This chapter explores the work of genderqueer artist Cassils in order to address the question of what it is to be human from a queer perspective. The challenges from queer and postmodern scholarship to the “identity politics” so central to earlier activist and academic agendas have been well documented. Yet, notwithstanding these valid critiques, identity remains a powerful organizing concept in contemporary experience. These contradictory stances on identity serve as a prompt for thinking about what queer brings to our understandings of being human now and in the near future
The relatively new field of Queer Theory creates ways of thinking about people living without binary...
Some literature on asexuality has claimed that it is inherently radical and contains the potential f...
Contemporary discourse on sexuality presents a picture of fluidity and malleability, with research c...
grantor: University of TorontoQueer is a contested term with numerous meanings. This thesi...
This Senior Project questions the usefulness of identity, specifically queer identity, as an organiz...
This paper examines how writing practice and engagement with textual artefacts (literature) can trig...
This dissertation presents a picture of the complexities and contradictions in the daily lives of pe...
This work explores aspects of Queer identity, historical reflection, and acceptance through painting...
Being is Becoming: selves are constantly changing, always in process, and never able to arrive at a ...
The recent proliferation of non-binary identities that do not include any physical, social, or prese...
Drawing from performance, affect, and queer theories, I explore how queer identity is storied, perfo...
The years between 1989 and 1993 witnessed a sea change in the fabric of contemporary artistic practi...
Queer has a double meaning: both as an umbrella term for marginalised identities and also as a decon...
Abstract: The word queer in queer theory has been used to identify gay, lesbian, and bisexual people...
In an era of hyper-connectivity and technological advancement, the growing understanding of identiti...
The relatively new field of Queer Theory creates ways of thinking about people living without binary...
Some literature on asexuality has claimed that it is inherently radical and contains the potential f...
Contemporary discourse on sexuality presents a picture of fluidity and malleability, with research c...
grantor: University of TorontoQueer is a contested term with numerous meanings. This thesi...
This Senior Project questions the usefulness of identity, specifically queer identity, as an organiz...
This paper examines how writing practice and engagement with textual artefacts (literature) can trig...
This dissertation presents a picture of the complexities and contradictions in the daily lives of pe...
This work explores aspects of Queer identity, historical reflection, and acceptance through painting...
Being is Becoming: selves are constantly changing, always in process, and never able to arrive at a ...
The recent proliferation of non-binary identities that do not include any physical, social, or prese...
Drawing from performance, affect, and queer theories, I explore how queer identity is storied, perfo...
The years between 1989 and 1993 witnessed a sea change in the fabric of contemporary artistic practi...
Queer has a double meaning: both as an umbrella term for marginalised identities and also as a decon...
Abstract: The word queer in queer theory has been used to identify gay, lesbian, and bisexual people...
In an era of hyper-connectivity and technological advancement, the growing understanding of identiti...
The relatively new field of Queer Theory creates ways of thinking about people living without binary...
Some literature on asexuality has claimed that it is inherently radical and contains the potential f...
Contemporary discourse on sexuality presents a picture of fluidity and malleability, with research c...