Decolonizing Queer Experience draws from research around the post-socialist world to argue that understanding LGBT+ experience in the region cannot be limited to oppression and violence. Using a decolonizing lens, the contributors explore performance, identity, and political affiliations as essential parts of LGBT+ communities.
Decolonizing Queer Experience draws from research around the post-socialist world to argue that understanding LGBT+ experience in the region cannot be limited to oppression and violence. Using a decolonizing lens, the contributors explore performance, identity, and political affiliations as essential parts of LGBT+ communities.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Edited by Emily Channell-Justice - Contributions by Feruza Aripova; Emily Channell-Justice; Vitaly Chernetsky; Tjasa Kancler; Polina Kislitsyna; Roman Leksikov; Janis Ozolins; Zhanar Sekerbayeva; Tamar Shirinian; Syinat Sultanalieva and Karlis Verdins
Inhaltsangabe
Preface: Vitaly Chernetsky Introduction: Of Constatives, Performatives, and Disidentifications: Decolonizing Queer Critique in Post-socialist Times (5606) Tamar Shirinian and Emily Channell-Justice Section 1: The Categories Themselves Chapter 1: Body Politics, Trans*Imaginary, and Decoloniality (6859) Tjaa Kancler Chapter 2: Queering Categories: Recognition, Misrecognition, and Identity Politics in Armenia (7753) Tamar Shirinian Chapter 3: Escaping the Dichotomies of 'Good' and 'Bad': Chronotopes of Queerness in Kyrgyzstan (6815) Syinat Sultanaieva Section 2: Queer in Public Chapter 4: LGBT+ Rights, European Values, and Radical Critique: Leftist Challenges to LGBT+ Mainstreaming in Ukraine (7922) Emily Channell-Justice Chapter 5: Queering the Soviet Pribaltika: Criminal Cases of Consensual Sodomy in Soviet Latvia (1960s-1980s) (7796) Feruza Aripova Chapter 6: Queer People and the Criminal Justice System in Ukraine: Negotiating Relationships, Historical Trauma and Contemporary Western Discourses (7655) Roman Leksikov Section 3: Decolonizing Queer Performance Chapter 7: Stifled Monstrosities: Gender-Transgressive Motifs in Kazakh Folklore (7553) Zhanar Sekerbayeva Chapter 8: "Pugacheva for the People": Two Portraits of Non-Urban Post-Soviet Queer Performers (7751) K rlis V rdi and J nis Ozoli Chapter 9: Religious Experiences in Life Stories of Homosexuals and Bisexuals in Russia (6577) Polina Kislitsyna Conclusion: Emily Channell-Justice (1820)
Preface: Vitaly Chernetsky Introduction: Of Constatives, Performatives, and Disidentifications: Decolonizing Queer Critique in Post-socialist Times (5606) Tamar Shirinian and Emily Channell-Justice Section 1: The Categories Themselves Chapter 1: Body Politics, Trans*Imaginary, and Decoloniality (6859) Tjaa Kancler Chapter 2: Queering Categories: Recognition, Misrecognition, and Identity Politics in Armenia (7753) Tamar Shirinian Chapter 3: Escaping the Dichotomies of 'Good' and 'Bad': Chronotopes of Queerness in Kyrgyzstan (6815) Syinat Sultanaieva Section 2: Queer in Public Chapter 4: LGBT+ Rights, European Values, and Radical Critique: Leftist Challenges to LGBT+ Mainstreaming in Ukraine (7922) Emily Channell-Justice Chapter 5: Queering the Soviet Pribaltika: Criminal Cases of Consensual Sodomy in Soviet Latvia (1960s-1980s) (7796) Feruza Aripova Chapter 6: Queer People and the Criminal Justice System in Ukraine: Negotiating Relationships, Historical Trauma and Contemporary Western Discourses (7655) Roman Leksikov Section 3: Decolonizing Queer Performance Chapter 7: Stifled Monstrosities: Gender-Transgressive Motifs in Kazakh Folklore (7553) Zhanar Sekerbayeva Chapter 8: "Pugacheva for the People": Two Portraits of Non-Urban Post-Soviet Queer Performers (7751) K rlis V rdi and J nis Ozoli Chapter 9: Religious Experiences in Life Stories of Homosexuals and Bisexuals in Russia (6577) Polina Kislitsyna Conclusion: Emily Channell-Justice (1820)
Es gelten unsere Allgemeinen Geschäftsbedingungen: www.buecher.de/agb
Impressum
www.buecher.de ist ein Internetauftritt der buecher.de internetstores GmbH
Geschäftsführung: Monica Sawhney | Roland Kölbl | Günter Hilger
Sitz der Gesellschaft: Batheyer Straße 115 - 117, 58099 Hagen
Postanschrift: Bürgermeister-Wegele-Str. 12, 86167 Augsburg
Amtsgericht Hagen HRB 13257
Steuernummer: 321/5800/1497
USt-IdNr: DE450055826