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Aantal resultaten: 29( DE:"lhbtq-gemeenschappen" )

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Love Song to Lavender Menace  / 

James Ley.London: Bloomsbury, 2017 - 88 p.
uitgave: London: Bloomsbury, 2017 - 88 p.
onderwerpen:
samenvatting: In 1982, two friends Bob and Sigrid opened their new radical lesbian, gay and feminist bookshop, 'Lavender Menace' on Edinburgh's Forth Street. On the eve of the shop's 5th birthday, sales assistants Paul and David take a look back at its origins, in this funny, moving play. Cast your mind back to 1982 -- Margaret Thatcher sends the British Fleet to the Falklands, Channel 4 comes to the living room and Prince William is born. But this play has nothing to do with all that. This play is about activism, community and fighting for acceptance with words, music, humour and heart. The play looks back at 1982, as Bob and Sigrid open their shop. A trailblazing venture that began life in the cloakroom of a gay club, the shop will become the beating heart of Edinburgh's LGBT+ community. Now, on the final night of the shop's existence, sales assistants Lewis and Glen look back at its origins, its importance, its celebration of queer culture, how things have changed for the better (maybe)... And straight away the arguments begin! Love Song to Lavender Menace is a beautifully funny and moving exploration of the love and passion it takes to make something happen and the loss that is felt when you have to let it go.

signatuur: cat. (ley/lov) fb

toegang:
Love Song to Lavender Menace
cat. (ley/lov) fb
https://ihlia.nl/search/covers/thumb/F98704_1.jpg
James Ley.
F98704
Artikel

Excluding the queer unwanted: Perspectives from older LGBTQ+ adults in New Zealand  / David Betts.

Journal of Gay & Lesbian Social Services, 33 (2021) 4 (okt-dec), p. 475-492
bron: Journal of Gay & Lesbian Social Services jaargang: 33 (2021) 4 (okt-dec), p. 475-492
samenvatting: This article focuses on the community connections of older people with diverse sexual, gender, and/or sex characteristics in New Zealand. Specifically, it is reporting on how access to social spaces is filtered through perceptions of who is welcome in lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ+) spaces. Thirty-one qualitative semi-structured interviews were conducted with older adults (ages 60-80) who were part of LGBTQ+ communities. These interviews addressed the topics of social connection, wellbeing, and identity. The findings indicated that identity-based exclusion resulted in disconnection from LGBTQ+ social spaces, with participants reporting both active and passive actions that positioned these spaces for specific individuals, resulting in a group that has previously been described in research as the queer unwanted.
onderwerpen:

signatuur: ts.

Excluding the queer unwanted: Perspectives from older LGBTQ+ adults in New Zealand
ts.
David Betts.
Journal of Gay & Lesbian Social Services
33
(2021)
4
(okt-dec)
475-492
N310045
Artikel

Queering the Community Music Archive  / Zelmarie Cantillon, Sarah Baker and Bob Buttigieg.

Australian Feminist Law Journal, 32 (2017) 91-92, p. 41-57
bron: Australian Feminist Law Journal jaargang: 32 (2017) 91-92 , p. 41-57
samenvatting: Archiving has become an increasingly important practice in the preservation of feminist and queer histories. In this article, we pay specific attention to the emerging body of literature on feminist archives of popular music, many of which are community-based, DIY initiatives. These community-led archives aim to comprehensively collect the ephemeral, intangible heritage of feminist music cultures that have traditionally been excluded in popular music canons and marginalised by mainstream heritage institutions. The literature revealed that feminist music archives function as much more than spaces for preservation - they are affective as much as they are intellectual, and they are key sites for activism and community-building. These two themes - activism and affectivity - thread together the body of literature, providing both the driving force behind these DIY archives and their potentiality in the communities of interest they cater to. The community archivists accounted for in the literature have all engaged in practices of queering the community music archive; taking the mainstream heritage institution as a model and rebuilding it from the ground up, renegotiating its boundaries and notions of linear history, and reconfiguring its practices to account for lives lived in the margins of the mainstream.
onderwerpen:

signatuur: dgb artikelen (canti/que)

