This book asks what makes queer studies possible, and what does queer studies make possible? While social science approaches shape thinking about sexuality, gender, and race, this collection emphasizes the role of reading, imagination, and interpretation in these discussions, reclaiming literary roots for queer studies and its futures.
This book asks what makes queer studies possible, and what does queer studies make possible? While social science approaches shape thinking about sexuality, gender, and race, this collection emphasizes the role of reading, imagination, and interpretation in these discussions, reclaiming literary roots for queer studies and its futures.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Introduction: thinking sideways, or an untoward genealogy of queer reading E. L. McCallum and Tyler Bradway; Part I. Reading Queery Literary History: 1. Shakespearean sexualities Stephen Guy-Bray; 2. Write, paint, dance, sex: queer styles/American fictions Dana Seiter; 3. Queer Lantix studies and queer Latinx literature 'after' queer theory, or: thought and art and sex after pulse Ricardo Ortiz; Part II. Reading Queer Writer: 4. Oscar Wilde and George Bernard Shaw in queer time: law, lawlessness, and the mid twentieth-century after-life of a decadent person Richard A. Kaye; 5. After queer Baldwin Matt Brim; 6. Revision, origin, and the courage of truth: Henry James's New York edition prefaces Kevin Ohi; 7. All about our mothers: race, gender, and the reparative Amber Musser; Part III. Reading Queerly: 8. Camp performance and the case of discotropic Nick Salvato; 9. Reading in juxtaposition: comics Andre Carrington; 10. Reading for transgression: queering genres Rebekah Sheldon; 11. Sovereignty: a mercy Sharon Patricia Holland.
Introduction: thinking sideways, or an untoward genealogy of queer reading E. L. McCallum and Tyler Bradway; Part I. Reading Queery Literary History: 1. Shakespearean sexualities Stephen Guy-Bray; 2. Write, paint, dance, sex: queer styles/American fictions Dana Seiter; 3. Queer Lantix studies and queer Latinx literature 'after' queer theory, or: thought and art and sex after pulse Ricardo Ortiz; Part II. Reading Queer Writer: 4. Oscar Wilde and George Bernard Shaw in queer time: law, lawlessness, and the mid twentieth-century after-life of a decadent person Richard A. Kaye; 5. After queer Baldwin Matt Brim; 6. Revision, origin, and the courage of truth: Henry James's New York edition prefaces Kevin Ohi; 7. All about our mothers: race, gender, and the reparative Amber Musser; Part III. Reading Queerly: 8. Camp performance and the case of discotropic Nick Salvato; 9. Reading in juxtaposition: comics Andre Carrington; 10. Reading for transgression: queering genres Rebekah Sheldon; 11. Sovereignty: a mercy Sharon Patricia Holland.
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