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Queer in a Wee Place: Small Nations, Sexuality & Scotland [Kõva köide]

Edited by (University of Strathclyde, UK)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 344 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 02-Apr-2026
  • Kirjastus: Bloomsbury Academic
  • ISBN-10: 1350513032
  • ISBN-13: 9781350513037
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 344 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 02-Apr-2026
  • Kirjastus: Bloomsbury Academic
  • ISBN-10: 1350513032
  • ISBN-13: 9781350513037
Teised raamatud teemal:

Queer in a Wee Place explores queer identity, inequality and belonging, in and beyond, Scotland.

Building on interdisciplinary sexualities scholarship, activism, creative practices, as well as legislative and cultural changes, this open access book examines the past, present and future imaginings of queerness in Scotland - a 'wee place'.

Scotland's recent world-leading claims in the advancement of LGBTQ+ rights and inclusion, is evident in key cultural and educational institutions, in classrooms, and across the creative sector. Yet such 'equality, diversity and inclusion' initiatives, including recent hate crime legislation, arguably omit the realities and persistence of enduring homophobia, transphobia, sexism and racism and so re-invoke a global hierarchy of places to be.

By focusing on queerness in the case of Scotland – its differences, similarities and exceptionalism – this book demonstrates how queer inclusions, and exclusions, are mobilised and resisted across spatial scales, and the resulting impact on feelings of community and internationalism. With case studies covering law, politics, nationhood and migration, art and culture, education, and activism, this study offers an in-depth analysis of the Scottish queer experience as an illustration of the broader link between queerness and place globally.

The ebook editions of this book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on bloomsburycollections.com. Open access was funded by UKRI.



An open access collection that explores queer identity, inequality and belonging, in and
beyond, Scotland.

Arvustused

Fresh, insightful, thought-provoking - Queer in a Wee Place takes us on a journey across a wide terrain. Scotland in all its multiplicity. Scotland anew! * Jackie Kay * This is a dazzling collection, a volume that contains a marvelously rich mix from feminist and queer legal theory, to social and cultural policy as it impacts on queer and working-class communities in Scotland, to migrant queer experiences on the dancefloor. There is also biography and autobiography as well as ethnographic work in the classroom. A key feature is the importance of ongoing struggles and resistance against heteronormative assumptions and alongside this the need to challenge Scottish romanticisms about its progressive identity. Its a major achievement, an erudite and also a highly readable volume, a 'must read' indeed. * Angela McRobbie, Goldsmiths University of London, UK * This book provides a powerful and vast validation of the varied experiences and blends of identities that queer people experience - as well as some needed wake-up calls on where Scotland is as a country. A necessary contribution to queer discourse. * Emma Roddick MSP * This generative and confronting collection invites us to re-think, re-position, and re-imagine the imbrication of queerness and Scottishness, alongside other social differences. Taylor has curated an impressive array of creatives, scholars, and activists who explore the tensions, possibilities, pleasures, risks, and glitches that emerge for queer and trans people navigating their senses of belonging to the wee nation of Scotland. * Senthorun Raj, Manchester Metropolitan University, UK * Yvette Taylors Queer in a Wee Place is a carefully curated collection of big conversations about queerness in peripheral places in Scotland. It is attentive to where people come from, noticing the dirt and delight of a back lane in Glasgow marked lesbian library, it remembers what was scrawled on the wall before it was scrubbed clean. Revelling in interdisciplinary methods this collection dwells in local histories, languages, and social systems inviting readers to contemplate very specific places and practices and have shaped queer lives. * Mary Lou Rasmussen, Australian National University, Australia *

Muu info

An open access collection that explores queer identity, inequality and belonging, in and beyond, Scotland.
Introduction

1.Big Conversations in Queer Wee Places: Small, Nations, Sexuality and
Scotland
Yvette Taylor, University of Strathclyde, UK

Section 1: Queer Counts! Categories, Legalities and Challenges

2.Yes
Robyn ODonnell
3.Hate Crime in Scotland and the Classification of Queer Lives: Doors, Data
and Definitions
Kevin Guyan, University of Edinburgh, UK
4.Queer Hope of LGBTQ+ Rights in a Wee Place
Sharon Cowan, University of Edinburgh, UK
5.The Construction of Scotlands LGBTQ+ Population in the Census
Kirstie Ken English, University of Glasgow, UK
6.The Revolt and Revolting,
Jj Fadaka


Section 2 Queer States: Legacies and Transformations

7.Queer Provincialisms in (Post-)Brexit Britain
Yvette Taylor, Strathclyde Institute of Education, UK
8.Scotlands Menstrual Landscape, a Red Flag?
Kate Molyneaux, University of Strathclyde, UK
9.Queer in Scotland: A Wives Tale in Conversation
Aoife Christoffersen, and Ashlee Christoffersen, York University, Canada
10.Being Queer in Scotland: Conversational Snapshots
Dario Luis Banegas, University of Edinburgh, UK, and Drew Bain
11.Queer New Scots? On Migration, Queerness and Scottish Exceptionalism
Francesca Stella, University of Glasgow, UK
12.Assemblages
Mae Diansangu

Section 3: Queer Homelands: Myths, Migrations and Movements

13.Leaving is Queer: Loving and leaving a Wee Place
Finn Mackay, University of the West of England, UK
14.The Aul Days: Ewan Forbes and the Ghost in the Machine
Zoe Playdon, University of London, UK
15. A Queer Poetics of Belonging: From Dui Bangla to Glasgow
Tanvir Alim, University of Glasgow, UK and Rohit K Dasgupta, LSE, UK
16.Lessons in Geography: Learning from Maud Sulter
Natasha Thembiso Ruwona
17.Unintended Poiesis
Sindhu Rajasekaran


Section 4: Queer Creations: Vibrations, Glitches and Curiosities

18.Queer Wee Filmic Places: Creating a Utopic Gaze through Queer Film
Exhibition in Scotland,
Leanne Dawson, University of Edinburgh, UK
19.Queer Curiosities: LGBTQ+ Equity in Scotlands Museums
Joe Setch
20.After Morgan: On Legacy and Queer Elders in Poetry
Andrés N. Ordorica
21.Brilliant Vibrating Interface: Queering the Post-Internet through Poetry
and Practice
Kirsty Dunlop, University of Glasgow, UK and Maria Sledmere, University of
Strathclyde, UK
22.International Stories on a Scottish Stage: A Conversation on
Representation, Recognition and Activism through the As Is Ethnodrama
Harvey Humphrey, University of Glasgow, UK, Slater Clain, Gina Gwenffrewi,
University of Edinburgh, UK, Leni Daly, Odhran Thomson and Mathew Wilkie

Section 5: Queer Education: (Post-)Compulsory Classroom Contexts

23. Black Scottish Writing and the Fiction of Diversity
Churnjeet Mahn, University of Strathclyde, UK
24. Welcome Home? Finding your (Queer) Place in Scotland and in STEM
Marco Reggiani, University of Strathclyde, UK and Jessica Gagnon, University
of Manchester, UK
25. Disabled Queer Student Experiences of Scottish Higher Education
Jack McKinlay, University of Strathclyde, UK
26. NOHOMO in the Classroom: Queer Ideas Through and Beyond Scottish
Classrooms
Dan Brown
Yvette Taylor is a Sociologist and Professor of Education, Strathclyde Institute of Education, University of Strathclyde, UK.