During the 1970s in New York, queer people of color consolidated a queer subculture commonly known as ballroom as a response to spatial and social oppression. At a time when problems such as the spread of AIDS, homelessness, drug abuse, and prostitution were heavily portrayed as inherently related to the queer community, trans people of color were specifically and disproportionately affected by this political climate. In combination with the lack of security they faced in public spaces, this community was forced to use ballrooms to shape their own places of encounter away from the public eye. Drag shows became an escape and a support system through the creation of Houses, intangible structures of kinship, that hosted the grad shows and occa...
At the pinnacle of urban crisis that had ravaged cities across America, from the 1950s to the 1970s,...
"Petite Mort: Recollections of a Queer Public," published in September 2011, contains drawings and r...
At the decadal turn of 1980s, Downtown New York was paradoxically characterized by crisis alongside ...
This electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in th...
Abstract This paper explores the complex relationship between transgendered people and cities in the...
This dissertation examines controversies and conflicts over the cabaret law that regulates spaces fo...
Across the United States, in the mid-1930s, drag made a transition, along with much other entertainm...
Queer communities have historically gathered in cities, often accompanying a commonly held neighborh...
Scholars have paid particular attention to the various ways that queer sexuality is organized within...
This paper examines the contested nature of New York’s public spaces in the 1980s and 1990s through ...
This thesis explores the concept of queer space in architecture to understand its relationship betwe...
New York City has a long history of gentrification, well demonstrated by the strategies of “revitali...
This dissertation, Making Space in a Militarized Global City: The Racial and Gendered Politics of Pr...
My project aims to photograph queer people of color in underground nightlife in Los Angeles and New ...
“Queer with the City” traces how urban and environmental context have shaped the commitments of quee...
At the pinnacle of urban crisis that had ravaged cities across America, from the 1950s to the 1970s,...
"Petite Mort: Recollections of a Queer Public," published in September 2011, contains drawings and r...
At the decadal turn of 1980s, Downtown New York was paradoxically characterized by crisis alongside ...
This electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in th...
Abstract This paper explores the complex relationship between transgendered people and cities in the...
This dissertation examines controversies and conflicts over the cabaret law that regulates spaces fo...
Across the United States, in the mid-1930s, drag made a transition, along with much other entertainm...
Queer communities have historically gathered in cities, often accompanying a commonly held neighborh...
Scholars have paid particular attention to the various ways that queer sexuality is organized within...
This paper examines the contested nature of New York’s public spaces in the 1980s and 1990s through ...
This thesis explores the concept of queer space in architecture to understand its relationship betwe...
New York City has a long history of gentrification, well demonstrated by the strategies of “revitali...
This dissertation, Making Space in a Militarized Global City: The Racial and Gendered Politics of Pr...
My project aims to photograph queer people of color in underground nightlife in Los Angeles and New ...
“Queer with the City” traces how urban and environmental context have shaped the commitments of quee...
At the pinnacle of urban crisis that had ravaged cities across America, from the 1950s to the 1970s,...
"Petite Mort: Recollections of a Queer Public," published in September 2011, contains drawings and r...
At the decadal turn of 1980s, Downtown New York was paradoxically characterized by crisis alongside ...