Queer Citizenship and Critical Perspectives on Naturalization

CHAPTER 11:
QUEERING CITIZENSHIP
Politics, Power, and Justice
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
What does it mean to be a queer citizen?
Queer Nation (1990):  started by members of ACT UP
Previous labels of queer political activists (imposed by
outsiders):
Comintern (popular in McCCarthyism, in1950s, generally,
international communists)
Homintern (used as early as 1930s to add queer layer to
otherness)
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Citizen:  definitions?
Bestowed by birthplace:  Obama and “birther” movement
OED:  Citizenship includes “the rights to live and work in a
particular national state and to participate in its politics
while being subject to taxation”
Fordham:  adds to OED, “also someone who holds
membership in a certain geographic region and actively
participates in the society of their specific region”
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Devon W. Carbado: Citizenship vs. Naturalization
Critical race theory
Naturalization involves implicit and explicit assumptions
about belonging, membership, and rights
Non-citizen white people may be granted greater degree of
naturalization than black citizens, through policing,
surveillance, and freedom of movement
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
How to apply to queer people?
Denaturalization based on sexual orientation and/or gender
identity?
Examples:  Kim Davis’ refusal to grant wedding licenses to
same-sex couples Kentucky)
Masterpiece Bakery:  Colorado baker who refused to make
wedding cake for same-sex couple
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
The Public Sphere
Term coined by German philosopher, Jurgen Habermas
“Virtual or imaginary community which does not necessarily
exist in any identifiable space” (Soules)
While originating in concepts of public authority, it is
through “talk” produced within the sphere that policies,
laws, and values become articulated and realized.
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Eric O. Clarke: Heterosexism and the Public Sphere
Heterosexism has had the power for “defining proper civic
personhood.”
Traces activism for queer rights to 19
th
 century movements,
centered in German, originated by Magnus Hirschfeld
Paragraph 175:  criminalization of homosexual acts (only
formally repealed in 1994)
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Clarke, continued
Visibility politics
In 21
st
 century, biggest problem: marginalization and
devaluing of queer identities, often within LGBT communities
(such as the devaluing of T identities)
Ellen DeGeneres:  the specter of the “scary homosexual”
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Homonormativity
Upholds and sustains the assumptions and institutions of
heteronormativity
Happens when queer people do not question or challenge
the norms in various spheres (education, commerce, etc.)
Comes from fear, exhaustion, desire for acceptance
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Homonormativity and Homonationalism
Lisa Duggan:
Homonormativity:  “a politics that 
… upholds and sustains
[heteronormative assumptions].”
Implicit agreement to act as “docile bodies” (Foucault’s
phrase)
Also, “promising the possibility of a demobilizied gay
constituency and a privatized, depoliticized gay culture
anchored in domesticity and consumption” (Duggan)
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Homonationalism:  Global Extensions
Jasbir Puar, 
Terrorist Assemblages: Homonationalism in
Queer Times 
(2007)
Grounds theory in the commemoration in Iran on July 19,
2006, of the International Day of Action Against Homophobic
Persecution--first anniversary of hanging of two young
Iranian men for homosexual acts.
Western involvement to justify military invasion of Iran
Imposition of Western concepts of queerness on “darkened
bodies”
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Pinkwashing
Makes false equivalence: being positive on one issue
obviates negative attitudes on other dimensions/identities
Rewards queer people into citizenship by rewarding them for
support of military aggression and violence
Benevolence toward sexual “others” (queers) involves tacit
or explicit endorsement of white/Western supremacy
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Queer Politics in the United States
Amy Stone, 
Gay Rights at the Ballot Box 
 (2012):
Social
 
