Blessed is the Fruit: Drag Performance, Birthing and Religious Identity (original) (raw)

When the Lights are Shining on Them: Drag Performance and Queer Communities in London

2019

Drag performance is and continues to be intimately linked to queer communities. This thesis explores drag performances and queer communities in contemporary London. It argues that these performances offer fertile sites for the emergence and sustenance of queer communities, focusing on the work of twelve performers in contemporary London. Starting from the understanding that homophobic and transphobic violence is increasingly prevalent in the context of this study, it describes and theorises drag performance and its relation to the practice of queer communities both in response to and regardless of this violence. Overall, this thesis proposes that drag and the spaces in which these performances happen facilitate queer communities and as such are connected to queer modes of survival. There has been a resurgence in drag performance in the UK both as a result of and a resistance to the rise in popularity of RuPaul’s Drag Race (World of Wonder, 2009). As a result of this show, drag perfo...

Ackley, D. W. (2021) Queer Foreword and Chapter 9. Creating, expressing, connecting: Arts, Music, Drama as Divine Play in Sex and Sacrament: A Queer Liberation Theology of Prayer and Worship (Queer Liberation Theology & Praxis Volume1), 221-269

Sex and Sacrament: A Queer Liberation Theology of Prayer and Worship (Queer Liberation Theology & Praxis Volume 1), 2021

This excerpt from chapter 9 from Queer Liberation Theology and Praxis Volume 1 (Sex and Sacrament) explores singing -- especially queer group singing -- as an embodied practice of resistance, resilience, worship, and interconnectedness from both Christian and interfaith liturgical theological perspectives. Listed as one of the top 5 English-language LGBTQ books in religion in 2021 https://qspirit.net/top-lgbtq-christian-books-2021/

Transgressing the father figure: Performing queer theology as an act of liberation

Theology & Sexuality, 2017

This chapter examines the intersection of power, ritual, and the sacred through the lens of performing drag as a tool to subvert dominant notions of theological discourse. Grounded in Cheng’s assertion that queer theology is transgressive (Radical Love) and Althaus-Reid’s Indecent Theology, the foundational text which introduces the concept of theology as destabilizing and grounded in subversion, particularly in the realm of sexuality, we critique the forces of power operating within Catholicism. We ask: Whose bodies are allowed to play a powerful role in Catholicism? How has ritual performance perpetuated the colonization of the mind/spirit and how can it be used to undo that same colonization? In discussing a public drag performance using George Michael’s “Father Figure,” we suggest the possibility of liberation that exists in bringing theology into queer spaces, extending theology beyond the realm of religious institutions or the academy.

Contemporary Drag Practices and Performers: Drag in a Changing Scene, Volume 1

2020

In recent years drag performance has moved from the fringes to emerge as a mainstream phenomenon, showcased on TV shows in the US and the UK. This collection offers a diverse range of critical engagements by drag performers, makers, scholars and writers reflecting on work from the UK, USA, Israel, Germany and Australia. Moving beyond discussions of gender theory, the essays consider contemporary drag performance practices, connecting them to the histories, communities and politics that produced them. Chapters range across discussions of drag kings in the US, UK and drag and activism; the influence of RuPaul on the generation of new forms of work in New York; transfeminist critiques of drag; 'bio'/faux queens; engagements with race and ethnicity through drag performance; drag andragogy; audience concerns; drag intersections with animal personas, and how drag performance relates to personal narratives of history and identity. Collectively the contributions focus on drag as a m...

The Thin Line Between Modernity and Tradition in Queer Performance

BlackFlash Magazine issue 38.3, 2022

Referencing social media works by African, Muslim, non-binary trans artist Maroodi, Abdi Osman discusses the ways in which the legacies of colonialism and imperialism shape debates on sexual minority cultures in the African, Black, and Muslim worlds.

“Fundamental Femininity in Performance: An Artist's Reflection on ‘Jesus Camp Queen’”

Performance Matters, 2017

Jesus Camp Queen (JCQ) is an authoethnographic performance that focuses on the author/performer’s formative experiences as a member of a fundamentalist Christian sect and particularly the gendered nature of her faithfulness to its religious values. In her artist’s reflection, Latham theoretically, culturally, and aesthetically contextualizes JCQ renderings of her own and others’ performances of “Christ-like femininity” within rituals of “queen” and “court” ceremonies at church youth camps and at a church-affiliated college. More broadly, JCQ and Latham’s reflections on it speak to the ways in which public spectacles that celebrate a highly codified feminine ideal—and thereby reify binary gender roles—can and do create profound internal dissonance, even or perhaps especially within those whose performances most fully embody the idealized role of femininity in which they have been cast. The performance-related materials to be published include: a framing essay that theoretically and aesthetically situates the performance text of JCQ within a larger exploration of the performance of gender within conservative Christian culture; the text of JCQ and related images; and reviewer responses to JCQ. LATHAM, Angela J. Fundamental Femininity in Performance: An Artist's Reflection on "Jesus Camp Queen". Performance Matters, [S.l.], v. 3, n. 1, p. 132-137, may. 2017. ISSN 2369-2537. Available at: http://performancematters-thejournal.com/index.php/pm/article/view/71.

En/Activist Drag: Kings Reflect on Queerness, Queens, and Questionable Masculinities

In recent years, media attention to drag performers has increased transforming the once-hidden leisure activity of gay men and lesbians into a publicly recognized phenomenon. Many of these representations of drag have fallen short in offering reflective illustrations of the connections among gender identity, performance, misogyny, patriarchy, and activism. In response,we find ourselves studying the gendered life experiences of drag kings to illuminate the variety of experiences that shape their gendered lives. We specifically look to our re-storied, visual, composite narratives of eight kings’ experiences to show how drag functions as a context where social-political-capitalist transformation can be enacted.