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E-raamat: Queer Theory Now: From Foundations to Futures

(University of Melbourne, Australia), (Monash University, Australia)
  • Formaat: 268 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 06-Nov-2019
  • Kirjastus: Bloomsbury Academic
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781350314535
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  • Formaat: 268 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 06-Nov-2019
  • Kirjastus: Bloomsbury Academic
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781350314535
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This short textbook provides an introduction to queer theory, exploring its key genealogies and terms as well as its application across various academic disciplines and to contemporary life more generally.

The authors engage with a wide range of developments in queer theory thinking including discussions of identity politics, transgender theory, intersectionality, post-colonial theory, Indigenous studies, disability studies, affect theory, and more.

In offering an updated reflection on the present tensions that queer theory must negotiate, as well as its unfolding future(s), Queer Theory Now is an ideal resource for anyone starting out on their queer theory journey; for students who want to get a grasp of the basic concepts, for teachers looking for a textbook for their queer theory course, or for scholars who want a quick go-to resource for key queer theory ideas and terms. 

Arvustused

Queer Theory Now is a thorough synthesis of thirty years of queer theory and its precursors. It should be required reading in classrooms around the world. An essential primer! * Don Romesburg, Sonoma State University, USA * Queer Theory Now is an invaluable resource for newcomers to queer theory. McCann and Monaghan define key terms with outstanding clarity. Centering the work of theorists of colour and trans theorists, the authors uncover the variegated histories that have converged on, and diverged from, queer theory. Eminently teachable. * Jean-Thomas Tremblay, New Mexico State University, USA * This is a rigorous and pedagogically designed introduction to queer theory that covers not only the fields foundations but also more recent debates. Moreover, the inclusion of case studies, definitions of key terms and film recommendations makes complex ideas accessible for students finding their way in queer theory. Sam McBean, Queen Mary University of London, UK * Sam McBean, Queen Mary University of London, UK * Part disciplinary history, part field assessment, part critical reference, Queer Theory Now is perhaps most importantly a primer for the queer work ahead. It will be a welcome queer pedagogy text in both undergraduate and graduate classrooms. * Matt Brim, College of Staten Island, CUNY, USA * An absolute must read! Queer Theory Now, carefully crafted by McCann and Monaghan, is an incredibly timely, necessary and rich resource. Undergraduates and post-graduate students interested in engaging with historical and contemporary debates in queer theories will find much to stimulate their thinking in this book. * Leanne Coll, Deakin University, Australia * The last real primer for queer theory was Annemarie Jagoses Queer Theory over 20 years ago. Queer Theory Now fills that enormous gap, covering key areas such as intersectionality, the global dimensions of queerness, and the history of the field, while remaining attentive to the difficulties of defining the complex and ever-evolving perspectives on sexuality and gender. * Ross Forman, University of Warwick, UK * The most concise and comprehensive explanation of the past, present and future of queer theory available today. This book traces queer theorys significant histories and locates its renewed relevance in contemporary times. It makes queer theorys evolution and complexities easy to access and is a must-have for any university library. * Joanna McIntyre, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia * McCann and Monaghan have written one of the most insightful overviews of queer theory currently on the market. It is highly recommended for those seeking an accessible guide to key ideas, issues, developments, and controversies in this field. The writers deserve credit for their ample demonstration of queer theory's applicability to a range of disciplines, lives, and events. * Páraic Finnerty, University of Portsmouth *