movements: longer fight for LGBT rights
Ballot measures:  more limited goals/purposes
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Social Movements and 
Habitus
Pierre Bourdieu:  “Habit,” a way of performing everyday
social life
Stone:  “campaign politics is rarely queer politics” (may be
too ambitious an attempt to change 
habitus
)
Stone:  local levels, individual issues (such as Briggs initiative)
tend to be more successful; weakest on transgender issues
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
LGBT Politicians and Electoral Politics
Gerry Studds (1983) and Barney Frank (1987): first members
of national Congress to openly identify as gay (did not do so
until after election); both represented Massachussetts
Other pioneers:
Elaine Noble
Barbara Jordan (never came out)
Tammy Baldwin
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Criminalizing Queerness: Sodomy Laws
Sodomy laws: have existed for centuries in many countries
In US, have been handled primarily at state level
Questions of constitutionality
1996:  
Bowers v. Hardwick
; upheld by Supreme Court (5-4)
2003:  
Lawrence v. Texas
; dismantled sodomy laws at  federal
level
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Same-Sex Marriage/Marriage Equality
“Marriage-like” arrangements for centuries
1970:  Jack Baker and Michael McConnell, Minneapolis;
initially granted license, but was rescinded
1983:  Evan Wolfson, wrote paper for law class on issue;
eventually became national activist for same-sex marriage
Conservative Arguments for Same-Sex Marriage
Andrew Sullivan and Jonathan Rauch: major figures
AIDS epidemic:  absence of marriage equality often robbed
partners of rights of association and decision-making
Sullivan:  argued for “domestic partnerships” or “civil
commitments” rather than marriage per se
Rauch:  same-sex marriage could help “tame” gay men and
encourage them to be more faithful (critics say this as
homonormativity)
Critiques of Same-Sex Marriage
Against Equality
: collective dedicated to resistance of same-
sex marriage, military enrollment, prison systems
Believed that such resistance would work for fairness and
justice for multiple oppressed groups
Queers for Economic Justice, 
Joseph DeFillipis:
Beyond Same-Sex Marriage”:  “securing governmental and
private institutional recognition of diverse kind of partnerships,
households, kinship relationships and families.”
Historical Landmarks in Marriage Equality
1991:  Hawaii:  Wolfson and Lambda Legal pled case for gay
couple wishing to marry
1996:  Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), signed by Bill
Clinton:  allowed individual states t legalize marriage,
invalidated federal rights for same-sex partners; led to
Proposition 8 in California
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Challenges to DOMA
United States v. Windsor
 (2013):
Edie Windsor and Thea Spyer: married in Canada in 2007;
Spyer died in 2009
Windsor sought to receive survivor benefits; would have
been tax at higher rate
Initially, Windsor won; ruling overturned at appeal
Ultimately, won at Supreme Court, 5-4 decision
Kennedy, writing for majority, cited “dignity” as a right of
all citizens
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Obergefell v. Hodges
2015:  Case that led to national recognition of same-sex marriage
James Obergefell and John Arthur: resided in Ohio (did not
recognize SSM), married in Maryland (which did)
Arthur dying of ALS; Obergefell petition to be listed as surviving
spouse; Arthur died in 2013
Ended up at Supreme Court, Kennedy once again writing for
majority, invoked “dignity” again
While some states refuse to issue marriage licenses for same-sex
couples, marriages performed in other states must be
acknowledged legally
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Queering
 
