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Journal Article
GLQ (2016) 22 (4): 645–648.
Published: 01 October 2016
...Helmut Puff Seeing Sodomy in the Middle Ages . Mills Robert . Chicago : University of Chicago Press , 2015 . xiv + 398 pp . © 2016 by Duke University Press 2016 References Bray Alan . 2003 . The Friend . Chicago : University of Chicago Press . Camille...
Journal Article
GLQ (2008) 14 (2-3): 434–436.
Published: 01 June 2008
... chapter deals
directly with the politics of queer sexual lives (though many do), the project as a
whole is a notable contribution to the study of the queerness of culture, exilic and
otherwise.
Note
1. See Eithne Luibhéid, Entry Denied: Controlling Sexuality at the Border (Minneapo-
lis...
Journal Article
GLQ (2021) 27 (2): 201–231.
Published: 01 April 2021
...AJ Ripley This article explores how Jill Soloway uses mirror imagery in the series Transparent to facilitate their version of the female gaze, particularly the tenet of feeling-seeing . By doing so, this article aims to assist ongoing efforts in both transgender studies and media studies research...
Journal Article
GLQ (2022) 28 (2): 277–288.
Published: 01 April 2022
... identity, affinity, and community across prison walls. Reflecting on the authors’ friendship and the possibilities for mutual recognition that queer kinship has afforded them—even across the distance and disposability produced by incarceration—these letters reveal transness as a practice of seeing. Through...
Journal Article
GLQ (2007) 13 (1): 63–91.
Published: 01 January 2007
...Sam See Duke University Press 2006 RICHARD BARNFIELD AND
THE LIMITS OF HOMOEROTIC
LITERARY HISTORY
Sam See
What mea-sure can there be for love
— Virgil, second eclogue
Power as a pure limit set on freedom is, at least in our society,
the general form of its acceptability...
Journal Article
GLQ (2011) 17 (1): 97–105.
Published: 01 January 2011
... of the familiar and thereby position us, in a sense, to anachronize the present, to see our own ways of seeing the world as contingent, curious, and changeable. Duke University Press 2010 Thinking Sex with
an Androgyne
Joanne Meyerowitz
More than twenty-five years ago, when I first read Gayle...
Image
in Writing “INFINITYLOOPS”: Sericultural Trans-Migrations through Literature and Cultural Theory
> GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies
Published: 01 October 2023
Figure 1. Images of the poem strand at different scales. Courtesy of the artist. For additional images, including of the nano-printed silk film, see Jenbervin.com .
More
Journal Article
GLQ (2014) 20 (4): 391–406.
Published: 01 October 2014
..., the cum and shit — and in doing so push at the cartographic and historiographical edges of food studies, critical race theory, and sexuality studies. As scholars engaged in thinking about consumption in and through these frameworks, we and the authors in these two issues see many points of convergence...
Journal Article
GLQ (2015) 21 (1): 65–93.
Published: 01 January 2015
... of unacknowledged citation that we might usually see in literary works as intertextual jouissance, or in extreme cases as plagiarism, are best understood here as cannibal practice—the digestive making of two into one—by Wilder and her collaborator and daughter, Rose Wilder Lane. Zitkala-Ša's autobiographical essays...
Journal Article
GLQ (2016) 22 (1): 55–80.
Published: 01 January 2016
... and femme agency remains consistent. Yet the ways in which time, place, gender, and race meet are not straightforward. Through the various iterations of the calendar, we can see that these contemporary performances of femme-ness are part of a particular affective attachment to the 1950s. This essay...
Journal Article
GLQ (2011) 17 (1): 119–124.
Published: 01 January 2011
...Neville Hoad This article investigates Gayle Rubin's 1984 article “Thinking Sex: Notes for a Radical Theory of the Politics of Sexuality” as a piece of “traveling theory.” It takes a key concept, “hierarchies of sexual value,” and its representation in a famous graphic, “the charmed circle,” to see...
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 (2011) 17 (4): 620–623.
Published: 01 October 2011
.... The archivists, the filmmaker Julia Wallace, and the poet-writer-scholar Alexis Pauline Gumbs, collect stories as they travel across America in a mobile home, committing to what Nora sees as “the obsession with the archive that marks our age.” © 2011 by Duke University Press 2011 Moving Image Review...
Journal Article
GLQ (2011) 17 (4): 624–628.
Published: 01 October 2011
... of view. Alexandra Juhasz revisits their archive of process with a different simultaneous look: hoping to see what other generations can learn from records of feminist and lesbian process. © 2011 by Duke University Press 2011 Moving Image Review
Lesbian Archives
For this Moving Image Review we...
Journal Article
GLQ (2011) 17 (4): 665–676.
Published: 01 October 2011
... pleasures of watching and seeing queers on TV, and believing that it matters. Gay TV and Straight America Becker Ron New Brunswick, NJ : Rutgers University Press , 2006 . 000 + 296 pp Lesbians in Television and Text after the New Millennium Beirne Rebecca New York : Palgrave Macmillan...
Journal Article
GLQ (2012) 18 (2-3): 277–295.
Published: 01 June 2012
... in the Caribbean region run by and for self-identified gay men—to see how these men have used the erotic to survive. © 2012 by Duke University Press 2012 Chatting Back an Epidemic
Caribbean Gay Men, HIV/AIDS,
and the Uses of Erotic Subjectivity
Lyndon K. Gill
In the popular imagination...
Journal Article
GLQ (2008) 14 (4): 481–507.
Published: 01 October 2008
...” of lesbian and gay identities, individual female subjectivities are much more complex and layered. In Padang, West Sumatra tombois and their girlfriends, who identify themselves as masculine and feminine, access global circuits of queer knowledge and see themselves as part of a global community, but maintain...
Journal Article
GLQ (2008) 14 (4): 509–535.
Published: 01 October 2008
.... Rather than see the celibate as desiring something lacking or as embodying a disjunction between desire and practice, Moore's volume posits a coextensive desire and practice, suggesting a theory of celibate desire. Duke University Press 2008 “The Viper’s Traffic-knot”
Celibacy and Queerness...
Journal Article
GLQ (2019) 25 (1): 29–32.
Published: 01 January 2019
... a precarious field and secure it a future, and they can manifest as suspicion or concern over how later generations enter the field. I look elsewhere in Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick’s oeuvre to see how she provides ways to both understand and disrupt this generational logic, and thus open up possibilities...
Journal Article
GLQ (2019) 25 (4): 545–567.
Published: 01 October 2019
... to slow jams, examining how they use slowness to theorize and take pleasure in the party as black queer women. As the party gets more popular, however, the music gets faster, the crowd gets whiter, and black queer women’s deployments of slowness shift as they see the party capitulating to a model...
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