The Routledge Handbook of Queer Rhetoric 1st Edition by Jacqueline Rhodes, Jonathan Alexander – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 9780367696580 ,0367696584
Full download The Routledge Handbook of Queer Rhetoric 1st Edition after payment
Product details:
ISBN 10: 0367696584
ISBN 13: 9780367696580
Author: Jacqueline Rhodes, Jonathan Alexander
The Routledge Handbook of Queer Rhetoric 1st Edition Table of contents:
1 Introduction
Note
Works Cited
Section I Histories, Re-Histories, Archives
2 Undoing Happiness with Pleasure: Rhetorics of Affect in The Ladder
Affective Circulations
“Homosexuality is Not the Dirty Word it Used to Be”
Happy Homonormativity
Pleasure and Possibility in the Cruise
Notes
Works Cited
3 Retroactivism and the Institutional Archive
Shifting Alliances: From the 1970s to Today
Activism and the “Ordinary” in Archival Studies
Identity and Trust
Conclusion
Works Cited
4 Bisexual Invisibility, David Bowie, and the Prospects of Queer Memory
Bi-Invisibility in History and Memory
Considering Earthly Messenger
Lessons from Remembering Bowie
Works Cited
5 The Ready-Made Queerness of Greco-Roman Rhetoric
Notes
Suggested Reading
Works Cited
6 Printing a Queer Identity: Edward Carpenter, Ioläus, and the Affirmation of Same-Sex Desires in the Nineteenth Century
Establishing a Commonplace Sexuality
Surpassing the Rhetoric of Sexology
The Impact of Print on the Construction of a Queer Rhetoric
Conclusion
Notes
Archival Sources
Works Cited
7 Re-Storying Trans* Zines
On Trans* Epistemology
A New Reading of Trans* Zines
Zines, Archives, and Histories
Influence Upon Zines in the Academy
Disciplining Stories
Forward from Here
Notes
Works Cited
8 An Archive of Disposability: (Trans)gender and Sexuality in South Africa
Introduction
The Trans Homeless Body as an Embodied (Colonial) Cultural Archive of Gender and Sexuality
Moments of Unbuilding the Archive of Disposability Through Theatre and Performance
Notes
Works Cited
9 Re-Historicizing the “Lacking South”: Archiving Queer Memory and Sexual Visibilities in Alabama, Mississippi, and Georgia Through the Invisible Histories Project
The Myth of the “Lacking South”
Queer Memory and Sexual Visibilities
Queer Intermediaries
Re-Historicizing the Conversation
Works Cited
10 The Trans Rhetorical Practice of Archive Building
Becoming Subjects
Controlling the Story
Conclusion
Notes
Works Cited
Section II Methodologies
11 Wobbly Words and Transnational Queer Slippages
Story 1
Story 2
Story 3
Final Thoughts
Works Cited
12 Queer Topoi: Writing “Like” Sedgwick
Works Cited
13 Methodologies Not Yet Known: The Queer Case for Relational Research
Introduction: Research Is Ongoing Colonization, and You Are an Agent of Empire
Queerness is Settler Colonial Futurity
Toward Queer Relationalities—Refusal, Deliberation, Action
Methodologizing in a New Queer Relationality
Establishing a Research Paradigm
Chaining Theory
Asking Relational Questions
Ending (or Toward Hopeful Futures)
Notes
Works Cited
14 Blake Brockington’s Rhetorical Afterlife: Fugitive Black Trans* Data and Queer Kairotic Methodology
I.
II.
III.
Notes
Works Cited
15 Histories in (Trans)lation: Xie Jianshun and the Potential and Perils of Trans Historiography
The Problem of Pronouns: or, Pronoun as Metaphor
Transing
Trans of Color Critique
Trans*temporal Kinship
Notes
Works Cited
16 Subatomic Literacies and Queer Quantum Storytelling
Relativity, Subjectivity, Proximity
Composing Queer Quantum Rhetorics
Automythnography as Reflection/Refraction/Diffraction
Electrons Keep the Score
Time Travel as Intervention
Notes
Works Cited
17 Between the Sheets: Gavin Arthur’s Sexual Circulation
Notes
Works Cited
18 Queer Ecovisual Rhetorics
Queer Ecovisual Rhetorical Methodologies: Settler Colonial Landscapes as Normative Natures
Laura Aguilar’s Queer Ecovisual Rhetorical Methods
Conclusion
Notes
Works Cited
19 Queering Spaces
Failure and Mis-fit in Queer Geographies
Tracing Binaries
Mapping Spatial Rhetorics Queerly
Conclusion
Notes
Works Cited
Section III Communities
20 “Let’s Get Some Family Chosen”: Refugees, Homonationalism, and Queer Family Rhetoric
Speaker’s Benefits
Consubstantiality
Family Values
Notes
Works Cited
21 Queer Memes as Rhetorical Scenes
Notes
Works Cited
22 Womyn’s Words: Rhetorical Practices of Lesbians in the Tampa Bay Area
Coming Home (An Introduction)
A Queer Methodology
Identity-Based Writings (1980s to Early 90s)
Consensus as Queer Rhetorical Listening
Trans Discourse in Womyn’s Words
Legacy of Womyn’s Words (A Conclusion)
Works Cited
23 Mountain Dirt(y) Queer Rhetorics: Making Appalachian Queerness Visible
Author Positionality Statements
Appalachia as Place and the Construct of Appalachian Identity
Appalachian Rhetorics
Queer Appalachian Rhetorics
Queer Appalachian Rhetorics in Action
Note
Works Cited
24 Queer Rhetorics of Resistance in HIV Healthcare
Compliance and Individualism in National Strategies for HIV Prevention
HIV and Structural Inequity
Toward Resistance
Works Cited
25 “People Can’t Say I’m a Man, They Can’t Say I’m a Woman”: Reality Expansion in the Kewpie Collection
Collecting Kewpie
“She’s gay”
Enabling Livability
Conclusion: “She’s Queer?”