the Military
Queer soldiers in US military since beginning:  Baron
Friedrich von Steuben
1940s:  formalized policy of not inducting men who
”admitted” to homosexual feelings and activities
Many queer people nonetheless served in “closeted” fashion
1950s: coincident with McCarthy communist “witch hunts,”
heightened surveillance of queer people in military, with
discharges on this basis
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Spotlight on Leonard Matlovich and Margarethe
Cammermeyer
Sgt. Leonard Matlovich:
Joined Air Force at 19 and served in Vietnam for three terms of
duty
Came out to self around age 30; following year made contact with
gay rights activist Frank Kameney
Became test case; cover of 
Time
 magazine
Did not win case, but was given honorable discharge
Died of AIDS in his mid-40s
Epitaph:  “When I was in the military, they gave me a medal for
killing two men and a discharge for killing one"
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Col. Margarethe Cammermeyer: 
Serving in Silence
Nurse, originally married to a man
1988:  met women would become her wife; came out to
military authorities during security clearance
1992:  honorably discharged
Brought law suit, judge found ban unconstitutional
Returned to service under Don’t Ask Don’t Tell
Retired a few years later; wrote memoir; made into TV film
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Don’t Ask Don’t Tell
Came into existence under Bill Clinton
Devised by Charles Moskos, sociologist of the military
Stated that openly active homosexuals were deleterious to
military, conceded that closeted ones could serve honorably
Therefore, to remain eligible, military personnel should not
disclose queer sexual identity, nor should other personnel
ask them to.
Flaw:  if third party revealed a soldier’s sexuality
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Chelsea Manning and Transpeople in Military
Manning, originally assigned male and inducted into military as man;
often “read” as queer and called stigmatizing names
Served in intelligence, charged with Espionage Act for sending “leaked”
emails and documents to Wikileaks
Had “experimented” with dressing as women while in Iraq; while in
custody transitioned to female gender
Obama commuted her sentence in late 2016
2017:  two cadets graduating from Air Force Academy and West Point,
both of whom identified as transgender, not allowed to be
commissioned as officers)
Donald J. Trump has announced directive to block presence of
transgender people in military
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Hate Crimes and Hate Speech:
“Special Circumstances” and Continuing Debates
FBI definition:  “criminal offense against a person or property
motivated in whole or in part by an offender’s biase against a
race, religion, disability, sexual orientation, ethnicity, gender,
or gender identity”
Highest proportion based on race, especially against African-
Americans and Hispanics (FBI terminology)
Sexual orientation was next; gender identity fewer (numbers
may be skewed by either identification or comparatively
smaller population)
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
The Matthew Shepard Case
1998:  Laramie, WY
Shepard, college student, killed by two men, left to die on
fence
Defense unsuccessfully used “gay panic” defense
At time, Wyoming hate crimes law did not include sexual
orientation
Killers sentenced to life imprisonment
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Federal Hate Crime Legislation
2009:  Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes
Prevention Act
Approved by both houses and signed by Barack Obama
Arguments in favor:
Longer recovery times and increased for depression and PTSD for
survivors
Increased stigma may result
Arguments against:  “special rights”
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Trans (and Intersex) Politics:
An Emerging Territory
Taylor and Haider-Markel, 
Transgender Rights and Politics
LGB rights tend to focus on “morality” politics
T rights tend to emerge from “reinvention pressure”
T rights increasingly focusing on deconstructing gender binaries
Lewis:  “passing” transgender people tend to fare better in public
than ”non-passing” ones
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Political Issues for Transgender People
Identity documentation:  
s
uch items as birth certificates, social
security cards, and other “cards of identity”
Bathroom spaces:  fear of the “scary trans woman” (e.g. an individual
who has not bottom surgery and may still have penis)
Especially painful and challenging for young people
One solution:  option of gender neutral bathrooms
2016:  North Carolina passed law requiring people to use
bathroom labeled for the sex/gender assigned at birth
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Global and Transnational Issues in Queer Politics
The European Union and Queer Rights:
EU affirms queer antidiscrimination laws and practices
Required to belong to EU
28 EU nations:
15 allow same-sex marriage
Of remaining, all but 6 recognize some form of same-sex civil union
or partnership
Northern Ireland, countries from formerly Soviet-occupied
countries, and one where religious prohibitions determine laws are
the only outliers
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
