 2024
...Jina B. Kim [email protected] Copyright © 2024 by Duke University Press 2024 queering domesticity crip disability crip of color The introduction to the 1981 anthology This Bridge Called My Back , coauthored by Chicana lesbian feminists Cherríe Moraga and Gloria Anzaldúa...
Journal Article
GLQ (2024) 30 (2): 260–262.
Published: 01 April 2024
...Samuel Rutherford [email protected] The Queerness of Home: Gender, Sexuality, and the Politics of Domesticity after World War II . Stephen Vider . Chicago : University of Chicago Press , 2021 . iv + 300 pp. Copyright © 2024 by Duke University Press 2024...
Journal Article
GLQ (2007) 13 (2-3): 249–272.
Published: 01 June 2007
... to look away from the
time as it manifests on-screen: a lush, painstaking reproduction of a distinctly
cinematic 1957. Inspired by Douglas Sirk’s later Hollywood work, Haynes’s film
restores the machinery of those midcentury domestic melodramas in lavish detail,
from its quaintly restrained...
Journal Article
GLQ (2011) 17 (1): 193–204.
Published: 01 January 2011
... in late capitalism” (71). As brown bodies from the
global South move north to take up employment as domestic labor, in agricultural
sectors, and in service industries, white bodies in the global North move south in
search of leisure and pleasure. In the process, they expand...
Journal Article
GLQ (2009) 15 (3): 441–468.
Published: 01 June 2009
... By
returning differently to family photographs and home movies, Carlomusto under-
scores the productive role of domestic media and storytelling as performative prac-
tices that conjoin gender, kinship, and ethnicity.
To Catch a Glimpse explores a particular family history...
Journal Article
GLQ (1999) 5 (3): 315–329.
Published: 01 June 1999
... not enhance her domestic role, and who
would not have dreamed of desiring a profession that would have taken her out of
her proper sphere.
Indeed, many sexologists of the era suggested that such interests were not
only unwomanly but also the inevitable hallmarks of the female...
Journal Article
GLQ (2007) 13 (1): 125–139.
Published: 01 January 2007
... account of life in the “domestic gulag” usefully illumi-
nates Foucault’s account of modern techniques of power, surveillance, and social
management. She explains how the fantasy of a replete domestic intimacy keeps
us in line with normative expectations of gender, sexual, and more...
Journal Article
GLQ (2024) 30 (4): 465–484.
Published: 01 October 2024
... condemned and divested from, and “only those configurations of home that were domesticated and functionally subservient to” the interests of capital were approved and sanctioned as housing (449). Family abolition demands a wholesale reimagination of how we design and build residential infrastructure...
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