Notes
Works Cited
26 Converging in a Room of Our Own: The Ladder, Autostraddle, and Queer Convergence in Online Communities
Not So Strange Bedfellows: Queer Rhetoric and Convergence Online
Flagging the Rainbow: Constraints of Authority in LGBTQ Online Community
Autostraddle: Taking Our Legacy Online
The Love that Dared to Type Its Name: The Ladder and Lesbian Author-ity
Murder, She Wrote: Combatting Violent Heteronormative Narratives
The Futures and Pasts of Queer Convergence
Works Cited
Section IV Identities
27 Prescribe for Me, Doctor, for I Have Sex: Rhetorics of Empowerment, Queer Shame, and the Confessional in PrEP Prescribing
“Turn around, drop your pants, and bend over the table.”
It Began, Like So Many Things, on Grindr
It Has Been Three Months Since My Last Confession
Concluding with Chronic Exposure
Works Cited
28 Making Nothing Out of Something: Asexuality and the Rhetorics of Silence and Absence
Reading for Absence
The Politics of Absence and Silence
Notes
Works Cited
29 The Queer Potential of Bisexual Rhetorics
Start Here (Maybe)
Tremble, Bisexual Swine
Entitled
The Bisexual as an Ephemeral Archive
“We Seduce You” (Alexander and Rhodes, “Impossible” 201)
Bisexual Space, Directions, and Disorientations
Or Start Here
Let it Pass
“A conclusion, at this point, would be impossible” (Alexander and Rhodes, “Impossible” 204).
Hide and Seek
Works Cited
30 Fuck (Gay) Racism: Queer Asian American Rhetorics of Abe Kim’s TikTok
Queer Asian American Critique
Fuck (Gay) Racism
Doing Homely Queer Politics
Concluding Remarks
Works Cited
31 Anthos, Bottoms, and Anal Sex in Troye Sivan’s “Bloom”
“Is This the Summer Bottom Bop We’ve Been Waiting For?”: Troye Sivan, “Bloom,” and the Queering of Pop
Troye Sivan, Bottoming, and Classical and Contemporary Anthos
Queer Enthymemes, Anthos, and the Anal Rhetoric of “Bloom”
“I / Bloom / Just / For / You”: Imagining Bottoming through Botanical Metaphors and Staccato Rhythm
“I’ve Got So Much to Show Ya”: Visual Contrast and (Re-) Constructing the Identity of the Bottom
“I Get This Sweet Desire”: Attuning to the Rhetorics and Identities of Queer Sex
Notes
Works Cited
32 How Much Does It Take?: Persuasion and the Stakes of Will in The Transformation
The Stakes of Will
The Terms of Transformation
Beauty and Suffering
Persuasion, Will, and the Conditions of Trans Life
Works Cited
33 Irreversible Damage: Trans Masculine Affectability and the White Family
Trans Virality
The Virus and the Environment
Affectable Hosts: When Time is Not on Your Side
Conclusion
34 Disidentification (as a Survival Strategy for Religious Trauma)
Disidentification
The Epistemic Shatterings of Religious Trauma
Disidentification as Survival
Works Cited
35 Resilient Closets, Addressivity, and Opening Pandora’s Box
Incident #1
Addressivity and Opening Pandora’s Box
Incident #2
Closeting and Being In-Common-In-Difference
Works Cited
36 Rhetoric of the Invisible (or, How Bisexual People Demand to be Seen)
The History of Bi (In)visibility
Rhetorically Negotiating Bisexual Invisibility in the 1990s
Navigating Bisexual Invisibility in the Twenty-first Century
Bi+ TikTok and the Online Bi+ Community
Some Closing Thoughts
Notes
Works Cited
Section V Provocations & Interventions
37 Sexual Assaults, Queer Panics: Gemma Watts and Reynhard Sinaga
I From Sex Panics to Sex Crimes
II Gemma Watts
III Reynhard Sinaga
IV Queer Interventions
Notes
Works Cited
38 Anti-Normativity under Duress: An Intersectional Intervention in Queer Rhetoric
Prelude
Anti-Normativity in Queer Rhetoric
Anti-Normativity as Normative or, Recasting Normativities
Taking Trans Critiques of Cisheteronormativity Seriously
Works Cited
39 Lettering Me Queer: An Open Letter to Gurlesque