EU and the “Politics of Visibility”
Philip Ayouh, political scientist:
Diffusion theory
Identifies “first movers”—allows ”new adapters” to join
Not necessarily a product of “modernization”
Rather, “norm visibility”
“Religious nationalism” greatest obstacle
Russia and the Russian Federation
Russia:  homosexuality itself decriminalized
Gay censorship law: criminalizes publication and distribution
of pro-gay materials:  2017 case brought before European
Court.  Found in favor of the men, 6-1
Gay men sent to concentration camps in Chechen Republic
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
ISIS, the Middle East, and Conditions for Queer People
Israel and Lebanon: most progressive on queer issues; Lebanon
most religious diverse in Middle East
Joseph Massad, 
Desiring Arabs
:
Western views of queerness in Arab countries carry considerable
degree of “Orientalism” (term coined by Edward Said)
“the Gay International”: project by Westerners to turn LGBT/queer
identity into a “universalized” set of characteristics
Claims that violence and imprisonment based more on claims for public
identity than on private behaviors (this claim has been contested by
scholars and activists)
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Saleem Hadad: Critic of Massad
Novelist, 
Guapa
 (2016)
Shows ways men of Arab descent engage in sexual activities and
relational interactions with other Arab men
While conceding some of Massad’s “Gay Internationalist” critique,
also sees Massad’s rejection of queer politics limiting and
monolithic
“Who owns Arab bodies?”
Iran and Queer Lives
One of the harshest stated penalties for homosexual activity
Views trans identity as a medical illness
Pays for surgeries to “correct” the “illness”
Sara Farizan, 
If You Could Be Mine
 (2013), Iranian-American writer,
Young Adult Novel
Narrator teen-age woman involved in same-sex relationship
with best friend
Explores the “queer” underground of Tehran
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
2005:  Mahmoud Asgari and Ayad Marhoni
Aged 16 and 18 respectively
Hanged in town square of Khorosan, province in northeast Iran
Convicted of raping 13 year-old boy
Issue of whether the sex was consensual; had it been considered
consensual, the ages of Asgari and Marhoni would have been considered in
sentencing
Questions of whether labeling them as “gay” is accurate or not
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
ISIS’s influence on violence against queer people
Came to light in wake of the Pulse nightclub shooting
Tim Teeman, journalist, “the secret, hypocritical gay world of
Isis”
Execution of 15 year old Syrian boy who was discovered to
be having sexual relationship with top commander of ISIS.
Commander flogged but then sent to front in Iraq to fight for
ISIS
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Africa: A Continent Not a Country
South Africa: despite history of apartheid, has most
progressive policies on LGBT/queer issues
1988: decriminalized male homosexuality; never had laws about
female homosexuality
Permits same-sex marriage, adoption by same-sex couples, and
inclusion in the military
Still instances of “corrective rape” (lesbians being forced to have
sex with men for “therapeutic” purposes)
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Uganda:  The Other Extreme
2009:  Bill introduced to make homosexuality activity
grounds for death penalty; while not passed, received large
amount of support
Ironically, no laws against gay propaganda
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Explanations for African Antigay Attitudes
History of colonialism:  some Africans view western
colonialists as having ”introduced” homosexuality to their
cultures
Claim that homosexuality was not indigenous to African
nations
Different ways of understanding same-sex relations (i.e. not
fixed identity)
Role of Christian missionaries in influencing attitudes and
policies
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Spotlight on The Rainbow Project in Namibia
Located in southeast Africa
No anti-discrimination laws (other than decriminalizing sex between
women)
John Walters, country’s Ombudsman, 2016:  “If people of the same
sex would like to get married, it is their choice, whether the country,
the community, churches and government acknowledge that”
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
The Rainbow Project
Robert Lorway, Canadian anthropologist, studied The Rainbow
Project:
Organization committed to education, service, and activism
Challenges:  distances between communities, lack of resources, and
negative views towards outsiders intervening in local matters
Local conditions include: conflation of gender nonconformity with
presumption of sex work
“Hate speeches” delivered by ruling government during Lorway’s
research; corrective rape not punished, and rounding up of young
men wearing earrings
HIV prevalence among the highest in the world
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Other Continents, Other Countries:
“The Rest”
Other places you may wish to explore:
Central and South America
East Asia
Australia and Oceania
Canada
(Perhaps the most progressive place for LGBT/Issues on the Planet)
Bruce Henderson, 
Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries
, Harrington Park Press 2019
Slide Note
Embed
Share