Queering the Community Music Archive
dgb artikelen (canti/que)
Zelmarie Cantillon, Sarah Baker and Bob Buttigieg.
Australian Feminist Law Journal
32
(2017)
91-92
41-57
N310225
Artikel

Authenticating and Legitimizing Transgender and Gender Non-conforming Identities Online: A Discourse Analysis  / Alyssa West, Kaori Wada & Tom Strong.

Journal of LGBTQ Issues in Counseling, 15 (2021) 2 (apr-jun), p. 195-223
bron: Journal of LGBTQ Issues in Counseling jaargang: 15 (2021) 2 (apr-jun), p. 195-223
samenvatting: The number of Transgender and Gender Non-Conforming (TGNC) individuals who are presenting for counseling is increasing; yet counselors receive little to no exposure to gender-diversity throughout their education and training. TGNC individuals have reported receiving discriminatory experiences within therapy and ineffectual outcomes. Consistent with social-justice practice, knowledge of how clients understand themselves is necessary to enhance the outcomes of counseling. A key resource TGNC individuals are using to engage in identity exploration is online communities. We applied discourse analysis to analyze the talk and text of three such online communities, and explored: "How do self-identifying TGNC individuals construct their identity when they discuss their related experiences online?" We identified that individuals made sense of their identity using three discourses: (a) felt sense, (b) authenticity, and (c) legitimacy. Individuals constructed their identity using linguistic resources to resist systemic oppression and claim their identities as valid and real. We offer suggestions for infusing this insight into trans-affirmative practice.
onderwerpen:

signatuur: ts.

Authenticating and Legitimizing Transgender and Gender Non-conforming Identities Online: A Discourse Analysis
ts.
Alyssa West, Kaori Wada & Tom Strong.
Journal of LGBTQ Issues in Counseling
15
(2021)
2
(apr-jun)
195-223
N310307
Artikel

LGBTQ Clients and Adverse Laws: Mental Health Concerns and Advocacy Suggestions  / Jennifer H. Greene-Rooks ...[et al].

Journal of LGBTQ Issues in Counseling, 15 (2021) 3 (jul-sep), p. 329-349
bron: Journal of LGBTQ Issues in Counseling jaargang: 15 (2021) 3 (jul-sep), p. 329-349
samenvatting: LGBTQ communities have faced a history of legalized discrimination including discriminatory laws and lack of legal protections. This has had varied mental health implications including increases in depression, anxiety, substance use, and suicidality. The authors provide an overview of this discriminatory history and it's connection to mental health concerns of the LGBTQ population. Counseling implications and advocacy suggestions are also provided.
onderwerpen:

signatuur: ts.

LGBTQ Clients and Adverse Laws: Mental Health Concerns and Advocacy Suggestions
ts.
Jennifer H. Greene-Rooks ...[et al].
Journal of LGBTQ Issues in Counseling
15
(2021)
3
(jul-sep)
329-349
N310314
Grijs

LGBTQ+ Cultural Infrastructure in London : Night Venues, 2006-present  / Ben Campkin and Laura Marshall.

