Queer Subjects and the Contemporary United States

Christopher William Clark Announcement
Location
United Kingdom
Subject Fields
Cultural History / Studies, Humanities, Literature, Sexuality Studies, Art, Art History & Visual Studies

Recent upheaval from the Trump administration’s policy-making in the United States has seen the lives of queer subjects radically altered. This has included numerous executive orders that seek to curtail the power and agency of certain groups based on race, disability, gender, and sexuality particularly. Such identity distinctions are being made through an increasingly nationalist, and therefore heteronormative, lens which lends itself to the supremacy of ideals that support hegemonic cultural discourse.

This one-day colloquium aims to highlight queer subjectivities in the contemporary context of the United States, and seeks to uncover modes of resistance and ways in which the queer subject can lay claim to public and private spaces within both the nation-state and its outward global effects. Papers from a variety of scholars include discussions ranging from literature to activism, and RuPaul's Drag Race to Young Avengers.

Keynote provided by Dr. Sam McBean, Queen Mary, University of London.

Programme details and more information can be found here.

Contact Email
c.clark@uea.ac.uk