Delve into the complexities of queer citizenship through a critical lens, discussing the evolving definitions of citizenship, the impact of naturalization on different racial groups, and examples of denaturalization based on sexual orientation and gender identity. The concept of the public sphere is also explored in relation to queer politics and activism.

  • Queer citizenship
  • Naturalization
  • Critical race theory
  • Public sphere
  • LGBTQ rights

Uploaded on Sep 13, 2024 | 0 Views


Download Presentation

Please find below an Image/Link to download the presentation.

The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author. Download presentation by click this link. If you encounter any issues during the download, it is possible that the publisher has removed the file from their server.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CHAPTER 11: QUEERING CITIZENSHIP Politics, Power, and Justice Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  2. What does it mean to be a queer citizen? Queer Nation (1990): started by members of ACT UP Previous labels of queer political activists (imposed by outsiders): Comintern (popular in McCCarthyism, in1950s, generally, international communists) Homintern (used as early as 1930s to add queer layer to otherness) Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  3. Citizen: definitions? Bestowed by birthplace: Obama and birther movement OED: Citizenship includes the rights to live and work in a particular national state and to participate in its politics while being subject to taxation Fordham: adds to OED, also someone who holds membership in a certain geographic region and actively participates in the society of their specific region Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  4. Devon W. Carbado: Citizenship vs. Naturalization Critical race theory Naturalization involves implicit and explicit assumptions about belonging, membership, and rights Non-citizen white people may be granted greater degree of naturalization than black citizens, through policing, surveillance, and freedom of movement Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  5. How to apply to queer people? Denaturalization based on sexual orientation and/or gender identity? Examples: Kim Davis refusal to grant wedding licenses to same-sex couples Kentucky) Masterpiece Bakery: Colorado baker who refused to make wedding cake for same-sex couple Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  6. The Public Sphere Term coined by German philosopher, Jurgen Habermas Virtual or imaginary community which does not necessarily exist in any identifiable space (Soules) While originating in concepts of public authority, it is through talk produced within the sphere that policies, laws, and values become articulated and realized. Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  7. Eric O. Clarke: Heterosexism and the Public Sphere Heterosexism has had the power for defining proper civic personhood. Traces activism for queer rights to 19th century movements, centered in German, originated by Magnus Hirschfeld Paragraph 175: criminalization of homosexual acts (only formally repealed in 1994) Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  8. Clarke, continued Visibility politics In 21st century, biggest problem: marginalization and devaluing of queer identities, often within LGBT communities (such as the devaluing of T identities) Ellen DeGeneres: the specter of the scary homosexual Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  9. Homonormativity Upholds and sustains the assumptions and institutions of heteronormativity Happens when queer people do not question or challenge the norms in various spheres (education, commerce, etc.) Comes from fear, exhaustion, desire for acceptance Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  10. Homonormativity and Homonationalism Lisa Duggan: Homonormativity: a politics that upholds and sustains [heteronormative assumptions]. Implicit agreement to act as docile bodies (Foucault s phrase) Also, promising the possibility of a demobilizied gay constituency and a privatized, depoliticized gay culture anchored in domesticity and consumption (Duggan) Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  11. Homonationalism: Global Extensions Jasbir Puar, Terrorist Assemblages: Homonationalism in Queer Times (2007) Grounds theory in the commemoration in Iran on July 19, 2006, of the International Day of Action Against Homophobic Persecution--first anniversary of hanging of two young Iranian men for homosexual acts. Western involvement to justify military invasion of Iran Imposition of Western concepts of queerness on darkened bodies Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  12. Pinkwashing Makes false equivalence: being positive on one issue obviates negative attitudes on other dimensions/identities Rewards queer people into citizenship by rewarding them for support of military aggression and violence Benevolence toward sexual others (queers) involves tacit or explicit endorsement of white/Western supremacy Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  13. Queer Politics in the United States Amy Stone, Gay Rights at the Ballot Box (2012): Socialmovements: longer fight for LGBT rights Ballot measures: more limited goals/purposes Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  14. Social Movements and Habitus Pierre Bourdieu: Habit, a way of performing everyday social life Stone: campaign politics is rarely queer politics (may be too ambitious an attempt to change habitus) Stone: local levels, individual issues (such as Briggs initiative) tend to be more successful; weakest on transgender issues Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  15. LGBT Politicians and Electoral Politics Gerry Studds (1983) and Barney Frank (1987): first members of national Congress to openly identify as gay (did not do so until after election); both represented Massachussetts Other pioneers: Elaine Noble Barbara Jordan (never came out) Tammy Baldwin Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  16. Criminalizing Queerness: Sodomy Laws Sodomy laws: have existed for centuries in many countries In US, have been handled primarily at state level Questions of constitutionality 1996: Bowers v. Hardwick; upheld by Supreme Court (5-4) 2003: Lawrence v. Texas; dismantled sodomy laws at federal level Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  17. Same-Sex Marriage/Marriage Equality Marriage-like arrangements for centuries 1970: Jack Baker and Michael McConnell, Minneapolis; initially granted license, but was rescinded 1983: Evan Wolfson, wrote paper for law class on issue; eventually became national activist for same-sex marriage

