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1-18 of 18 Search Results for
asexuality
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Journal Article
TSQ (2014) 1 (3): 368–386.
Published: 01 August 2014
... and the United States, this article exposes how initial encounters in the colony were entextualized and deployed as evidence for sexological arguments in Europe and North America. Throughout, sarimbavy were read variously as asexual and sexual, as externally perverted and internally inverted, as artistic...
Journal Article
TSQ (2016) 3 (3-4): 653–660.
Published: 01 November 2016
...Ela Przybylo Asexualities: Feminist and Queer Perspectives is the first of its kind, a collection congregated around the identities, practices, and analytics of asexuality. Asexuality has come to flourish as a sexual identity category over the course of the last decade. This has been marked...
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Image
Published: 01 November 2016
Figure 1. Photograph from Toronto Pride, 2015. The article title is taken directly from the poster displayed in the photograph. The poster was made by asexuality activist and scholar C. J. Chasin. Photo credit: Ennis Deye
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Journal Article
TSQ (2017) 4 (2): 301–310.
Published: 01 May 2017
... are asexual, those who identify within binary gender roles or do not. A commonality we share is living the life of a Black person. And one of our duties is to create space for ourselves in which we can, as complete persons, contribute to the Black community in Germany. The establishment of the LGBTIQ...
Journal Article
TSQ (2021) 8 (4): 572–574.
Published: 01 November 2021
... of their partners’ bodies when questioned. In such framing, not only are female husband's marriages presumed to be asexual, but their wives are presumed to be not queer. Manion recovers the queer potential in these wives, asking in one case, “What if Abigail pursued James, persuading James that she could see them...
Journal Article
TSQ (2023) 10 (2): 168–174.
Published: 01 May 2023
.../ . The status of lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, queer, intersex, asexual, and others' (LGBTQIA+) rights in Brazil is rife with contradiction; while in theory our rights are protected, in practice we face extreme levels of violence. Brazil's legislation regarding LGBTQIA+ rights is among the most advanced of any...
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Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Article
TSQ (2015) 2 (2): 209–226.
Published: 01 May 2015
... of sexual and asexual reproduction” (69). But even the usual fish method of fertilization, whereupon the female releases her eggs and the male fertilizes them externally, cannot take place without the intervention of the watery environment: “The fertilized embryos form part of the zooplankton—the animal...
Journal Article
TSQ (2020) 7 (1): 140–147.
Published: 01 February 2020
... asexuality. Subsequently, Angela Y. Davis ( 1999 ) engaged in the study of female blues singers, analyzing the texts of the blues to gain access to working-class women's sexual consciousness and practices. Since then, the tree of the study of African diasporic sexualities has flowered in many different...
Journal Article
TSQ (2014) 1 (4): 605–613.
Published: 01 November 2014
... to gender play, or a comment on a self-presentation that chooses “asexual” as an embraced category and possibility of sexual expression. This feels instead like a non-wished-for devaluation. In public, often, my gender agency seems under erasure. Here in the studio I enjoy the moment of enactment...
Journal Article
TSQ (2016) 3 (3-4): 569–577.
Published: 01 November 2016
... rhythm to follow and when to enter my cunt, to brush against all those obscure curves, the creased cliffs, the canals, climbing the steep slope of arousal and suddenly planting a crimson flag there. The Virgin Mother of burgeoning flowers reproducing asexually and gushing forth in clusters from...
Journal Article
TSQ (2018) 5 (3): 311–320.
Published: 01 August 2018
...), the surveillance of asexual work such as ritualistic singing and dancing, and the governance of their gender performances. This was a way in which the hijra figure was to be made into a docile body (Foucault 1977 ). The British classified the hijra based on three categorizations: first, as naturally impotent men...
Journal Article
TSQ (2018) 5 (4): 638–647.
Published: 01 November 2018
... to provide feedback on the show on a comment board and participate in an interactive panel that asked them to choose their gender/sexual identity from eighteen options: among them were “female,” “male,” “heterosexual,” “asexual,” “cisgender,” “trans*,” “not even close,” “uncategorizable,” and “questioning...
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Journal Article
TSQ (2014) 1 (3): 308–319.
Published: 01 August 2014
... connection across continents. The legacy of European and American sexology's collection and categorization of “Native” sexual practices and gender embodiments grounds Seth Palmer's essay “Asexual Inverts and Sexual Perverts: Locating the Sarimbavy of Madagascar within Fin-de-Siècle Sexological Theories...
Journal Article
TSQ (2014) 1 (3): 419–439.
Published: 01 August 2014
...-based action. The structural violence of gender oppression affects everyone, whether self-identified as men, women, asexual, and/or gender or sexual liminal. Still, even with a nuanced recognition of gender-violence operations among diverse communities that traverse identity categories...
Journal Article
TSQ (2016) 3 (3-4): 506–523.
Published: 01 November 2016
... things, a mild S&M scene—or as a radical activist, as the English translation of the memoir does, but, rather, as a largely asexual representative of the petty bourgeoisie, as underscored by Wright's decision to translate the Frau in the title of the memoir as “wife” instead of “woman.” “Wright's...
Journal Article
TSQ (2016) 3 (3-4): 412–432.
Published: 01 November 2016
..., and/or sannyasi (asexual ascetics) place themselves in this rubric ( Reddy 2005 : 56)? In these cases, it is necessary to make the distinction between taxonomies based on perceived differences in bodily appearance and sexual preference and those based on sociocultural variables that determine membership...
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Journal Article
TSQ (2022) 9 (1): 44–64.
Published: 01 February 2022
... a host of questions: Why shouldn't transness be transmissible or contagious? Why can't the erotic be a site of producing trans identity or practices? Why must we accommodate the asexual connotations of transgender when it replaces transsexuality , rather than asking how, as Jules Gill-Peterson writes...
Journal Article
TSQ (2024) 11 (2): 318–347.
Published: 01 May 2024
..., in turn, led some cisgender people to become “queer for frelks.” Those who are “queer” for desiring the passive objectification of their body, and capable of enjoying it on a level that the asexual spacers cannot, could be said to experience this same escape from reification by erotic means. The fact...
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