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trans ecologies

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Journal Article
TSQ (2024) 11 (4): 531–541.
Published: 01 November 2024
... movements devalue disability and make paltry gestures to liberal inclusion, intersectional trans‐crip ecologies require that we move, as Erin writes elsewhere, “to revere and respect that which is sick—in all of us, and some of us more than others. It is to venerate blackness, transness, and our adapting...
Journal Article
TSQ (2024) 11 (4): 599–617.
Published: 01 November 2024
...Lauran Whitworth Abstract How do we voice legitimate concerns about pollution and toxic exposure without resorting to gender panic? This article analyzes several examples of trans ecologies that are alternatives to the eco‐heteronormativity and purity logic found in much environmentalism. In Eli...
FIGURES
Journal Article
TSQ (2024) 11 (4): 624–644.
Published: 01 November 2024
... that the current state of community ecology offers a strategic possibility for trans* studies to flip the script: rather than seeking to make sense of transness through biology, perhaps a trans* analytic can help us all make better sense of nature instead. Trans* ecologies force a rethinking of the long...
Journal Article
TSQ (2024) 11 (4): 694–697.
Published: 01 November 2024
...Amelia Carter [email protected] Underflows: Queer Trans Ecologies and River Justice . Cleo Wölfle Hazard . Seattle : University of Washington Press , 2022 . 312 pp. Copyright © 2024 by Duke University Press 2024 What is queer ecology? For Cleo Wölfle Hazard...
Journal Article
TSQ (2024) 11 (4): 667–670.
Published: 01 November 2024
... document something encountered (during periods of lockdown, this would normally be on my daily allotted walk). Overlaid on the same page, I would arrange words in an attempt to articulate whatever was on my mind: reflections on gender, identity, ecology, and relationality. The tight format forced me...
FIGURES
Journal Article
TSQ (2024) 11 (4): 563–571.
Published: 01 November 2024
...Cleo Wölfle Hazard Abstract Using text, autohistoria, and photo collage, the author traces trans possibilities for connecting with the water cycle through bathing. [email protected] Copyright © 2024 by Duke University Press 2024 bath ecology water trans swimming If we...
FIGURES
Journal Article
TSQ (2024) 11 (4): 572–593.
Published: 01 November 2024
...Stephanie D. Clare; Maxine Savage Abstract This essay considers queer ecology's engagement with transness with the goal of clarifying what it is that trans ecology, in particular, has to offer: a centering of trans people and phenomena, a more radical reworking of the concept of “nature,” one...
Journal Article
TSQ (2024) 11 (4): 547–562.
Published: 01 November 2024
...Mel Y. Chen; M. Murphy Abstract A ranging conversation between M. Murphy and Mel Y. Chen on birds, science, gender, chemicality, and the politics and means of knowing, held at the Queer and Trans Ecologies conference in March 2023. This conversation was hosted by the Institute for Advanced Study...
Journal Article
TSQ (2024) 11 (4): 671–693.
Published: 01 November 2024
...Jenne Schmidt Abstract There are many overlaps between crip and trans ecologies, such that human and more‐than‐human corporeal difference, like trans existence, is often constituted as unnatural and undesired within dominant scientific discourses. Yet in the context of environmental futurities...
Journal Article
TSQ (2023) 10 (3-4): 388–409.
Published: 01 November 2023
..., such as Wingspan, rely on the transing of animal bio-reproduction under the aegis of ludic aesthetics? And how might these concerns be otherwise transformed by the transing of gender and erotic appeal in parodied video games? In response, I examine new horizons for trans ecologies and the gaming imaginaries...
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Journal Article
TSQ (2024) 11 (4): 542–546.
Published: 01 November 2024
... and preposition luxuriate with adjectives and nouns: our language wants fucking. Within the texture of conjunction—a connective grammar of and , but , if —that holds meaning together, lust buckles language. But, what can we bare to know? Can trans mean anything to ecology? If so, what? To start...
Journal Article
TSQ (2020) 7 (4): 573–584.
Published: 01 November 2020
... am arguing here that trans vulnerabilities to HIV—even vulnerabilities that might be unique to transing—must also be emplotted within that matrix. Trans would therefore be analytically decentered, which—to be clear—is not the same as marginal or incidental. In concluding, I want to return to my...
Journal Article
TSQ (2023) 10 (3-4): 226–238.
Published: 01 November 2023
...Dylan McCarthy Blackston Abstract What utility does trans hold and carry forward at this politically and ecologically volatile moment, when increasingly prevalent legal restrictions are preventing trans people from accessing gender affirming and reproductive health care and seeking to disallow our...
Journal Article
TSQ (2014) 1 (1-2): 136–137.
Published: 01 May 2014
..., not the Bellbird's. We are wild animals still learning how to wield our tool of language, sometimes too dull, sometimes too sharp. Nature is something the blade of grass hollers up to Orion's Belt, and we are still trans inside of it. I am still driving across Nebraska, thinking about trans ecologies. I am...
Journal Article
TSQ (2020) 7 (4): 605–610.
Published: 01 November 2020
...Che Gossett; Eva Hayward Abstract The following is an interview conducted by Che Gossett and Eva Hayward with Kiyan Williams, multidisciplinary artist and assistant professor at Virginia Commonwealth University. William's visual art—sculpture and video—on blackness and ecology, dirt...
Journal Article
TSQ (2017) 4 (3-4): 639–646.
Published: 01 November 2017
.... These material, aesthetic, and philosophical concerns are essential in imagining the reach of trans* theorizing, questions of sexuality, and the mattering of race in the collective milieu. Indeed, human “progress” and ecological deterioration are symbiotic. It is from this eco-philosophical musing...
Journal Article
TSQ (2022) 9 (2): 301–303.
Published: 01 May 2022
... In a Queer Time and Place (2005) established Halberstam as a staple in much of queer and trans ecology, carving out a language for metronormativity and queer rurality that has helped scholars in these fields think through a number of environmental tensions. Wild Things , then, understandably generated...
Journal Article
TSQ (2022) 9 (2): 228–247.
Published: 01 May 2022
... environmental influences, to whales, whose enormous scale conceals the similarities enstructuring all mammalian composition—situates corporeal entanglement and biological sex's embeddedness within vast webs of bodies and meanings. These more-than-human organisms suggest a “trans-ecological” (Vakoch 2020...
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Journal Article
TSQ (2019) 6 (1): 4–19.
Published: 01 February 2019
... is informed by erased histories of forced migration from which Maria may benefit. 19. In her reading of the road-trip genre, affect, and ecologies in Nevada, Seymour also positions Binnie's critique of the trans journey “home” as one that resists manifest destiny and acknowledges Maria's own role...
Journal Article
TSQ (2015) 2 (2): 297–316.
Published: 01 May 2015
..., but not against the river. In speaking of beavers, speaking of “crossings” may generate possibilities that speaking of nonspecific “transings” does not. Etymologically, trans and cross share the meanings “across,” “beyond,” “traversing,” and “on the opposite side.” Crossing has other valences, too—to strike...