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Journal Article
GLQ (2007) 13 (2-3): 273–300.
Published: 01 June 2007
...Geeta Patel Duke University Press 2007 Time to Tell How to Tell the Proper Time? Finance and Cinema Geeta Patel In a real-time, single fifteen-second take shot with a still camera, a man walks slowly, the end of his stick feeling its way across slightly uneven earth, dotted...
Journal Article
GLQ (1995) 1 (4): 405–417.
Published: 01 October 1995
...: Commentaire du Dialogue de Placides et Timéo . Geneva: Librairie Droz, 1982 . DON’T ASK, DON’T TELL MURDEROUS PLOTS AND MEDIEVAL SECRETS Karma Lochrie “Instead of the question ‘What does secrecy cover...
Journal Article
GLQ (2009) 15 (4): 654–656.
Published: 01 October 2009
...-009 654 GLQ: A JOURNAL OF LESBIAN and GAY STUDIES Live to Tell Richard T. Rodríguez Queer Latino “Testimonio,” Keith Haring, and Juanito Xtravaganza: Hard Tails Arnaldo Cruz-Malavé New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007. xi + 227 pp...
Journal Article
GLQ (2007) 13 (2-3): 415–417.
Published: 01 June 2007
...). In this compelling account, gardening becomes a practice of willed countermemory. When their tropological condensations and displacements are deciphered, gardening memories tell the hidden truths of imperial world-making in the eighteenth century. Gardens are sites, images, and also ideological tools...
Journal Article
GLQ (2006) 12 (2): 344–346.
Published: 01 April 2006
... Press, 2004. xi + 213 pp. Tell the American people . . . that I am a devoted husband and father . . . that I go to the theater, ride horseback, have a comfortable home, a fine garden that I love  . . . just like any man.  — Henri Matisse A summary, standard view of American painting...
Journal Article
GLQ (2008) 14 (4): 509–535.
Published: 01 October 2008
.../practice, friendship/homosexuality), this essay attempts to articulate an affirmative content for celibacy. Reading Marianne Moore's last single volume of original work, Tell Me, Tell Me (1966), and Elizabeth Bishop's memoir of Moore, “Efforts of Affection” (1979), I elaborate a definition of celibate...
Journal Article
GLQ (2020) 26 (4): 673–700.
Published: 01 October 2020
... to state violence and projects of national belonging. They discuss (1) what the events in Chechnya tell us about visibility and invisibility as sites of queer liberation, in light of recent discussions in LGBT visibility politics; (2) what the episodes tell us about the epistemological value of queer...
Journal Article
GLQ (2013) 19 (4): 515–543.
Published: 01 October 2013
... about a boy's feelings for sport tells us considerably more than that about him. This article looks at the special role played by sport in what Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick once called “the war on effeminate boys” (1991). Following Sedgwick, the article considers how gendered ideas about sport and athleticism...
Journal Article
GLQ (2018) 24 (4): 421–444.
Published: 01 October 2018
... largely overlooked in the recent attention to ACT UP’s legacy. This article asks what the history of ACT UP’s needle exchange might tell us not only about the history of HIV/AIDS and public health but also about the ideals of health and recovery in defining the subjects, forms, and historiography of queer...
Journal Article
GLQ (2021) 27 (1): 39–59.
Published: 01 January 2021
... observances and more medicalized practices of sex reassignment, the article looks at how thirunangais consistently queer modern prescriptions of the relationship among political, private, and religious spheres. What can thirunangais tell us about those bodies, practices, and discourses that are seen...
Journal Article
GLQ (2022) 28 (4): 567–587.
Published: 01 October 2022
..., telling, and laboring waste are themselves critiques of how property orders earth, and they are ecological modes forged elsewhere. Through the analytics of flyness, becoming fill, and queer Black geometries of relationality, Betty shows us that living as and proximate to waste refracts fugitive...
Journal Article
GLQ (2023) 29 (2): 215–236.
Published: 01 April 2023
...Patrick Kindig This essay argues that Glenway Wescott — an American author widely read in the early twentieth century but virtually unknown to literary scholars today — poses a problem for many of the narratives we tell ourselves about both queer identity and modernist literary history. On the one...
Journal Article
GLQ (2024) 30 (2): 157–180.
Published: 01 April 2024
... of social marginalization, reveling in upsetting good taste for laughs. Traversing literary studies and popular culture, this essay tells the story of bitchy luminaries in three historical scenes: the tart wit of nineteenth-century satirists Jane Austen, George Gordon Byron, and Oscar Wilde; classic...
Journal Article
GLQ (2023) 29 (1): 109–128.
Published: 01 January 2023
...—of same-sex sexual behavior. Stephanie Clare, Patrick R. Grzanka, and Joanna Wuest argue that the 2019 GWAS marks a moment of both flux and continuity: a recognition of sexuality's complexity and contingency alongside a continued affective, ideological, and economic investment in biology's role in telling...
FIGURES
Journal Article
GLQ (2009) 15 (1): 131–151.
Published: 01 January 2009
... and others following the screening of The Gendercator at Outfest in Los Angeles. Rather than offer a personal account of the panel, a reading of the film, or analysis of the varying viewpoints and decisions made surrounding The Gendercator , I have relied on “blogosphere” and cyber world to tell this story...
Journal Article
GLQ (2009) 15 (3): 397–439.
Published: 01 June 2009
... mediating conflicts within multiracial modernity in South Africa's emergent public culture, and I analyze the work done by queer “minor characters” in novels by Nadine Gordimer and J. M. Coetzee. None to Accompany Me (1994), The House Gun (1998), and Disgrace (1999) all tell the story of white, middle-class...
Journal Article
GLQ (2010) 16 (4): 623–633.
Published: 01 October 2010
... in the Holy City ends up telling a more complicated story. Duke University Press 2010 Moving Image Review Is Queer Secular? Netalie Braun’s Gevald Thea Gold A recent symposium at the University of California, Berkeley, was organized around the question “Is critique secular?”1 Responding...
Journal Article
GLQ (2011) 17 (1): 135–143.
Published: 01 January 2011
...) recasts trafficking by defining it as a crime of labor exploitation (not prostitution) that can harm any person (not just women and girls). Despite this reframing, the melodramatic narrative used to tell the story of trafficking subverts the new laws by highlighting sexual danger, innocent women, and male...
Journal Article
GLQ (2011) 17 (4): 457–481.
Published: 01 October 2011
...Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick This essay, written in 1976–77, is concerned primarily with James Merrill's long poem “The Book of Ephraim,” which was published in 1976. The poem tells of many nights spent by Merrill and his partner, David Jackson, in communication with a spirit named Ephraim, whose messages...
Journal Article
GLQ (2014) 20 (1-2): 95–113.
Published: 01 April 2014
... at regional drive-ins across the US Midwest. I next analyze one paradigmatic film — Bloody Mama (1970) — to substantiate its cultural operations for a largely white, working-class viewership, and then consider what hixploitation tells us about the intimate relationships between nascent conservative...