  18. Conservative Arguments for Same-Sex Marriage Andrew Sullivan and Jonathan Rauch: major figures AIDS epidemic: absence of marriage equality often robbed partners of rights of association and decision-making Sullivan: argued for domestic partnerships or civil commitments rather than marriage per se Rauch: same-sex marriage could help tame gay men and encourage them to be more faithful (critics say this as homonormativity)

  19. Critiques of Same-Sex Marriage Against Equality: collective dedicated to resistance of same- sex marriage, military enrollment, prison systems Believed that such resistance would work for fairness and justice for multiple oppressed groups Queers for Economic Justice, Joseph DeFillipis: Beyond Same-Sex Marriage : securing governmental and private institutional recognition of diverse kind of partnerships, households, kinship relationships and families.

  20. Historical Landmarks in Marriage Equality 1991: Hawaii: Wolfson and Lambda Legal pled case for gay couple wishing to marry 1996: Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), signed by Bill Clinton: allowed individual states t legalize marriage, invalidated federal rights for same-sex partners; led to Proposition 8 in California Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  21. Challenges to DOMA United States v. Windsor (2013): Edie Windsor and Thea Spyer: married in Canada in 2007; Spyer died in 2009 Windsor sought to receive survivor benefits; would have been tax at higher rate Initially, Windsor won; ruling overturned at appeal Ultimately, won at Supreme Court, 5-4 decision Kennedy, writing for majority, cited dignity as a right of all citizens Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  22. Obergefell v. Hodges 2015: Case that led to national recognition of same-sex marriage James Obergefell and John Arthur: resided in Ohio (did not recognize SSM), married in Maryland (which did) Arthur dying of ALS; Obergefell petition to be listed as surviving spouse; Arthur died in 2013 Ended up at Supreme Court, Kennedy once again writing for majority, invoked dignity again While some states refuse to issue marriage licenses for same-sex couples, marriages performed in other states must be acknowledged legally Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  23. Queeringthe Military Queer soldiers in US military since beginning: Baron Friedrich von Steuben 1940s: formalized policy of not inducting men who admitted to homosexual feelings and activities Many queer people nonetheless served in closeted fashion 1950s: coincident with McCarthy communist witch hunts, heightened surveillance of queer people in military, with discharges on this basis Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  24. Spotlight on Leonard Matlovich and Margarethe Cammermeyer Sgt. Leonard Matlovich: Joined Air Force at 19 and served in Vietnam for three terms of duty Came out to self around age 30; following year made contact with gay rights activist Frank Kameney Became test case; cover of Time magazine Did not win case, but was given honorable discharge Died of AIDS in his mid-40s Epitaph: When I was in the military, they gave me a medal for killing two men and a discharge for killing one" Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  25. Col. Margarethe Cammermeyer: Serving in Silence Nurse, originally married to a man 1988: met women would become her wife; came out to military authorities during security clearance 1992: honorably discharged Brought law suit, judge found ban unconstitutional Returned to service under Don t Ask Don t Tell Retired a few years later; wrote memoir; made into TV film Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  26. Dont Ask Dont Tell Came into existence under Bill Clinton Devised by Charles Moskos, sociologist of the military Stated that openly active homosexuals were deleterious to military, conceded that closeted ones