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social practice
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Journal Article
GLQ (2018) 24 (1): 113–138.
Published: 01 January 2018
...Hentyle Yapp At the intersection of social practice art and queer failure discourse, performativity pulses with possibility. This article tracks this strong performative force that undergirds theorizations of queer failure, social success, and performance. The author examines Julie Tolentino’s...
Journal Article
GLQ (2021) 27 (4): 603–627.
Published: 01 October 2021
... with Pride puts forth a model of longevity that is personally and collectively grounded in black sexual difference and queer of color resistant social practices that trouble public health life expectancy discourses. Drawing on queer of color critique, black sexuality studies, and visual cultural studies...
Journal Article
GLQ (2013) 19 (2): 167–189.
Published: 01 April 2013
...-
cal relationship.”9
Inherent in the reordering projects of colonial settlers was the establish-
ment of “proper” sexual/social relationships, coded as heteronormativity, which
Cathy Cohen has defined as “both localized practices and those centralized insti...
Journal Article
GLQ (2013) 19 (3): 341–379.
Published: 01 June 2013
... or practice of intertextuality. Rather it involves attempting to reconstruct something of the social world (mainly a part of “literary” Paris from the 1950s through the 1980s) in which such a work intervened, and attempting to understand the particular cultural concepts for understanding various ideologies...
Journal Article
GLQ (2020) 26 (2): 273–301.
Published: 01 April 2020
... of the desired status group, tastes that those members had in turn copied from others in similar social locations (189). Style of life was the name that Weber gave to this set of consumption practices that one adopted to look like an authentic member of a social group. Weber s analysis, and later work...
Journal Article
GLQ (2023) 29 (3): 353–385.
Published: 01 June 2023
... away from studies of sexual history in the North, this article reexamines the history of maricones in Lima, an understudied case in Latin American academic queer discourse. The Ball of La Laguna fits in a broader Latin American genealogy of marica social practices that encompassed cross-dressing...
FIGURES
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Journal Article
GLQ (2018) 24 (1): 55–83.
Published: 01 January 2018
... earlier than expected.
Rather, the bibliography suggests that the knowledge mobilization strategies of
social movements might continue to learn from a rich and growing archival record
of earlier LGBTQ media practices. The productive “unbelongings” of Gay Bibli-
ography users who...
Journal Article
GLQ (2015) 21 (2-3): 321–341.
Published: 01 June 2015
... species? And how might these practices of estrangement—queering—actually allow for a new ethical landscape? The essay explores the politics of science in relation to race and sex in historical context. Fantasies about the plasticity of life in speculative thought must consider the histories of social...
Journal Article
GLQ (2012) 18 (1): 107–125.
Published: 01 January 2012
..., through which unpredictable constellations of desire, knowledge, and practice become concretized into limited models of sexual identity, is bound up in the way capital produces the subjects accommodated to its own needs. Thus “queer value” sutures together two domains too often understood to operate...
Journal Article
GLQ (2021) 27 (1): 61–84.
Published: 01 January 2021
... counterpublics that they produced were uncannily facilitated by mediumship social networks. Through these practices of monarchic veneration, sarimbavy medium-activists implicitly challenged Western expectations that queer social movements must emerge through the subversion of social norms and secular, liberal...
Journal Article
GLQ (2009) 15 (1): 97–130.
Published: 01 January 2009
... classification of a person as a male or a female
has practical consequences, as one’s gender identification may also be used to
delineate social rights and opportunities. For example, it can determine to whom
individuals can get married, how much they pay for insurance, and which bath...
Journal Article
GLQ (2022) 28 (2): 165–184.
Published: 01 April 2022
... understanding of corrections, so that its applicability extends outside the prison or the jail and into the society imprisoned by similar logics: ones that “correct” deviance through coercive and violent practices. The author joins a queer critique of corrections with one of gentrification, the practice...
Journal Article
GLQ (2018) 24 (2-3): 343–365.
Published: 01 June 2018
... theorization of the black ecstatic attends specifically to the interrelation of political terror, social abjection, and aesthetic abstraction in contemporary black queer cultural production. As an affective and aesthetic practice, the black ecstatic eschews both the heroism of black pasts and the promise...
Journal Article
GLQ (2020) 26 (3): 503–527.
Published: 01 June 2020
..., industrial, and customary sociality produce queer forms of what I call biofinancial personhood. As other anthropologists have argued, inflecting norms can destabilize them toward progressive ends (Mahmood 2005; Wilder 2015); such practices are potentially just as politically fecund as the antinomy...
Journal Article
GLQ (2015) 21 (4): 635–666.
Published: 01 October 2015
... of social science research that has investigated the role of religion and “spirituality” in queer people's everyday lives, I explore how the experience of a divine presence informs queer practices of self-formation and how religious faith becomes implicated in marginalized world-making projects. Drawing...
Journal Article
GLQ (2011) 17 (2-3): 309–329.
Published: 01 June 2011
...Whitney Davis The essay presents a model of “queer family romance” (adapted from Freud's concept of family romance) in historical practices of collecting visual culture in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Though queer collections of visual culture and queer family romance are independent...
Journal Article
GLQ (2018) 24 (4): 399–419.
Published: 01 October 2018
...Nadja Millner-Larsen; Gavin Butt Abstract Ideas and practices of “the commons” have been urgently explored in recent years in attempts to forge alternatives to global capitalism and its privatizing enclosures of social life. Contemporary queer energies have been directed to commons-forming...
Journal Article
GLQ (2020) 26 (3): 377–403.
Published: 01 June 2020
... occupied within legal, social, and economic terms here, does not (only) refer to the constituted individual who lives or experiences a gendered and sexed position and location but, rather, refers to the ritual process itself that comes to produce a range of positions, scenes, desires, practices intensities...
Journal Article
GLQ (2013) 19 (4): 465–485.
Published: 01 October 2013
..., her multiyear Amber Doll Project (2006 – 8) in which she daily collaborated with a life-size sex doll (a RealDoll) made in her own image. Hawk Swanson often stages her work for social media, and she has an online presence that has received millions of viewers. With this practice, she exposes herself...
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...
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