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Encyclopedia :
Q :
QU :
QUE :
Queer |
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Queer"Queer" means unusual, and is controversial, although commonly used in a non-offensive manner [see below] as an adjective or noun for people whose sexual orientation and/or gender identity are counter to societal normss.Queer is now used as a unifying umbrella term for people who are gay, lesbian, bisexual, and also for those who are transgender, transsexual, and/or intersexual (although many transgender, transsexual and intersexual people identify as heterosexual or straight, and/or not queer). It is also commonly used as a term that includes asexual, pansexual and omnisexual people. It is not used of same-sex pedophiles or pederasts. "Queer" in this sense is simply used as a synonym for such terms as LGBT or lesbigay. The term is sometimes capitalised when referring to an identity or community, rather than merely a sexual fact (compare the capitalized use of Deaf). Since 1989, many combinations have occurred, like queer tranny fag, genderqueer and others.
Origin In German, 'quer' can be translated as 'across, at right angle, diagonally or transverse'. 'Sich quer legen' ('to lay quer') is translated with 'to be awkward'. Two different uses seem to have arisen seperately, but at the same time. The first, rather short-lived, arose initially from an aggressive essentialist seperatism. Initially labelled as the 'New Radicals', this was linked with radical outing and a militant 'black power' style and seperatist approach to sexuality (Katlin, 1991). This meaning of the word quickly evaporated. The second and even more radical form of the term was popularized by a wave of activist groups in the UK and USA, often working in new forms of performative non-violent street protest (the 'zap') that were developing around HIV/AIDS activism; such as Queer Nation, ActUp, OutRage, Subversive Street Queers, and Homocult. This use also arose from an underground queer fanzine scene, primarily in the USA (i-D magazine, 1992) where queer fanzines' inter-communication had been greatly aided by Factsheet Five. There were other currents that also contributed; campaigns in the UK around the age of consent, Stop the Clause, queer bashing, as well as the growing alienation of young 'pro-sex, pro-porn' lesbians from feminism, and a profound disillusionment with socialism and the left. At this time, 'queer' seemed to mean a breaking free from sexual identities and sexual labels, an embracing of a flexible repertoire of acts and emotions. This is shown clearly in the experience of many in ActUp and Queer Nation ...
Inevitably, the radical edge of the 'new queer politics' quickly became blunted. There was something of a retreat into the academy and what became known as Queer Theory...
While many queers who stayed outside the academy were highly suspicious of 'theory', many academics inside it also argued against this use of queer. Leo Bersani (1995) argued against the wide definitions of queer, specifically Warner's, that he claimed put...
Usage and MeaningAmong homosexuals, more people identify as gay or lesbian than as "queer". Andrew Parker (1994), among others, defines queer as, "a non-gender-specific rubric that defines itself diacritically not against heterosexuality but against the normative," while Michael Warner (1993) defines queer as "resistance to regimes of the normal." Thus, queer is a much more political term and is often used by those who are activists; by those who strongly reject traditional gender identities; by those who reject sexual identities such as gay, lesbian, bisexual, straight; by those who see themselves as oppressed by the heteronormativity of the larger culture; and/or by heterosexuals whose sexual preferences make them a minority (for example, BDSM practitioners). It should also be noted that this academic use of queer keeps in place the binary of 'normal' & 'perverse', and can thus only posit itself as "against the normative" or resisting the normal. It does not seek to 'queer' this essential binary, either through exposing the perversities that 'the normal' hides within itself (e.g. straight men having gay sex), or visa versa. Lauren Berlant and Michael Warner (1995) suggest that participation in "queer publics," is "more a matter of aspiration than it is the expression of an identity or a history," - although this comment ignores the ways in which dissident sexualities have historically made the 'aspirational imaginary' a place of cultural refuge for themselves and their sensibilities. Many people, however, identify primarily as Queer rather than using other labels. Some feel that society's labels do not adequately describe their sexual identity and preferences. Many people believe that using the umbrella term of queer is thus a positive way to reclaim a term that was previously used against them, stripping the term of its power to insult. This usage is becoming increasingly common among youth. But it is an umbrella that only stretches so far; a number of 'troublesome sexualities' (historicially, those that were key elements of same-sex love) are left entirely outside of the current public use of the term, are shown no such solidarity, and are left to the mercies of the law & the state. Historical UsageHistorically, the term 'queer' has been largely used as a pejorative epithet for effeminate and homosexual males, and others exhibiting non-traditional gender behaviour. Since the term persists as a homophobic slur bordering on profanity, and because another common meaning of the word is "strange", many members of sexual minorities do not favour its use. An early recorded usage of the word as an attack on a gay man, was in a letter by John Sholto Douglas, 9th Marquess of Queensberry to his son Lord Alfred Douglas. It was used in the late 1960s by radical writer Paul Goodman in his book The Politics of Being Queer (1969), that had a siginifact effect on the early gay liberation movement in the USA. According to academic feminist theorist Judith Butler (1993)...
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