could serve honorably Therefore, to remain eligible, military personnel should not disclose queer sexual identity, nor should other personnel ask them to. Flaw: if third party revealed a soldier s sexuality Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  27. Chelsea Manning and Transpeople in Military Manning, originally assigned male and inducted into military as man; often read as queer and called stigmatizing names Served in intelligence, charged with Espionage Act for sending leaked emails and documents to Wikileaks Had experimented with dressing as women while in Iraq; while in custody transitioned to female gender Obama commuted her sentence in late 2016 2017: two cadets graduating from Air Force Academy and West Point, both of whom identified as transgender, not allowed to be commissioned as officers) Donald J. Trump has announced directive to block presence of transgender people in military Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  28. Hate Crimes and Hate Speech: Special Circumstances and Continuing Debates FBI definition: criminal offense against a person or property motivated in whole or in part by an offender s biase against a race, religion, disability, sexual orientation, ethnicity, gender, or gender identity Highest proportion based on race, especially against African- Americans and Hispanics (FBI terminology) Sexual orientation was next; gender identity fewer (numbers may be skewed by either identification or comparatively smaller population) Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  29. The Matthew Shepard Case 1998: Laramie, WY Shepard, college student, killed by two men, left to die on fence Defense unsuccessfully used gay panic defense At time, Wyoming hate crimes law did not include sexual orientation Killers sentenced to life imprisonment Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  30. Federal Hate Crime Legislation 2009: Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act Approved by both houses and signed by Barack Obama Arguments in favor: Longer recovery times and increased for depression and PTSD for survivors Increased stigma may result Arguments against: special rights Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  31. Trans (and Intersex) Politics: An Emerging Territory Taylor and Haider-Markel, Transgender Rights and Politics LGB rights tend to focus on morality politics T rights tend to emerge from reinvention pressure T rights increasingly focusing on deconstructing gender binaries Lewis: passing transgender people tend to fare better in public than non-passing ones Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  32. Political Issues for Transgender People Identity documentation: such items as birth certificates, social security cards, and other cards of identity Bathroom spaces: fear of the scary trans woman (e.g. an individual who has not bottom surgery and may still have penis) Especially painful and challenging for young people One solution: option of gender neutral bathrooms 2016: North Carolina passed law requiring people to use bathroom labeled for the sex/gender assigned at birth Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  33. Global and Transnational Issues in Queer Politics The European Union and Queer Rights: EU affirms queer antidiscrimination laws and practices Required to belong to EU 28 EU nations: 15 allow same-sex marriage Of remaining, all but 6 recognize some form of same-sex civil union or partnership Northern Ireland, countries from formerly Soviet-occupied countries, and one where religious prohibitions determine laws are the only outliers Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  34. EU and the Politics of Visibility Philip Ayouh, political scientist: Diffusion theory Identifies first movers allows new adapters to join Not necessarily a product of modernization Rather, norm visibility Religious nationalism greatest obstacle