List of figures and Tables
xi
Key Terms and Concepts xii
Key Debates and Queer Theory in Practice xiv
Recommended Films xvi
Acknowledgements xvii
1 Defining Queer Theory
1(21)
Defining the Indefinable
1(3)
Queer Theory Beyond Identity
4(2)
Genealogies of Queer Theory
6(1)
Postmodernism, Poststructuralism and Queer Theory
7(4)
Queer Theory Against Normativity
11(3)
Queer Theory Without Anti-Normativity
14(2)
The Death of Queer Theory?
16(2)
Roadmap for Queer Theory Now
18(4)
2 From Pathology to Pride
22(32)
Queer Theory and the History of Sexuality
22(1)
History According to Foucault?
23(10)
The repressive hypothesis
25(1)
The discursive explosion
25(4)
The "invention" of homosexuality
29(4)
Racism in Western Sexology
33(3)
Fighting for Homosexual Rights
36(15)
The homophile movement
38(4)
Gay Liberation
42(2)
The Stonewall riots
44(3)
The Sydney Mardi Gras
47(2)
From liberation to pride
49(2)
Conclusion: A History of Knowledge and Power
51(3)
3 Sexuality and Feminism
54(37)
Queer Theory's Feminist Foundations
54(1)
Feminism(s)
55(1)
Queer Theory's Gender Problem
56(1)
Feminisms in Tension
57(15)
Lesbians and feminism
63(4)
The politics of difference
67(5)
Intersectional Feminism
72(3)
Anti-Pornography Feminism
75(7)
Anti-pornography feminists and the new right
78(1)
The "sex wars"
79(3)
The Sexuality/Feminism Split
82(3)
The Impact of the "Sex Wars" on Queer Theory
85(1)
Queering the "Third Wave"
86(2)
Conclusion: Queer Feminism Today
88(3)
4 AIDS and Acting Up
91(27)
AIDS and Queer Thinking
91(3)
The Unfolding Crisis
94(5)
AIDS Activism and the Emergence of "Queer"
99(15)
Unleashing power: ACT UP
102(5)
Bashing back: Queer Nation
107(4)
Racism, whiteness and AIDS
111(3)
Conclusion: Queer Thinking After AIDS
114(4)
5 Outing the Closet
118(35)
Queer Theory Articulates Itself
118(1)
What's So Queer About Judith Butler?
119(17)
Butler's approach to sex and gender
121(2)
What is gender anyway?
123(2)
Gender melancholy
125(1)
Gender performativity
126(3)
Subversion and drag
129(2)
Responses, critiques and lasting influence
131(5)
What's So Queer About Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick?
136(14)
Sedgwick's Axioms
138(4)
Sedgwick and "the closet"
142(3)
Queer readings: paranoid and reparative strategies
145(3)
Responses, critiques and lasting influence
148(2)
Conclusion: Queering Critical Inquiry
150(3)
6 Theory Meets Identity
153(26)
Queer Theory Versus Identity
153(4)
The New Homonormativity
157(6)
From homonormativity to homonationalism
161(2)
Wounded Attachments
163(3)
Connectivity and Transgender Identity
166(10)
The rise of transgender studies
168(4)
Phenomenology and the lived body
172(1)
Transnormativity and the issue of representation
173(1)
Non-binary identity
174(2)
Conclusion: Where to Now for Postidentity Politics?
176(3)
7 Negotiating Intersections
179(34)
The Problem of Erasing Difference
179(3)
Intersectionality or Deconstruction?
182(1)
An Intersectional Approach to Queer Theory
183(5)
New Avenues for Queer Theory
188(21)
Queer(s) of colour theory, queering race
190(2)
Queer theory's geopolitical turn
192(4)
Queer Indigenous studies
196(3)
Queer Marxism
199(3)
Queering affect, affect-ing queer theory
202(5)
Queerness, disability and debility
207(2)
Conclusion: Queer Intersections
209(4)
8 Temporality and Queer Utopias
213(26)
Queer Theory and Time: A Temporal Turn
213(2)
Heteronormative Temporality
215(3)
The Anti-Social Thesis
218(5)
No Future and figure of the Child
219(2)
Negative affect, the critical present and backward orientations
221(2)
Critical Present-Ness
223(1)
Cruel Optimism and the Impasse
224(2)
Queer Childhoods
226(1)
Looking Forward, Feeling Backward
227(1)
Affirmation, Optimism and Future Orientations
228(8)
Utopias and the queer future
229(1)
Queer happiness
230(3)
An optimistic challenge to chrononormativity
233(3)
Conclusion: Queer Time
236(3)
References 239(25)
Index 264
Hannah McCann is a Lecturer in Cultural Studies at the University of Melbourne, Australia. Her research sits within critical femininity studies, and explores femme identity, beauty culture, and queer fandom. She is the author of Queering Femininity: Sexuality, Feminism and the Politics of Presentation (Routledge, 2018).

Whitney Monaghan is an Assistant Lecturer in Film and Screen Studies at Monash University, Australia. She has a background in screen, media and cultural studies and her research examines queer representation on screen. She is the author of Queer Girls, Temporality and Screen Media: Not Just a Phase (Palgrave Macmillan, 2016).