Japonica Brown-Saracino’s How Places Make Us is an engaging book that illustrates the centrality of cities in shaping understandings of sexuality. She analyzes the identities and lives of lesbian, bisexual, and queer (LBQ) women in four cities: Ithaca, New York; San Luis Obispo, California; Portland, Maine; and Greenfield,Massachusetts. Despite the fact that these cities are home to a high number of female same-sex couples and are imagined as sites of acceptance for LGBTQ people, Brown-Saracino discovers, through her ethnographic fieldwork and interviews, something surprising: the LBQ women in each city offered radically different narratives about sexuality. The book is devoted to exploring the distinct “sexual identity culture” in each cit...
The year 1978 held many contradictions for gay rights in the United States. The city of San Francisc...
Violence against lesbians and gay men has increasingly captured media and scholarly attention. But t...
First paragraph: I read What’s the Use? while tired. On lockdown due to COVID-19, my anxiety was dom...
In new research Japonica Brown-Saracino examines differences in GLBTQI identification among demograp...
In this foreword to the special issue “Geographies of Sexualities,” I provide a review of the schola...
First paragraph: In this volume Lynda Johnston embarks on an ambitious project: to understand the re...
Review of Homoplot: The Coming-Out Story and Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Identity by Esther Saxe
Kaisa Ilmonen’s Queer Rebellion in the Novels of Michelle Cliff opens slowly, with the first two cha...
Book synopsis: This book contains a collection of cutting-edge chapters that explore various connect...
Contains fulltext : 151428.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Geographies of ...
Abstract: Recent studies of sexuality and space have done much to demonstrate that ‘everyday’ space ...
A Queer New York: Geographies of Lesbians, Dykes and Queers, 1990by Jen Jack Gieseking, New York, Ne...
Place-making’, ‘place identity’ and ‘sense of place’ have been widely used by cities in their urban...
Review of Sex, Time and Place: Queer Histories of London, c.1850 to the Present, edited by by Si...
Review of: Feminist City: Claiming Space in a Man-made World by Leslie Kern, London and New York: V...
The year 1978 held many contradictions for gay rights in the United States. The city of San Francisc...
Violence against lesbians and gay men has increasingly captured media and scholarly attention. But t...
First paragraph: I read What’s the Use? while tired. On lockdown due to COVID-19, my anxiety was dom...
In new research Japonica Brown-Saracino examines differences in GLBTQI identification among demograp...
In this foreword to the special issue “Geographies of Sexualities,” I provide a review of the schola...
First paragraph: In this volume Lynda Johnston embarks on an ambitious project: to understand the re...
Review of Homoplot: The Coming-Out Story and Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Identity by Esther Saxe
Kaisa Ilmonen’s Queer Rebellion in the Novels of Michelle Cliff opens slowly, with the first two cha...
Book synopsis: This book contains a collection of cutting-edge chapters that explore various connect...
Contains fulltext : 151428.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Geographies of ...
Abstract: Recent studies of sexuality and space have done much to demonstrate that ‘everyday’ space ...
A Queer New York: Geographies of Lesbians, Dykes and Queers, 1990by Jen Jack Gieseking, New York, Ne...
Place-making’, ‘place identity’ and ‘sense of place’ have been widely used by cities in their urban...
Review of Sex, Time and Place: Queer Histories of London, c.1850 to the Present, edited by by Si...
Review of: Feminist City: Claiming Space in a Man-made World by Leslie Kern, London and New York: V...
The year 1978 held many contradictions for gay rights in the United States. The city of San Francisc...
Violence against lesbians and gay men has increasingly captured media and scholarly attention. But t...
First paragraph: I read What’s the Use? while tired. On lockdown due to COVID-19, my anxiety was dom...