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humanistic discourse
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Journal Article
GLQ (2019) 25 (1): 67–72.
Published: 01 January 2019
... into the present, questioning the lack of memory and discourse on AIDS in contemporary US culture. Like Román, I insist on the importance of humanistic discourse on AIDS through embodied, cultural interventions. Moreover, I point to discursive backlash that humanistic discourse often solicits via a critique...
Journal Article
GLQ (2022) 28 (1): 145–147.
Published: 01 January 2022
... and sea—yet unbounded and ever shifting. Within this inability to be made known in white settler geographies and liberal humanist discourses, or what King describes as an “unpredictability [that] exceeds full knowability/mappability” (3), resides the meeting ground for blackness and indigeneity...
Journal Article
GLQ (2011) 17 (1): 85–88.
Published: 01 January 2011
... an astonishingly interdisciplinary engagement. Part of what Rubin has given social scientists (as well as ethnographically minded humanists) is a model of how to link discourse and representation to the domain of practice as enacted within the lived worlds of erotic communities that are marked by their own rituals...
Journal Article
GLQ (2000) 6 (1): 137–144.
Published: 01 January 2000
... those of politics.
This humanist veneer vibrates with recent gay and lesbian discourses
informed by the culture of personal rights.5 Such claims are attractive to those who
see in sexuality the perfect setting for human exposure to tolerance. In fact...
Journal Article
GLQ (2017) 23 (3): 391–418.
Published: 01 June 2017
... that this interdiction is what enables the ontology of the
human to have any intelligibility at all, and it is this primary interdiction that has
remained absent from humanist discourse. “White (Human) capacity, in advance
of the event of discrimination or oppression, is parasitic on Black incapacity. With-
out...
Journal Article
GLQ (2015) 21 (4): 561–584.
Published: 01 October 2015
... that the subject has a stable, self-derived identity, that people make deci-
sions based only on rational thought, and that the individual exists apart from and
in conflict with society, we also give up the humanist understanding of agency, a
word used within that discourse...
Journal Article
GLQ (2009) 15 (1): 153–169.
Published: 01 January 2009
..., “a biologist schooled
in those discourses, and a practitioner of the humanities and ethnographic social
sciences” (13), and later canine agility enthusiast, Haraway turns the tables on the
implicit biological basis for prejudice against domesticates as unnatural animals.
She...
Journal Article
GLQ (2003) 9 (1-2): 133–147.
Published: 01 April 2003
... rhetorical function in sex education literature.
Discourses of blindness and sexuality have much to gain from the strategic
employment of the repression trope. By contrasting itself with a repressive past, a
discourse can credibly offer itself up as a liberatory remedy...
Journal Article
GLQ (2024) 30 (2): 205–233.
Published: 01 April 2024
... as evidence frottage My work, rather than being a shining achievement in the relinquishment of humanism, is a process of attempting a confrontation or expulsion of my own (latent) humanist investments and failing more of the time. The disappointment is not trivial because it shows the endurance...
FIGURES
Journal Article
GLQ (2015) 21 (2-3): 209–248.
Published: 01 June 2015
...: THEORIZING QUEER InHUMANISMS 213
Fanon, Sylvia Wynter, and others, Jackson discusses how nineteenth-century
humane discourse understood “blackness as inferior to both ‘the human’ and ‘the
animal.’ ”21 Contemporary variations on this theme include Morrisey’s statement
that “the Chinese...
Journal Article
GLQ (2023) 29 (4): 507–510.
Published: 01 October 2023
... storytelling method of Kong's mentor Kenneth Plummer ( 1995 ), to whom this book is dedicated, Kong's approach is sympathetic and humanistic, offering clear accounts of how young men experience growing up gay in these diverging contexts. Kong shows how men dealing with similar personal dilemmas develop...
Journal Article
GLQ (2012) 18 (4): 565–594.
Published: 01 October 2012
...
of Puritan sympathy “as important for understanding the function of sympathy
and sentimentalism . . . as the contributions of Enlightenment philosophy.”8 Puri-
tan sympathy was distinguished by its sectarian scope as well as its discourse of
humiliation, designed to soften the hearts of those who...
Journal Article
GLQ (2023) 29 (3): 419–421.
Published: 01 June 2023
... (though perhaps always provisional) response: What forms of political coalition are possible when trans/queer identity isn't the ground for collective/communal belonging? What does a politic that refuses legibility as the ground for inclusion do? What does it mean to foster other-than-liberal-humanist...
Journal Article
GLQ (2021) 27 (1): 103–120.
Published: 01 January 2021
... Problems and Potentials Alexa Winstanley- Smith Mainstream contemporary discourses of political theology are frequently staged within philosophy as an exigency: Make a decision! Behold, a messiah! Behead the king in theory, at least! A modern political astrology, for which we presently have more...
Journal Article
GLQ (2017) 23 (4): 607–609.
Published: 01 October 2017
... villages’ ruins, scattered all over the
Israeli landscape. The book enacts, then, a set of alliances between cultural prod-
ucts whose common ground and urgency extend beyond their political stance and
onto their surprising formal languages. As such, it moves beyond the discourse on
representation...
Journal Article
GLQ (2020) 26 (1): 183–196.
Published: 01 January 2020
... discourse- centered model into complex territory allowing for more than the categories of sodomy and homosexuality. Halperin delineated a series GLQ 26:1 DOI 10.1215/10642684-7929229 © 2020 by Duke University Press 184 GLQ: A JOURNAL OF LESBIAN AND GAY STUDIES of discursive categories under an umbrella...
Journal Article
GLQ (1998) 4 (2): 213–230.
Published: 01 April 1998
... © 1998 by Duke University Press
214 GLQ: A JOURNAL OF LESBIAN AND GAY STUDIES
Bioethics, Medicine, and Culture
In the last quarter century, many philosophers and other humanist scholars who
have traditionally thought of what they do as assessing fundamental ideas con...
Journal Article
GLQ (2015) 21 (2-3): 321–341.
Published: 01 June 2015
... and
the human rights discourses that attach themselves to the term. I seek to detach
it from conservative “right to life” discourse as well as a liberal politics of inclu-
sivity, including the plea for societal recognition in the political agendas of some
LGBTQI and POC social movements. I wonder...
Journal Article
GLQ (2002) 8 (1-2): 101–137.
Published: 01 April 2002
.... These ventures perhaps mirror the solidarity tours of the 1980s to Nicaragua, for
example, or tours sold by organizations like Global Exchange that promote liberal
cross-cultural experiential “exchanges” based on liberal-humanist discourses.
42. See Michael Luongo, “Rome’s World Pride: Making...
Journal Article
GLQ (2009) 15 (1): 31–66.
Published: 01 January 2009
...
political mode.9 What is of importance to this study is that the dominant vision of
homophile politics conformed to a Cold War liberal paradigm, one that utilized the
discourse of humanist psychology, citizenship, and rights talk.10
Citizenship and Rights Talk
The language of human and civil...
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