1-20 of 1130

Search Results for working through

Follow your search
Access your saved searches in your account

Would you like to receive an alert when new items match your search?
Close Modal
Sort by
Journal Article
GLQ (2020) 26 (4): 701–722.
Published: 01 October 2020
... us a performative complement or reverse-orientation to Sigmund Freud’s psychologically centered idea of “working-through” (1914). Reading these pugilistic performances along the slide between working through and working out—their psychic and material practices and effects—allows us to perceive...
Journal Article
GLQ (2014) 20 (4): 407–437.
Published: 01 October 2014
..., and historians. I further argue that a metaphorics of consumption undergirds historical archives and archival documents, as they are produced, ordered, read, and interpreted. By working through such complex affective archival engagements, we gain a more nuanced understanding of the erotic chains that structure...
Journal Article
GLQ (2021) 27 (3): 321–327.
Published: 01 June 2021
... contributions with activists, scholars, and artists working through queer and cuir studies, gender and sexuality studies, intersectional feminisms, decolonial approaches, migration studies, and hemispheric American studies. Published across three journals, GLQ in the United States, Periódicus in Brazil, and El...
Journal Article
GLQ (2022) 28 (1): 55–86.
Published: 01 January 2022
... year of the Trump administration followed from working through the question of homotribal desire within liberalism. Endeavoring to depict the courtship between Elio and Oliver denuded of the masks of identity, the film uncovers a heavy charge of masc affects in their place. Their relationship builds...
FIGURES | View All (10)
Journal Article
GLQ (2021) 27 (3): 357–377.
Published: 01 June 2021
... essays and poetry up until his eventual death in 1990 from AIDS complications. Writing defiantly as a queer, a feminist, a Puerto Rican, and a sidoso , he produced work that invites death and desire to commingle through a figuration of dust, as a scattered substance that covers skin, coats translation...
Journal Article
GLQ (2009) 15 (2): 249–260.
Published: 01 April 2009
...Sarah M. Creighton; Julie A. Greenberg; Katrina Roen; Del LaGrace Volcano The present article seeks to bring together ideas from legal, medical, social science, artistic, and activist perspectives, through dialogue among the four authors. Sarah Creighton is a gynecologist working with women who...
Journal Article
GLQ (2009) 15 (3): 441–468.
Published: 01 June 2009
... kinship breaks down: illness and death, migrant experience, and family secrets. Through a doubled formal and thematic emphasis on fragmentation, discontinuity, and affective ambivalence, these extraordinary works help us understand kinship otherwise, or queerly. Duke University Press 2009 Queer...
Journal Article
GLQ (2009) 15 (4): 611–612.
Published: 01 October 2009
... to address how power plays out in graduate school, often in the minute exercises of discipline and learning understood through sexual metaphors. The authors also exhibit a noteworthy interest and investment in popular culture that leads each to consider the larger implications of their intellectual work...
Journal Article
GLQ (2020) 26 (1): 103–128.
Published: 01 January 2020
... around but is not necessarily in the bottom. His essay “Currency” and poem “Lick My Butt” theorize the (peri-)bottom as an ambivalent positioning that taints celebratory claims about the subversive potentiality of bottomhood. Reanimating shame and the erotic through a poetics of sweet pain, Chin’s works...
Journal Article
GLQ (2022) 28 (4): 541–566.
Published: 01 October 2022
...Juno Jill Richards This study follows the oceanic routes of female migrant laborers as a way to reconsider the geographies of queer theory through the colonial port city. In so doing, the author highlights feminized forms of migrant labor, including sex work and care work, as a central facet...
FIGURES
Journal Article
GLQ (2012) 18 (2-3): 263–276.
Published: 01 June 2012
... fighting for some- thing else in its name. oh yes some men may believe in home, maybe, because they think it’s a woman’s place closed in by her hands that continues to stay still like a picture while they run through war & work & death & exploration & tech- nicolor imaginations that they’ve found...
Journal Article
GLQ (2011) 17 (4): 517–542.
Published: 01 October 2011
... dissection of technologies of the self in the Greco- ­Roman and early Christian worlds as ethical practices of freedom — I reconceive his ethical project as spanning his entire oeuvre, from History of Madness (1961) to The Order of Things (1966), through the genealogical work...
Journal Article
GLQ (2020) 26 (4): 649–671.
Published: 01 October 2020
... such relationships may include. It also traces the evolution of Alarcón’s expression of his gay identity over the course of three decades from verse that centered upon loneliness and guilt, through a period of “liberation” poetry, and ultimately to a long and very productive period resulting in a body of work...
Journal Article
GLQ (2025) 31 (2): 187–208.
Published: 01 April 2025
... was not .” Thus Black women inhabit(ed) a “paradox of non-being,” being both enfleshed yet cast out of the traditional symbolics of the human in general and of female gender in particular. Spillers ( 1984 : 77) works through how this paradox of nonbeing marks the impossibilities of Black gender differentiation...
Journal Article
GLQ (2022) 28 (2): 165–184.
Published: 01 April 2022
...S.M. Rodriguez Abstract Corrections in the United States most often describes the institution that holds custody of criminalized people, purportedly to reform or reorient them from nonnormative behaviors through isolation, constraint, and force. This article puts forward a more expansive...
Journal Article
GLQ (2014) 20 (4): 391–406.
Published: 01 October 2014
... that of scholars of the period like Fiona Somerset whose work on the history INTRODUCTION: ON THE VISCERAL 401 of emotion and the heretical tradition asks similar questions.21 Thinking through the medieval, DeVun reminds scholars that the principal subject...
Journal Article
GLQ (2019) 25 (4): 513–543.
Published: 01 October 2019
... not from a westernized visual lexicon of queerness but from a culturally specific one. Starting with Ays¸e Loves Fatma, the present article explores works by Güres¸ that depict similar intimacies in public and semipublic settings, through GLQ 25:4 DOI 10.1215/10642684- 7767752 © 2019 by Duke University...
Journal Article
GLQ (2010) 16 (4): 517–536.
Published: 01 October 2010
... sexuality, one rooted both in the early Zionist ideology of the “new Jew” and in Israel’s demographic war with its Arab neighbors.2 Others have argued, however, that the popularity of Fox’s work stems precisely from its commitment to Israeli state projects through the insertion...
Journal Article
GLQ (2014) 20 (1-2): 167–180.
Published: 01 April 2014
... questions to energize future work committed to the even more thoroughgoing critique of violent power as it continues to articulate itself through racialization, sexualization, and other forms of unequal economic, social, cultural, and political division. Reading Chican@ Like a Queer: The De-Mastery...
Journal Article
GLQ (2018) 24 (2-3): 239–266.
Published: 01 June 2018
... in her life. Through a reading of her poetry, journals, and political activities, I argue that late twentieth-century US gender and sexual categories, as well as novel forms of queer intimacy, were forged in the material relations of print-related wage work. Rather than claiming to queer these texts...