Europe has recently become closely associated with LGBTQ rights. It remains unclear, however, what is the role of this association in everyday European imaginations and identifications. Empirical research on European identity hardly ever discusses the role of LGBTQ rights. Nor do we know much about European identifications of LGBTQ people themselves. In this article, I address those gaps from the perspective of Polish LGBTQs in the UK. Drawing on 30 interviews from a recent two-year research project, I discuss my participants’ European imaginations and identifications by developing the concepts of ‘uncanny Europe’ and ‘protective Europeanness’. I show how my participants tend to view Europe as ‘diverse’, ‘open’ and ‘tolerant’, while attribu...
The transformation of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) rights into a “standard for civ...
Does the EU help or hinder gay rights movements in post-communist Europe? Conor O’Dwyer assesses the...
This article argues that many young people (11 to 19) in Europe articulate a construction of their i...
Europe has recently become closely associated with LGBTQ rights. It remains unclear, however, what i...
Europe has recently become closely associated with LGBTQ rights. It remains unclear, however, what i...
The EU sees itself as a beacon of LGBT-friendliness and seeks to promote these norms in its external...
Europe has long been regarded as a unique place for the promotion and furthering of LGBT rights. Thi...
Thirty years after the fall of communism and fifteen years after Poland joined the European Union, t...
Europe matters to contemporary LGBTQ politics. This chapter maps out various political articulations...
In terms of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) rights, few organizations have done as muc...
The purpose of this study is to investigate anti-EU and anti- LGBT attitudes in Poland on the basis ...
Europe is a popular destination for LGBTQ people seeking to escape discrimination and persecution. Y...
The EU sees itself as a beacon of LGBT-friendliness and seeks to promote these norms in its external...
The aim of this article is to argue in favour of queer theory’s potential for non-essen-tialist poli...
Published online 13 October 2023The article historicizes social and state practices that Jasbir Puar...
The transformation of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) rights into a “standard for civ...
Does the EU help or hinder gay rights movements in post-communist Europe? Conor O’Dwyer assesses the...
This article argues that many young people (11 to 19) in Europe articulate a construction of their i...
Europe has recently become closely associated with LGBTQ rights. It remains unclear, however, what i...
Europe has recently become closely associated with LGBTQ rights. It remains unclear, however, what i...
The EU sees itself as a beacon of LGBT-friendliness and seeks to promote these norms in its external...
Europe has long been regarded as a unique place for the promotion and furthering of LGBT rights. Thi...
Thirty years after the fall of communism and fifteen years after Poland joined the European Union, t...
Europe matters to contemporary LGBTQ politics. This chapter maps out various political articulations...
In terms of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) rights, few organizations have done as muc...
The purpose of this study is to investigate anti-EU and anti- LGBT attitudes in Poland on the basis ...
Europe is a popular destination for LGBTQ people seeking to escape discrimination and persecution. Y...
The EU sees itself as a beacon of LGBT-friendliness and seeks to promote these norms in its external...
The aim of this article is to argue in favour of queer theory’s potential for non-essen-tialist poli...
Published online 13 October 2023The article historicizes social and state practices that Jasbir Puar...
The transformation of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) rights into a “standard for civ...
Does the EU help or hinder gay rights movements in post-communist Europe? Conor O’Dwyer assesses the...
This article argues that many young people (11 to 19) in Europe articulate a construction of their i...