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negative affect

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Journal Article
TSQ (2014) 1 (4): 539–551.
Published: 01 November 2014
... in the darkroom to make positive images (photographic prints), in the outmoded medium Polaroid 665, which Volcano employs, the positive image is used to make a (unique) negative. The generativity of the Polaroid 665 negative in Volcano's hands is not purely photographic; it is also affective. My essay explores...
Journal Article
TSQ (2017) 4 (1): 135–140.
Published: 01 February 2017
... of negative affect and economic precarity and as a trope erased in cinematic time, through the central character Rayon (Jared Leto), a trans* woman, and the establishment of an HIV medication “buyers club” in the mid-1980s. Copyright © 2017 by Duke University Press 2017 trans representation films...
Journal Article
TSQ (2019) 6 (4): 635–658.
Published: 01 November 2019
... 2019 trans temporalities trans embodiments cruel optimism negative affect t4t medical transition What makes a future bleak? Is it a question of one's orientation to futurity? Is a future bleak because of the anticipation, anxiety, and fear that imbues one's relationship...
Journal Article
TSQ (2014) 1 (1-2): 134–135.
Published: 01 May 2014
... potential. It is precisely the monster's ambivalent ability to speak to oppression and negative affect that appeals to trans* people reclaiming the monster for their own voices. Trans* metaphorizations of the monster draw from implications of monstrosity way beyond the idea of monstrous bodies...
Journal Article
TSQ (2014) 1 (1-2): 165–168.
Published: 01 May 2014
... ). They do so in full awareness that trans persons have been negatively affected by transphobic attitudes and practices, especially when psychoanalysis adopts normative models of interpretation. The history of the relationship of psychoanalysis to transsexuals is one that is exceedingly fraught...
Journal Article
TSQ (2023) 10 (3-4): 547–549.
Published: 01 November 2023
... transness and the medical establishment. Their resolution of trans negative emotions is to address, work within and alongside, invoke in advocacy and organizing, and open up space for an ethics of care. Therefore, Side Affects operates as a tool for trans people to contend with their negative emotions...
Journal Article
TSQ (2022) 9 (3): 425–442.
Published: 01 August 2022
... becomes attached to its own exclusion because it is premised on this exclusion for its very existence” (72–73). The politics of injury utilized by conservative Christian writers and ‘gender critical’ feminists to justify their anti-transgender animus is powered by a regime of negative affects aligned...
Journal Article
TSQ (2022) 9 (1): 9–27.
Published: 01 February 2022
... the individualized and discrete scope constraining the concept of burnout, taking place instead within mutual communities that share negative affect and trauma even as they share the care necessary to sustain each other (23, 25). Understanding trans care thus requires a more diffuse, mutual, communal, and tempered...
Journal Article
TSQ (2024) 11 (1): 178–180.
Published: 01 February 2024
... much of the bite-sized slogans used in mainstream LGBTQ speech is focused on positive affects, creating love, respect, and connections across various communities, particularly for those who have been demonized or marginalized by society. Our inclinations have been to embrace the positive attributes...
Journal Article
TSQ (2020) 7 (4): 585–597.
Published: 01 November 2020
... a patient is regularly followed up in care and adequately takes the treatment. Social factors affect medical adherence to HIV care and preventions beyond TGW. Through this study, we attempted to understand whether these types of HIV and STI care and prevention clinics could be a counterexample of perceived...
Journal Article
TSQ (2024) 11 (2): 266–286.
Published: 01 May 2024
... through the fetish character of capitalist social forms to expose the functioning of a sociohistorically specific epistemology of the body. Ultimately, the article unfolds a negative understanding of queer and trans processes of embodiment as precariously inaugurating new modes of sociality unrealizable...
Journal Article
TSQ (2019) 6 (1): 103–116.
Published: 01 February 2019
... with figures of the past that are disappointing to us because they fail to live up to some kind of “radical” litmus test. This is really where our projects meet and overlap, in questions of negative affect and bad objects. ALC : And there is no object worse than a woman. That's an operating assumption...
Journal Article
TSQ (2014) 1 (4): 469–481.
Published: 01 November 2014
... that affectively registers the desirability and possibility of mujercito lives. Khubchandani and Cowan overlap in offering a trans vision of a feminist solidarity that rests neither on shared gender identity nor on the exclusion of difference. Despite their shared activist orientation toward art making...
Journal Article
TSQ (2017) 4 (3-4): 358–383.
Published: 01 November 2017
... that grapples with the root of transphobia as it appears in Jeffreys's text, and it contributes to trans studies by exploring how transphobia works and why it is so difficult to eradicate. In our view, Jeffreys's text lends itself well to a symptomatic reading. In reiterating the negative claims...
Journal Article
TSQ (2020) 7 (3): 306–320.
Published: 01 August 2020
... candidly about our lives as transsexuals” (113). Candidness beyond trans studies' enforced political optimism, by contrast, would enrich the field's articulated critical trans affects by adding bitterness, satire, and disappointment to the mix (105–6). Ultimately, the authors conclude that trans studies...
Journal Article
TSQ (2016) 3 (1-2): 95–103.
Published: 01 May 2016
..., coined the term Jane Crow , which critiqued the simultaneous structural and affective impacts of white supremacy and male supremacy. These hegemonies divided individuals into binary categories of race and gender, categories that were naturalized and violently upheld. Murray lived on the margins...
Journal Article
TSQ (2019) 6 (4): 579–592.
Published: 01 November 2019
... as an end-point to trans reproductive oppression, this is far from being the case. 2 Despite its self-portrayal as a nation of human rights and gender freedom, France is not a country where reproductive self-determination of trans people is guaranteed. The forces that affect trans reproductive self...
Journal Article
TSQ (2023) 10 (3-4): 239–246.
Published: 01 November 2023
... this have to do with transgender, and (feminine affecting) trans women in particular? Marcuse ( 2000 ) called for a great refusal. A refusal of society's primary demand for a subject who identifies with and is performatively invested in the exchange principle most evident in the spheres of alienated...
Journal Article
TSQ (2015) 2 (4): 650–665.
Published: 01 November 2015
..., but also in the ways it might mark the archive that repossesses it as “trans*,” what might we read in Cook's scrapbook? The negation at the center of Cook's annotation seems particularly “trans*” in its temporality and desire. One of the affective productions of the negative paradox, and its strategy...
FIGURES
Journal Article
TSQ (2022) 9 (3): 488–500.
Published: 01 August 2022
... for their transphobic behavior by the women's movement reiterate the priority that cis-terhood takes over sisterhood (Feminist Futures Collective 2021 ; Sass 2020 ), even though the material created can have severely negative implications to a group of people as affected by patriarchy as them. The argument goes...
FIGURES