London: UCL Urban Laboratory, 2017 - 68 p.
uitgave: London : UCL Urban Laboratory, 2017 - 68 p.
onderwerpen:
thema:
  1. recreatie/uitgaan
  2. lhbti
samenvatting: This research develops a pilot mapping of LGBTQ+ nightlife spaces published in the report LGBTQ+ nightlife in London : 1986 to the present (2016). Both projects have been undertaken by UCL Urban Laboratory, a university-wide centre for research, teaching and public engagement on cities worldwide. The pilot research was designed in collaboration with LGBTQ+ community organisations Raze Collective (representing LGBTQ+ performers) and Queer Spaces Network (a group interested in preserving and supporting spaces for the LGBTQ+ community). The pilot research looked at LGBTQ+ nightlife in London from 1986 - when the Greater London Council was disbanded, marking a shift in urban regeneration policy - to the present day, a time of wide reporting and activism around the closure of commercial LGBTQ+ spaces. It evidenced, for the first time, the recent intensity of closures among London's LGBTQ+ nightlife spaces, with significant impacts on the most longstanding and community-valued venues. It also highlighted that spaces catering to women and Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic (BAME) LGBTQ+ people have been disproportionately vulnerable to closure. The pilot project emphasised the continuing risk to many LGBTQ+ nightlife venues, including those that survey evidence showed the London LGBTQ+ community deemed to be of most value. The research presented evidence of the diversity of the capital's LGBTQ+ nightlife as an important contributor to neighbourhoods, the night-time economy and culture. It showed the importance of nightlife venues and events to community life, welfare and wellbeing.

signatuur: cat. (campk/mar)

dgb grijs

toegang:
LGBTQ+ Cultural Infrastructure in London : Night Venues, 2006-present
cat. (campk/mar)dgb grijs
N310552
Artikel

Experiences of older LGBT people ageing in place with care and support: A window on ordinary ageing environments, home-making practices and meeting activities  / Roos Hoekstra-Pijpers.

Sexualities, 25 (2022) 1-2 (jan-feb), p. 25-44
bron: Sexualities jaargang: 25 (2022) 1-2 (jan-feb), p. 25-44
samenvatting: In the (near) future, a growing number of older LGBT people will "age in place", receiving health and social care in their homes and wider ageing environments until a very advanced age. This article discusses the results of a survey research among 115 LGBT people aged 65 years and over who are ageing in place and who are weekly and monthly receivers of health and social care services, and follow-up interviews with 10 people. The research was situated in the Netherlands. The results show that older LGBT people's experiences with ageing in place are related to differences in how ageing environments are able to accommodate LGBT lifestyles. The results further shed light on the meaning of receiving health and social care at home as an older LGBT person, and the ways in which LGBT life histories and identities are expressed in care relationships, both in verbal and in home-making practices. Finally, the results suggest that the links between older LGBT people and the wider LGBT community are vulnerable, and neighbourhood-based activities may not be sufficiently responsive to older LGBT people.
onderwerpen:

signatuur: ts.

Experiences of older LGBT people ageing in place with care and support: A window on ordinary ageing environments, home-making practices and meeting activities
ts.
Roos Hoekstra-Pijpers.
Sexualities
25
(2022)
1-2
(jan-feb)
25-44
N310561
Artikel

Mess up the empire: Deploying and disrupting homonationalism  / John Andrew G. Evangelista.

Sexualities, 25 (2022) 4 (jun), p. 347-364
bron: Sexualities jaargang: 25 (2022) 4 (jun), p. 347-364
samenvatting: Homonationalism refers to how the West folded LGBTQ rights into the nation through neoliberal economies, intervention, and surveillance of racialized communities. This shift relied on the exceptionalist narrative that reveres Western sexual liberation - liberal, bureaucratic, visible, and consumerist - while silencing queer narratives from Southern, racialized, and migrant communities. The literature found that some LGBTQ (lesbians, gays, bisexuals, transgenders, and queers) organizations deployed this imperial narrative, yet accounts on the social conditions facilitating such deployments remain scant. To expand the current discussions, my paper situates the Philippine LGBTQ movement's affinity with homonationalism within the political, material, and ideological exigencies that confronted activists.
onderwerpen:

signatuur: ts.

Mess up the empire: Deploying and disrupting homonationalism
ts.
John Andrew G. Evangelista.
Sexualities
25
(2022)
4
(jun)
347-364
N310575
Grijs

"It empowers those that need to hear it" : A Qualitative Study on Fandom, Representation and Bi+ Identity  / Apolline Leroux.

