(2000) Jaarboek voor Vrouwenstudies: Strijd om seksualiteit (original) (raw)

Arpita Das, Annelies Kleinherenbrink, and Dr. Ebtihal Mahadeen eds. Sexuality in Focus

Guest edited special edition of the Graduate Journal of Social Science edited by Arpita Das, Annelies Kleinherenbrink, and Dr. Ebtihal Mahadeen, which I had the pleasure & privilege of playing a part in supervising and bringing into being, in my role as GJSS Co-Editor in Chief. This exciting edition of the GJSS emerged from the 2011 NOISE Summer School: NOISE Summer School: The miraculous (dis-) appearing Act of Sexuality; Mapping the Study of Sexuality in Europe, 1960-2010.

Thesis Gender and Sexuality

The image above represents the much talked-of American hard rock band KISS in the company of their so beloved women. I would like to show my gratitude to professor Gert Buelens for his interest in my subject matter, his suggestions and the very useful feedback that I have got over the last few months. Without his support this dissertation would not have been possible. I also want to thank Ruben De Baerdemaeker for sharing his thoughts on my 'pretty glam boys' and discussing Butler's Gender Trouble with me. 'Tack så mycket' to Lisbeth Hellman for helping me out with Freudian and Lacanian theories. I also want to thank Bob Ruysschaert from the KULeuven and Aurora Van Hamme for their comments and advice. Many thanks also go to librarian Mario Floryn from the department of Art, Music and Theatre Sciences at the UGent. I want to thank my friends Sjar and Staffan for their support, and Jon for transcribing some song lyrics for me. Last but not least I thank Liz from Leaded Fuel and Autostrada Outlaws, G.A. Sinn from Cyanide 4, Lizzy from Lizzy Borden and all the guys from Frenchkiss for talking about their music with me. You guys rock hard!

Introduction to Women's, Gender, & Sexuality Studies

2020

This introductory course invites students to the explore the field of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies. As such, we will begin the semester by learning about the field's history and conclude the class by considering its future. The rest of the syllabus, which is organized into three parts, showcases scholarship that takes an interdisciplinary approach to understanding the social construction of sex, gender, and sexuality. Together, we will unpack the assumptions that underlie popular and academic discussions about sexed bodies, gender identities, and sexual desires, and we will examine the ways in which scholars, activists, and other feminist thinkers attempt to dismantle dominant power structures and enact lasting social change. The first part of the course explores the gendered regulation of bodies in relation to the rise of western science and the invention of sexual and racial difference. In the second part of the class, we will foreground questions of gender as we investigate the emergence of the modern nation-state alongside histories of capitalism, colonialism, slavery, and war. The third part of the course tackles issues of gender and globalization: in addition to studying the movement of bodies, capital, and things across geopolitical borders, we will also zero in on transnational feminist approaches to labor organizing and environmental justice. Although the syllabus is divided into three distinct parts, these units are designed to complement one another. In other words, students will be expected to draw connections between the sections and to relate material assigned at the beginning of the semester to what follows. As a whole, this course aims to give students a sense of the topics, methods, and questions that are central to women's, gender, and sexuality studies.

Proceedings from the Summer School for Sexualities, Cultures and Politics 2015

2016

Mirjana Stošić and Stanimir Panayotov Note from the Editors Dimana Ivanova On Some Aspects of the Lyrical Subject and his Queer Identity in Czech Decadent Poetry, with Comparisons Looi van Kessel Perverted by Literature: Rethinking Sexual Identity in the Works of James Purdy Enrico Petrilli New Maps for a Known Territory: Early Exploration of Club Studies and Epistemology of the Night Zhanar Sekerbayeva Cyberbodies: Hybridization and Rethinking Anna Kurowicka Asexual Affects: What Abjection, Anxiety and Shame Have to Do with Asexuality? Duygu Ula Ayşe Loves Fatma: Female Homoerotic Intimacy and the Public Space in Nilbar Güreş’s Photography Luciana Moreira Silva Queering Spanish Families: Friendship as a Transgressive Network among Lesbians

Looking for kambrada: Sexuality and social anxieties in the Dutch colonial archive, 1882–1923

Tijdschrift voor genderstudies, 2019

How can we embrace the appeal to use Caribbean terms for same-sex erotic relationships when we work with archives-such as the colonial archive-whose subjects are spoken about and do not speak back (at least not in a way that is understandable or recognisable to us)? This article deals with the term kambrada in Papiamentu in the context of Curaçao. The term can be translated as zami in Caribbean English Creole and mati in Suriname's Sranan Tongo. The Caribbean terms zami and mati, like kambrada, can refer to a (non-sexual) female or male companion as well as to female same-sex erotic relationships. I trace the appearance of kambrada in the Dutch colonial archive by looking at the first three (known) sources that mention female same-sex relationships in the Dutch Caribbean in general, and kambrada relationships in particular. These are the anthropological study Curaçao en Zijne Bewoners (Curaçao and Its Habitants, 1882) by Antoine T. Brusse, the travelogue Naar de Antillen en Venezuela (To the Antilles and Venezuela, 1904) by Henri van Kol, and the novel E No Por Casa (She Cannot Marry, 1923) by Willem Kroon. I do not approach these texts as sources for the recovery of the voices of women who engaged in kambrada relationships. Rather, I group them together as part of a 'cultural archive' to show how, as cultural articulations of sexuality, they simultaneously articulate colonial domination, social anxieties, and pa-triarchy. By deducing the ideological statements of these male authors, I take up Ann Stoler's invitation to read along the grain of the colonial archive.

Duits, L. and L. van Zoonen (2011), Coming to terms with sexualization. European Journal of Cultural Studies 14(5), 491-506.

Not since the feminist pornography debates of the 1980s has there been such an outburst of discussion, research and publications about sexualized images of women and girls. The debate is now carried out by governments and other social actors, but to hail current attacks on sexualization as a belated victory for feminism is naive and problematic, as discussed in this article. We contend that current sexualization policies involve academic analyses and political solutions which are cast in the discourse of liberal feminism and neoliberalism. Inevitable in the current work on sexualization is an identity of girls and young women as ‘victims’ in need of protection. Research among Dutch girls is utilized to refute that construction, emphasizing tactics of resistance, negotiation and accommodation which they have developed. Current sexualization concerns are ahistorical in their oblivion to similar sexualization panics in previous decades and to the years of feminist cultural analysis and critique in this arena.