  35. Russia and the Russian Federation Russia: homosexuality itself decriminalized Gay censorship law: criminalizes publication and distribution of pro-gay materials: 2017 case brought before European Court. Found in favor of the men, 6-1 Gay men sent to concentration camps in Chechen Republic Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  36. ISIS, the Middle East, and Conditions for Queer People Israel and Lebanon: most progressive on queer issues; Lebanon most religious diverse in Middle East Joseph Massad, Desiring Arabs: Western views of queerness in Arab countries carry considerable degree of Orientalism (term coined by Edward Said) the Gay International : project by Westerners to turn LGBT/queer identity into a universalized set of characteristics Claims that violence and imprisonment based more on claims for public identity than on private behaviors (this claim has been contested by scholars and activists) Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  37. Saleem Hadad: Critic of Massad Novelist, Guapa (2016) Shows ways men of Arab descent engage in sexual activities and relational interactions with other Arab men While conceding some of Massad s Gay Internationalist critique, also sees Massad s rejection of queer politics limiting and monolithic Who owns Arab bodies?

  38. Iran and Queer Lives One of the harshest stated penalties for homosexual activity Views trans identity as a medical illness Pays for surgeries to correct the illness Sara Farizan, If You Could Be Mine (2013), Iranian-American writer, Young Adult Novel Narrator teen-age woman involved in same-sex relationship with best friend Explores the queer underground of Tehran Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  39. 2005: Mahmoud Asgari and Ayad Marhoni Aged 16 and 18 respectively Hanged in town square of Khorosan, province in northeast Iran Convicted of raping 13 year-old boy Issue of whether the sex was consensual; had it been considered consensual, the ages of Asgari and Marhoni would have been considered in sentencing Questions of whether labeling them as gay is accurate or not Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  40. ISISs influence on violence against queer people Came to light in wake of the Pulse nightclub shooting Tim Teeman, journalist, the secret, hypocritical gay world of Isis Execution of 15 year old Syrian boy who was discovered to be having sexual relationship with top commander of ISIS. Commander flogged but then sent to front in Iraq to fight for ISIS Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  41. Africa: A Continent Not a Country South Africa: despite history of apartheid, has most progressive policies on LGBT/queer issues 1988: decriminalized male homosexuality; never had laws about female homosexuality Permits same-sex marriage, adoption by same-sex couples, and inclusion in the military Still instances of corrective rape (lesbians being forced to have sex with men for therapeutic purposes) Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  42. Uganda: The Other Extreme 2009: Bill introduced to make homosexuality activity grounds for death penalty; while not passed, received large amount of support Ironically, no laws against gay propaganda Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  43. Explanations for African Antigay Attitudes History of colonialism: some Africans view western colonialists as having introduced homosexuality to their cultures Claim that homosexuality was not indigenous to African nations Different ways of understanding same-sex relations (i.e. not fixed identity) Role of Christian missionaries in influencing attitudes and policies Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  44. Spotlight on The Rainbow Project in Namibia Located in southeast Africa No anti-discrimination laws (other than decriminalizing sex between women) John Walters, country s Ombudsman, 2016: If people of the same sex would like to get married, it is their choice, whether the country, the community, churches and government acknowledge that Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  45. The Rainbow Project Robert Lorway, Canadian anthropologist, studied The Rainbow Project: Organization committed to education, service, and activism Challenges: distances between communities, lack of resources, and negative views towards outsiders intervening in local matters Local conditions include: conflation of gender nonconformity with presumption of sex work Hate speeches delivered by ruling government during Lorway s research; corrective rape not punished, and rounding up of young men wearing earrings HIV prevalence among the highest in the world Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

  46. Other Continents, Other Countries: The Rest Other places you may wish to explore: Central and South America East Asia Australia and Oceania Canada (Perhaps the most progressive place for LGBT/Issues on the Planet) Bruce Henderson, Queer Studies: Beyond Binaries, Harrington Park Press 2019

More Related Content

giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#