Amsterdam: Universiteit van Amsterdam (UvA), 2022 - 61 p.
uitgave: Amsterdam : Universiteit van Amsterdam (UvA), 2022 - 61 p.
onderwerpen:
thema:
  1. # biseksualiteit
samenvatting: Although they form the largest demographic out of the LGBTQ+ community, bi+ identifying people are largely underrepresented in mainstream media and face stigma from both straight communities and lesbian and gay communities. These unique experiences of prejudice lead them to be the most at-risk population for mental health outcomes in all sexual orientation groups. It is important for bi+ people to have a positive identity development to be able to negotiate stigma. Fan communities, or fandoms, have been highlighted by research as a space where LGBTQ+ individuals can find support and come to terms with their identity by being in contact with other LGBTQ+ people. However, there is a gap in the literature when it comes to the perception of fandom spaces by more specific minorities. The aim of this qualitative study was to understand how bi+ people can construct and/or maintain their identity through fandoms, and how they perceive representation in those spaces. 14 interviews with a diverse sample were conducted, and grounded theory analysis revealed how bi+ individuals maintained their identity by using fandoms as a way to build connection and community, used these spaces to assert their identity, and had diverging perceptions on representation inside and outside of fan communities.

signatuur: cat. (lerou/emp)

dgb grijs

toegang:
"It empowers those that need to hear it" : A Qualitative Study on Fandom, Representation and Bi+ Identity
cat. (lerou/emp)dgb grijs
N310826
Grijs

Re-assessing community as a theoretical framework : The reproduction of exclusionary mechanisms within community-led archival projects  / Claudia Schelling.

Amsterdam: Universiteit van Amsterdam, 2022 - 77 p.
uitgave: Amsterdam : Universiteit van Amsterdam, 2022 - 77 p.
onderwerpen:
thema:
  1. informatievoorziening/technologie
  2. lhbti
samenvatting: In his article Community Histories, Community Archives: Some Opportunities and Challenges, Andrew Flinn (2007) argues for the merits of cooperation and integration of community archives into the field of 'mainstream' archives. He suggests that the silences in mainstream archives surrounding marginalized communities can be filled by the collections and knowledge contained in community archives. Flinn states, ?[i]t is clear that community archives, community memory schemes and oral history projects all have the potential, if supported and preserved, to have an impact in diversifying and democratizing heritage. Indeed their very existence challenges and subverts the authority of mainstream histories and archives. At the same time he cautions that community archives can reproduce the exclusionary mechanisms which are found in mainstream archives by excluding other groups - on the basis of class, gender, sexual orientation or transgression from community orthodoxies. Caswell (2014b) similarly suggests mainstream archives adopt the principles, which she ascribes to community archives, for liberatory action, but has in her most recent publication conceded that these community projects are not immune to the marginalizing forces attributed to mainstream archives. I will be using Homosaurus as a case study. The Homosaurus was created by IHLIA (International Homo/Lesbian Information center and Archive), a Dutch queer community archive, and further developed in cooperation with the Digital Transgender Archive (DTA) (Homosaurus 2022). I discuss the reproduction of exclusionary mechanism in queer and trans community archives by interviewing the theoretical writings on the topic with examples from US American history. By centering these criticisms of the queer and trans communities in the US and analyzing Homosaurus to see if these exclusive conceptions of queerness and transness are being reproduced, I hope to answer the question of how community-led archival projects reproduce the power mechanisms of institutional archives which these projects were meant to counter, as well as, how the literature on community archives contributes to this reproduction. While the origins of the vocabulary are Dutch, the current board is 90% American which is why I have chosen to look at it through the lens of US trans and queer history, though since the vocabulary is meant to be used internationally it could be applied to any other national or regional context.

signatuur: cat. (schel/rea)

dgb grijs

toegang:
Re-assessing community as a theoretical framework : The reproduction of exclusionary mechanisms within community-led archival projects
cat. (schel/rea)dgb grijs
N311175

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