![]() ![]() This conference asks participants to think about questions of relationality/community/solidarity that coexist tensely within queer political formations and queer studies. exceptionalism and the concomitant embrace of models of gay globalization, teleological models of historical progress, presentism, and models of identity based on traditional humanist exclusions. Examples include the formal endorsement of normative domestic kinship arrangements, neoliberal economic philosophies, the marginalization of non-normative sexualities, U.S. LISA DUGGAN’s analysis of “the new homonormativity… a politics that does not contest dominant heteronormative assumptions and institutions but upholds and sustains them” points to the problem of U.S.-based lesbian and gay political aspirations toward acceptance within contemporary economic and political systems, aspirations that risk jettisoning earlier queer commitments to economic redistribution and liberation. ![]() ![]() Saturday, May 12 / 9 AM – 6:30 PM / College 8, Room 240 ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |