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Published: 01 January 2023
Figure 1. Still from Tourmaline's Atlantic Is a Sea of Bones ( 2017 ). More
Journal Article
GLQ (2013) 19 (1): 128–130.
Published: 01 January 2013
... the most seem- ingly absurd historical doctrines and regarded human action as capable of pro- ducing meaningful power-­effects. This Foucault was no antihumanist. When he famously spoke of the pending erasure of man like a face in the sand at the edge of the sea, Foucault was simply signaling...
Journal Article
GLQ (2008) 14 (2-3): 383–402.
Published: 01 June 2008
..., as when several women attending a ball at Marysville, in Yuba County, persuaded a minister’s son from Boston to supplement their number by wearing a woman’s gown, shawl, and fan.19 Similarly, on a six-month sea journey to California, George Dornin, a future California politician...
Journal Article
GLQ (2008) 14 (2-3): 403–424.
Published: 01 June 2008
... and coexperienced in local and global sites. Through a queer, immigrant, transgender, and transnational Filipino (American) cultural logics and critique this essay foregrounds encounters with and translations of differently situated Filipino masculinities in ports and at sea, suggesting how specific embodied...
Journal Article
GLQ (2012) 18 (2-3): 325–346.
Published: 01 June 2012
...Vanessa Agard-Jones Saint-Pierre and Sainte-Anne sit on opposite shores—both territorially and symbolically—of Martinique, a French territory in the Caribbean Sea. During the nineteenth century, Saint-Pierre was known as the “Sodom” of the Antilles, as a cosmopolitan city where decadence...
Journal Article
GLQ (2008) 14 (2-3): 191–215.
Published: 01 June 2008
..., all ending in water. Turquoise, aquamarine, deep green, deep blue, ink blue, navy, blue-black cerulean water. . . . Water is the first thing in my memory. The sea sounded like a thousand secrets, all whispered at the same time. In the daytime it was indistinguishable to me from air...
Journal Article
GLQ (2009) 15 (3): 441–468.
Published: 01 June 2009
..., affectively nuanced, and above all produc- tively ambivalent accounts of kinship. Specifically, I analyze the formal strategies used to make strange and reconfigure kinship in three video autoethnographies by Jean Carlomusto (To Catch a Glimpse [1997] and Shatzi Is Dying [1999]) and Richard Fung (Sea...
Journal Article
GLQ (2023) 29 (1): 129–139.
Published: 01 January 2023
...Figure 1. Still from Tourmaline's Atlantic Is a Sea of Bones ( 2017 ). ...
FIGURES
Journal Article
GLQ (2025) 31 (2): 286–288.
Published: 01 April 2025
... opportunity but also, and always, its threat. The ambivalence of watery violence winds its way through four chapters, providing a consistent and situated keynote. After the introduction's readings of two poems—William Falconer's The Shipwreck (1762) and William Diaper's Nereides: Or Sea-Eclogues (1712...
Journal Article
GLQ (2015) 21 (2-3): 273–293.
Published: 01 June 2015
... Ecologies of Transgender Matter Jeanne Vaccaro Crochet Coral Reef (2005 – ) is a woolly exoskeleton of coralline geometries and sea critters made by a collective of hands joining animal and plastic fibers in hyperbolic shapes. The reef is a “testimony to the disappearing wonder of liv- ing reefs...
Journal Article
GLQ (2022) 28 (1): 145–147.
Published: 01 January 2022
..., or slowing, of dominant narratives within the field of settler colonial studies, as well as certain threads within Native studies, that bind blackness to a space of perpetual dis/placement: the oceanic, movement, the sea, unboundedness, the inattention to blackness and relations to land...
Journal Article
GLQ (2025) 31 (1): 176–179.
Published: 01 January 2025
... Sex in Ecology,” Pauline Doutreluinge and Anne Duk Hee Jordan investigate the “sexual habits of flatworms, sea slugs, and sea cucumbers from a queer perspective” (58). Elvia Wilk's “This Compost—Erotics of Rot” argues that the visual field itself is saturated in heteronormative ways of seeing...
Journal Article
GLQ (2008) 14 (4): 599–602.
Published: 01 October 2008
..., and political concerns of the present is a methodological feature of Martin’s scholarship both early and late, one that is on display in his second major intervention in the American canon, Hero, Captain, and Stranger: Male Friendship, Social Critique, and Literary Form in the Sea...
Journal Article
GLQ (2013) 19 (2): 261–263.
Published: 01 April 2013
..., Masculinities, and Glo- balization, Kale Bantigue Fajardo extends this scholarship by centering the sea and the politics of masculinity in globalization studies. He reminds us that ships transport 90 percent of the world’s commodities, that the Philippines contributes...
Journal Article
GLQ (2013) 19 (2): 264–266.
Published: 01 April 2013
..., Masculinities, and Glo- balization, Kale Bantigue Fajardo extends this scholarship by centering the sea and the politics of masculinity in globalization studies. He reminds us that ships transport 90 percent of the world’s commodities, that the Philippines contributes...
Journal Article
GLQ (2013) 19 (2): 267–269.
Published: 01 April 2013
...- balization, Kale Bantigue Fajardo extends this scholarship by centering the sea and the politics of masculinity in globalization studies. He reminds us that ships transport 90 percent of the world’s commodities, that the Philippines contributes the greatest proportion of workers...
Journal Article
GLQ (2013) 19 (2): 270–272.
Published: 01 April 2013
..., Masculinities, and Glo- balization, Kale Bantigue Fajardo extends this scholarship by centering the sea and the politics of masculinity in globalization studies. He reminds us that ships transport 90 percent of the world’s commodities, that the Philippines contributes...
Journal Article
GLQ (2013) 19 (2): 273–275.
Published: 01 April 2013
...- balization, Kale Bantigue Fajardo extends this scholarship by centering the sea and the politics of masculinity in globalization studies. He reminds us that ships transport 90 percent of the world’s commodities, that the Philippines contributes the greatest proportion of workers...
Journal Article
GLQ (2007) 13 (1): 1–31.
Published: 01 January 2007
... and reconfigured. This critical difference is figured through the novel’s dominant motif of Jim learning to swim in the Irish Sea, unlike Stephen Dedalus, who anxiously hovers Icarus-like between flight and fall, either soaring above and away from Ire- land and its institutions or falling into and being...
Journal Article
GLQ (2014) 20 (1-2): 115–140.
Published: 01 April 2014
... (Manila, Oakland, and at sea) in the context of Filipino seafaring (i.e., migrant labor in the global shipping industry) and Philippine neoliberal economic development plans at the end of the twentieth century and beginning of the twenty-­first. I evoke my crosscurrents framework 118 GLQ...