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Posts tagged: queer

Acceptance of actual homosexuality has increased by a staggering amount in the last few decades. In less than 40 years, the LGBT rights movement has gone from fighting for our right to not be put in mental institutions and lobotomized, to fighting for our right to get legally married. (And, okay, the right to not be fired from our jobs or kicked out of the U.S. military… but still.) And social acceptance of queers has paralleled our political acceptance. If you actually are a gay man, the “Don’t be even a little bit gay” message is being replaced, more and more every day, with the message, “Well… okay.”

But if you’re a straight man? It’s a very different story. In TV shows and movies, homosexual panic is still a reliable source of comic hijinks. Wacky situations in which straight men are mistaken for gay — Chandler and Joey on “Friends” being out together with a baby, the “Not that there’s anything wrong with that” gag on “Seinfeld” — these are a staple of modern comedy. And that staple is usually stapled to the assumption that, for straight men, being mistaken for gay is a humiliating blow to their masculinity. You see it in fashion/ dating/ etiquette advice for men, too, which often focuses to an almost hysterical degree on walking that razor- thin line between looking like an urbane, sophisticated man of the world… while still, for the sweet love of Jesus, not being mistaken for gay.
Instead we choose not to choose the child, as image of the imaginary past or as identificatory link to the symbolic future; we would bury the subject in the tomb that waits in the hollow of the signifier and pronounce at last the words we are condemned from the outset for having said anyway: that we are the advocates of abortion; that the child as figure of futurity must die; that we have seen the future and it’s every bit as lethal as the past; and thus what is queerest about us, queerest within us, and queerest despite
us, is our willingness to insist intransitively: to insist that the future stops here.
Lee Edelman “The Future is Kid Stuff: Queer Theory, Disidentification, and the Death Drive”
resmc:

proofrawk:

Barbara Kruger

resmc:

proofrawk:

Barbara Kruger

The Mirabelles are experimenting with a new type of militant theater, a theater separate from an explanatory language and long tirades of good intentions, for example, on gay liberation. they resort to drag, song, mime, dance, etc., not as different ways of illustrating a theme, to “change the ideas” of spectators, but in order to trouble them, to stir up uncertain desire-zones that they always more or less refuse to explore. The question is no longer to know whether one will play feminine against masculine or the reverse, but to make bodies, all bodies, break away from the representations and restraints on the “social body.
Felix Guattari; quoted in José Esteban Muñoz’s Disidentifications: queers of color and the performance of politics, p. 100 (via mutantninjabarbies)
genderqueer:

fuckyeahtrannies:

shaanmichael:

Glamour.com | Just Another Girl (Who Used to Be a Boy)

Glamour magazine has a great story that is as much about friendship as it is the biography of a young transgender woman.

genderqueer:

fuckyeahtrannies:

shaanmichael:

Glamour.com | Just Another Girl (Who Used to Be a Boy)

Glamour magazine has a great story that is as much about friendship as it is the biography of a young transgender woman.

Nude of Walt Whitman by Thomas Eakins

Nude of Walt Whitman by Thomas Eakins

Queers do a kind of practical social reflection just in finding ways of being queer. (Alternatively many people invest the better parts of their lives to avoid such a self-understanding and the social reflection it would imply.)
Michael Warner