1st Edition

The Ashgate Research Companion to Queer Theory

Edited By Noreen Giffney, Michael O'Rourke Copyright 2009
    558 Pages
    by Routledge

    558 Pages
    by Routledge

    This interdisciplinary volume of thirty original essays engages with four key concerns of queer theoretical work - identity, discourse, normativity and relationality. The terms ’queer’ and ’theory’ are put under interrogation by a combination of distinguished and emerging scholars from a wide range of international locations, in an effort to map the relations and disjunctions between them. These contributors are especially attendant to the many theoretical discourses intersecting with queer theory, including feminist theory, LGBT studies, postcolonial theory, psychoanalysis, disability studies, Marxism, poststructuralism, critical race studies and posthumanism, to name a few. This Companion provides an up to the minute snapshot of queer scholarship from the past two decades and identifies many current directions queer theorizing is taking, while also signposting several fruitful avenues for future research. This book is both an invaluable and authoritative resource for scholars and an indispensable teaching tool for use in the classroom.

    List of Contributors, Acknowledgements, Introduction: The ‘q’ Word (Noreen Giffney), Part I Identity 1. On Being Post-Normal: Heterosexuality after Queer Theory (Calvin Thomas) 2. Why Five Sexes Are Not Enough (Iain Morland) 3. ‘The Scholars Formerly Known as …’: Bisexuality, Queerness and Identity Politics (Jonathan Alexander and Karen Yescavage) 4. The Curious Persistence of Lesbian Studies (Linda Garber) 5. Making it Like a Drag King: Female-to-Male Masculinity and the Trans Culture of Boyhood (Bobby Noble) 6. Phenomenology, Embodiment and the Political Efficacy of Contingent Identity Claims (Annabelle Willox) 7. Queer Posthumanism: Cyborgs, Animals, Monsters, Perverts (Patricia MacCormack) Part II Discourse 8. Queering, Cripping (Todd R. Ramlow) 9. Generic Definitions: Taxonomies of Identity in AIDS Discourse (Meredith Raimondo) 10. Rethinking the Place of Queer and the Erotic within Geographies of Sexualities (Jon Binnie) 11. To ‘Play the Sodomits’: A Query in Five Actions (Garrett P.J. Epp) 12. Queer, but Classless? (Yvette Taylor) 13. Queer-in the Sociology of Sport (Jayne Caudwell) 14. ‘Things That Have the Potential to Go Terribly Wrong’: Homosexuality, Paedophilia and the Kincora Boys’ Home Scandal (Margot Gayle Backus) Part III Normativity 15. Queer Theory Goes to Taiwan (Song Hwee Lim) 16. Queer Theory Meets Archaeology: Disrupting Epistemological Privilege and Heteronormativity in Constructing the Past (Thomas A. Dowson) 17. A Queer Case of Judicial Diversity: Sexuality, Law and Judicial Studies (Leslie J. Moran) 18. Queerying Lesbian and Gay Psychology’s ‘Coming of Age’: Was the Past Just Kids’ Stuff? (Peter Hegarty) 19. ‘Nothing to Hide … Nothing to Fear’: Discriminatory Surveillance and Queer Visibility in Great Britain and Northern Ireland (Kathryn Conrad) 20. Biologically Queer (Myra J. Hird) 21. The New Queer Cartoon (Noreen Giffney) 22. Post-Queer Considerations (David V. Ruffolo) Part IV Relationality 23. Intimate Counter-Normativities: A Queer Analysis of Personal Life in the Early Twenty-First Century (Sasha Roseneil) 24. Queer Middle Ages (Steven F. Kruger) 25. Smacking My Bitch Up: Queer or What? (Nikki Sullivan) 26. ‘Quare’ Studies, or (Almost) Everything I Know about Queer Studies I Learned from My Grandmother (E. Patrick Johnson) 27. ‘A Strange Perversity’: Bringing Out Desire between Women in Frankenstein (Mair Rigby) 28. Sex and the Lubricative Ethic (Dinesh Wadiwel) 29. All Foucault and No Knickers: Assessing Claims for a Queer-Political Erotics (Tamsin Wilton), Index

    Biography

    Noreen Giffney is a Psychoanalytic Psychotherapist in private practice, and Lecturer in Counselling in the School of Communication and Media at the University of Ulster.

    Michael O’Rourke is the series editor of Queer Interventions at Ashgate Publishing. His research concentrates on the intersections between queer theory and Continental philosophy, especially Derrida, Delueze and Guattari, Ranciére, Foucault, Irigaray, Caputo and Nancy.

    'This collection ambitiously convokes established and emerging scholars across a wide spectrum of disciplines to critically address, in new and original ways, the field of queer theory. Divided into major categories of queer concern: identity, discourse, normativity, and relationality, the essays chart genealogies, track changes, and pose questions about the travels of this elusive term, the work it does, and the challenges it faces.' Carla Freccero, University of California, Santa Cruz, USA 'Far more than a retrospective reference work, this indispensable collection of essays does more than reassess most of the familiar themes in queer theory’s development over the past two decades. It takes the field in provocative new directions, suggesting many lines other than race, class, sexuality, and gender along which a critical queerness can perform its perversely enlightening operations.' Susan Stryker, Indiana University, USA 'Those invigorated by the multiple facets and faces of queerness will welcome this handy, heady, interdisciplinary tome... Recommended.' Choice 'The Ashgate Research Companion to Queer Theory is a solid collection providing an overview of the past, present and future applications of queer theory. The Companion confidently lives up to its name as a research companion offering useful theories and methodologies for the reader to utilise queer theory in their own work... an absolute pleasure to read...' M/C Reviews Culture & Media '... the collection introduces some exciting new ideas in relatively unexplored terrain... the contributors of this volume are cunning linguists who deliver intelligent appreciations and deprecations of the strangeness of language, discourses and social phenomena. In combination, they seem to offer a sharp new ’voice’ for the field. Their writing is in general witty, cheeky, at times laugh-out-loud funny, shocking, sexy and always academic enough to challenge general readers... The book is essential reading fo