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vogue
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Journal Article
GLQ (2006) 12 (3): 377–403.
Published: 01 June 2006
...Christopher Reed Duke University Press 2006 Design for (Queer) Living
Sexual Identity, Performance,
and Decor in British Vogue, 1922 – 1926
Christopher Reed
There is something queer about archives, places of paradigmatic institutional-
ity (careful filing systems, rows of desks...
Journal Article
GLQ (2005) 11 (3): 371–390.
Published: 01 June 2005
...: discarding her less-than-euphonious family name, McHarg,
and taking the fl oral, pretty surname of an ex-husband, whose name she had
refused when they married, she became Madge Garland. With the help of Dorothy
Todd, the editor of British Vogue and her lover for several years...
Journal Article
GLQ (2017) 23 (3): 289–326.
Published: 01 June 2017
... replaced Ira Hill with Baron Adolph de
Meyer as Vogue’s first paid staff photographer. However, scholars have not written
much about fashion photography’s central role in the history of capitalism and the
production of commercialized affect.1
This article brings together the history...
Journal Article
GLQ (2024) 30 (1): 141–144.
Published: 01 January 2024
..., interpretations (of bodies, of texts, of political situations)” (29). Among the Pasifika and Māori artists she addresses, Jones dedicates significant attention to the Tāmaki Makaurau (Auckland) collective FAFSWAG, whose performances intermix voguing with Indigenous gesturality, and whose members variously...
Journal Article
GLQ (2019) 25 (1): 169–177.
Published: 01 January 2019
..., David France, and the Netflix Marsha P. Johnson Documentary .” Teen Vogue , October 11 . www.teenvogue.com/story/reina-gossett-marsha-p-johnson-op-ed . Juhasz Alexandra . 1995 . AIDS TV: Identity, Community, and Alternative Video . Durham, NC : Duke University Press . Kelley...
Journal Article
GLQ (2019) 25 (1): 107–112.
Published: 01 January 2019
... at the Current Conjuncture .” GLQ 18 , nos. 2 – 3 : 217 – 18 . Allen Jafari . Forthcoming . There’s a Disco Ball between Us . Durham, NC : Duke University Press . Carlos Marjon . 2016 . “ Beyoncé’s Stylist Spills the Juice on the Fashion behind Lemonade .” Vogue , April 25...
Journal Article
GLQ (2006) 12 (3): 349–350.
Published: 01 June 2006
... images and artifacts — a 1927 Cecil Bea-
ton photograph in British Vogue, a female duet from the 1957 Broadway musical
West Side Story, an erotic drawing from the mid-1970s lesbian newsletter So’s Your
Old Lady, a collaboration between two graffiti artists in the 1980s — as a means
to launch...
Journal Article
GLQ (2023) 29 (3): 422–424.
Published: 01 June 2023
... the Board: The Glam Slam at the Nuyorican Poets Café,” focuses on the queering of the traditional poetry slam events the café is most famous for, which were enmeshed with the tradition of voguing balls in New York City. Jaime's documentation of this history, her analysis of the shared modalities between...
Journal Article
GLQ (2024) 30 (3): 343–346.
Published: 01 June 2024
... with “the boys” has meant conducting herself according to the codes of a more rugged masculinity. However, Tiffany also enjoys voguing in the ballroom and explicitly declares: “I consider myself a faggot,” or what Ross might mark as a “homo-sissy.” If we take Tiffany seriously as an insurgent sissy...
Journal Article
GLQ (2024) 30 (2): 255–259.
Published: 01 April 2024
...” to reconceptualize the history and future of Chicana women. In critical ways, cárdenas continues this critical impulse by disrupting the social and political critiques of algorithms in vogue over the past decade. She does this by showing how these critiques naturalize understandings of algorithms as only tools...
Journal Article
GLQ (2006) 12 (4): 517–542.
Published: 01 October 2006
... equivalent to fly-
ing — thus attracted a certain type of outgoing, risk-taking woman, as is evident in
some of the group portraits that convey something of their panache, their tendency
to swagger, their camaraderie (fig. 3). F. Tennyson Jesse, a journalist writing for
Vogue...
Journal Article
GLQ (1999) 5 (2): 173–197.
Published: 01 April 1999
...-
played an almost patriotic attraction to uniforms. . . . Cocteau and his milieu
were probably responsible in part for this vogue for sailors and the red pom-
pom. . . . In Paris, there were even meeting places for such special tastes: in
the dance halls of the rue de Lappe...
Journal Article
GLQ (2024) 30 (3): 291–315.
Published: 01 June 2024
..., an erotic show created for lesbian and bisexual women, trans people, and LGBT people and hosted by a nonbinary pleasure activist, somatic movement educator, and vogue dancer. The event was meant to create a safe and consensual erotic space; it also became educational. In an email beforehand as well...
Journal Article
GLQ (2016) 22 (2): 191–204.
Published: 01 April 2016
... (at least it seemed so) surrounded
by a crowd of whites, each of whom resembled fan
girls, or in the least, they was his crew. Stroking
him? Angels?
Yet at me, he was clearly, throwing shade —
Sulfur in the night —
I began to vogue in front of him, or at least to pose, Figure 2. Photograph...
Journal Article
GLQ (2024) 30 (2): 205–233.
Published: 01 April 2024
... that render examples of blackened speculative feeling in quotidian settings, in addition to queer sexuality, as flimsy or unsubstantiated. E. Patrick Johnson ( 2005 : 140) in his essay “Quare Studies” contends that “quare vernacular technologies” like throwing shade or vogueing index black GLBT people's...
FIGURES
Journal Article
GLQ (1999) 5 (1): 25–39.
Published: 01 January 1999
... for the gender
liminality of fa’afafine takes on a different cast in light of Butler’s essay on Paris Is
Burning. Butler argues that it is precisely the cultural heft of “family” and its related
terms that renders them liable to rearticulation in the voguing culture visited in Liv...
Journal Article
GLQ (2020) 26 (1): 183–196.
Published: 01 January 2020
... of something that has happened in the not- too- distant past in order to return back in time to reappropriate a former signi- fication no longer in vogue. Whether the sapphic has this valence in a given sociocultural period may always be an important question, and certainly the historiographical approach...
Journal Article
GLQ (2024) 30 (4): 485–503.
Published: 01 October 2024
... is a transgender Latinx sex worker who takes the stage—a set with graffiti-decorated street bills plastered on brick walls—voguing to the 1987 Pebbles song of female empowerment, “Girlfriend.” She has long orange hair and shiny lipstick to match ( fig. 1 ). She wears a skintight hot-pink minidress, black patent...
FIGURES
Journal Article
GLQ (2011) 17 (2-3): 423–425.
Published: 01 June 2011
... at the intersection of the trans
atlantic slave trade and eighteenthcentury England’s rapidly expanding consumer
culture, which contributed to a new vogue for “prestige” or “luxury” slaves. The
book’s compelling discussion of these “slavish swells,” particularly the celebrated...
Journal Article
GLQ (2011) 17 (2-3): 426–428.
Published: 01 June 2011
... at the intersection of the trans
atlantic slave trade and eighteenthcentury England’s rapidly expanding consumer
culture, which contributed to a new vogue for “prestige” or “luxury” slaves. The
book’s compelling discussion of these “slavish swells,” particularly the celebrated...
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