Works Cited
40 Chronicity Rhetoric as Queercrip Activism
Chronicity and Images of Queercrip Agency
The Liberatory Possibilities of Chronicity Rhetoric
Coda: Living Chronicity Rhetoric
Works Cited
41 Rhetorical Work: Genre Fluidity as a Queer Rhetorical Practice of Activists: a Play/Chapter in Multiple Acts
Dramatis Personae
Scene
Time
Works Cited
42 On Taking the Bottom’s Stance, or Not Your Typical Submissive
Notes
Works Cited
43 “Soft Armor” for Ugly Bodies: The Radical Visibility of Queercrip Fashion
Fashioning Ugly Bodies
Radical Visibility and the Stare
Notes
Works Cited
44 Dear Queer Memoir Writers …
Notes
Works Cited
45 Queer Rhetorics as Intervention Methods: The Curious Case of Conversion Violence
An Illogical, Poor, and Queer Framework
Queer Rhetorical Intervention: Reading Between the Lines
Queer Rhetorical Interventions: Telling Unsexy Stories and Unfossilizing Dominant Narratives
An Unsexy Story
Queer Rhetorical Interventions: Writing Unsexy Stories with Caution
Closing: Forward Directions
Note
Works Cited
Section VI Speculations
46 The Fabulous Rhetorics of Queer Inhumanity: Speculating with Queer Inhuman Figures to Restory Queerphobic Histories
Fabulousness and Queer Inhuman Rhetorics: A Conceptual Framework
Methods
Vignette 1. Hybrid Inhumans: Coyote and the Minotaur Teacher
Vignette 2: Ghostly Inhumans: Carlos and the “Ghast” of Homophobia
A Speculative Conclusion
Notes
Works Cited
47 The Queer Babadook: Circulation of Queer Affects
The Circulation of Queer Negative Affects
The Start of a Babadiscourse in Tumblr: Queer Negative Identification and Queer Trolling
Circulation Beyond Tumblr: The Babadook and Stickiness
Queering Circulation: Reverbs
Conclusion: Queer Resonances of Affect
Notes
Works Cited
48 Rhetorics of Gay Future and Queer Futurity: Strategies of Disruption
Strategy One: Perspective by Incongruity
Strategy Two: The Space-Off
Strategy Three: Queer Temporal Camp
Strategy Four: Queering Youthism
Conclusion
Works Cited
49 (Queer) Optimism Ain’t (Im)Possible
What Might Happen If We Refuse, in the Tradition of Radical Black Feminism, the Binary of Normative/Antinormative (Read: Rhetoric/Queer)?
What Becomes Possible If We Reconsider Material-Discursive Structures When Attending to the Rhetorical Affects of Queer?
Is It Possible to Create a Subjectless/Objectless Critique Without Engaging the Predictable “Bad Habits” of Critical Theory?
Queer Optimism Ain’t Impossible
Works Cited
50 Between Queer and Digital: Toward an Understanding of the Rhetoric of Digital Queerdom
Introduction
Defining What Is Known
Locating Queer Rhetoric in Digital Space
The Queer Wired Neighborhood
A Realized Digital Queerdom
The Queer Digital Future
Works Cited
51 Queering the Rhetoric of Health and Medicine: Bodies, Embodiment, and the Future
Queerness in the Rhetorics of Health and Medicine
Pathologizing the Queer Body
The Annihilation of the Queer Body in Health and Medicine
Interventions
Katie’s Body
Matt’s Body
Maria’s Body
No “Right Way” to Have a Body/Marginalized Bodies as Queer Bodies
Conclusion, or Wait What’s Queer (Here)?
Works Cited
52 Cuir-ing Queer: Speculations on Latin American Notions of Queerness
Notes
Works Cited
53 Queer Hauntings, Queer Renewings
Works Cited
54 Pathological Desire, Perverse Erotics, and Paraphiliac Entelechies
Pathological Desire
Perverse Erotics
Paraphiliac Entelechies
Works Cited
Index
People also search for The Routledge Handbook of Queer Rhetoric 1st Edition:
communication rhetoric
queer communication pedagogy
communication rhetorical studies
queer rhetoric
queer rhetorics syllabus
Tags: Jacqueline Rhodes, Jonathan Alexander, Routledge Handbook, Queer Rhetoric