Transnational and Queer Diasporic Sexualities
Transnational and Queer Diasporic Sexualities
- Fatima Zahrae Chrifi AlaouiFatima Zahrae Chrifi AlaouiCommunication Studies, San Francisco state University
Summary
Research on transnational and queer diasporic sexualities is still in its infancy but continues to evolve rapidly as understandings of sexuality and queer identity become further complicated. The nuanced and contextual intersections of queer identity as paired with cultural specificity amplify and redefine queerness across space. Pushing back against long-standing notions of what queer looks like in the West, transnational and diasporic queer sexual identities transcend normative definitions of what sexualities can look like outside of rigid binary thinking. Considering three core themes—Western hegemony, transnational and queer diasporic families, and blurring the First/Third World binary—offers the ability to highlight lived experiences to better understand the complexities of the past, present, and future of transnational and queer diasporic sexualities.
Subjects
- Gender (Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Studies)