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The Life and Afterlife of Gay Neighborhoods : Renaissance and Resurgence
The Life and Afterlife of Gay Neighborhoods : Renaissance and Resurgence
Autore Bitterman Alex
Pubbl/distr/stampa Springer Nature, 2021
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (434 pages)
Altri autori (Persone) HessDaniel Baldwin
Collana The Urban Book
Soggetto topico Regional & area planning
Gender studies, gender groups
Agricultural economics
Soggetto non controllato Landscape/Regional and Urban Planning
Gender and Sexuality
Urban Economics
Geography
Gender Studies
Regional and Spatial Economics
LGBTQ
Neighbourhood Planning
Urban Change
Generational Change
Urban Planning
Gentrification
Open Access
Regional & area planning
Gender studies, gender groups
ISBN 3-030-66073-7
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Intro -- Foreword -- Preface -- References -- Contents -- Editors and Contributors -- About the Editors -- Contributors -- Part IIntroduction -- 1 Who Are the People in Your Gayborhood? Understanding Population Change and Cultural Shifts in LGBTQ+ Neighborhoods -- 1.1 Introduction: Beneath the Crowded LGBTQ+ Umbrella -- 1.2 Nomenclature: Everyone Belongs -- 1.3 The Other: Refuge and Refusal to Change -- 1.4 Marginal to Memorable: The Evolution of Gay Neighborhoods -- 1.4.1 The First Great Plateau -- 1.5 Empirical Plan for This Book -- 1.5.1 A Note Regarding Limitations -- 1.6 Takeaway Messages -- 1.7 Conclusion: Resurgence and Renaissance -- References -- Part IIContext and Composition -- 2 Breaking Down Segregation: Shifting Geographies of Male Same-Sex Households Within Desegregating Cities -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Data and Methods -- 2.2.1 Decennial Census Data -- 2.2.2 Segregation Scores -- 2.2.3 Gay Neighborhoods -- 2.2.4 Other Neighborhood Characteristics -- 2.2.5 Analysis -- 2.3 Results -- 2.3.1 Trends in Segregation and Neighborhood Change -- 2.3.2 Characteristics of Neighborhoods Within Desegregating Cities -- 2.3.3 Increasingly Segregated Cities -- 2.4 The Demographic Future of Gay Neighborhoods -- 2.5 Future Research: Census 2020 and Beyond -- References -- 3 A Queer Reading of the United States Census -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Heteronormativity and Urban Development -- 3.3 The Census, Heteronormativity, and LGBTQ Populations -- 3.4 A Queer Reading of the Census -- 3.5 Testing the Variables in Four Neighborhoods -- 3.6 Non-family Household Results -- 3.7 Never Married by Sex Results -- 3.8 Divorced by Sex Results -- 3.9 Sex Ratio of Age 25-54 Cohort Results -- 3.10 Discussion -- 3.11 Comparison to Same-Sex Unmarried Partner Data -- 3.12 Conclusion -- References -- 4 Why Gayborhoods Matter: The Street Empirics of Urban Sexualities.
4.1 Introduction: Gayborhood Studies -- 4.2 Why Do You Live in the Gayborhood? -- 4.3 Conclusions -- References -- Part IIIIdentity and Evolution -- 5 The Rainbow Connection: A Time-Series Study of Rainbow Flag Display Across Nine Toronto Neighborhoods -- 5.1 Rainbow Flag: Visibility, Implication, and Meaning -- 5.2 A Capsule History of the Rainbow Flag -- 5.3 The Rainbow Flag as Place Brand for Gay Neighborhoods -- 5.4 The Power of Graphics in the Built Environment -- 5.5 Concentration and Persistence of Rainbow Flags Define Boundaries of Gay Neighborhoods -- 5.6 Empirical Plan for the Visual Assessment of Rainbow Flag Display -- 5.7 Observations and Findings -- 5.8 Diaspora as Practical Identity -- 5.9 Rainbow Proliferation: Synthesis and Conclusions -- 5.10 Takeaway Messages -- Sources -- 6 Wearing Pink in Fairy Town: The Heterosexualization of the Spanish Town Neighborhood and Carnival Parade in Baton Rouge -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Consuming Gay Culture -- 6.3 Baton Rouge Mardi Gras and the Spanish Town Parade -- 6.4 Methods -- 6.5 The Bohemian 1980s in Spanish Town -- 6.6 Spanish Town Parades as Part of Gay Cultural History in Baton Rouge -- 6.7 Homophobia and Queer Culture in the Contemporary Parade -- References -- 7 A Tale of Three Villages: Contested Discourses of Place-Making in Central Philadelphia -- 7.1 Background -- 7.2 The Space in Question -- 7.2.1 Gayborhood -- 7.2.2 Washington Square West -- 7.2.3 Midtown Village -- 7.3 Discursive Moments -- 7.3.1 Snapshots from the Gayborhood -- 7.3.2 The Skeleton of Washington West -- 7.3.3 Welcome to Midtown Village -- 7.4 Further Directions -- 7.5 Conclusion -- References -- 8 Are "Gay" and "Queer-Friendly" Neighborhoods Healthy? Assessing How Areas with High Densities of Same-Sex Couples Impact the Mental Health of Sexual Minority and Majority Young Adults -- 8.1 Introduction.
8.2 Background -- 8.3 Method -- 8.4 Results -- 8.5 Discussion -- 8.6 Limitations and Conclusion -- References -- Part IVCo-Relation and Dialectic -- 9 Let's (not) Go Outside: Grindr, Hybrid Space, and Digital Queer Neighborhoods -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 Situating Sexualities, Cities, and Technologies -- 9.3 Location-Based Dating Apps and Their Hybrid Queer Spaces -- 9.4 The Ambiguous Impact of Location-Based Media on Existing Gayborhoods -- 9.5 Conclusion: Space for Co-Existence? -- References -- 10 A Gay Neighborhood or Merely a Temporary Cluster of "Strange" Bars? Gay Bar Culture in Antwerp -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 The Emergence of a Gay Bar Culture in Antwerp -- 10.3 The Paradigmatic Case History of Café Strange in the Central Station Area -- 10.4 The Decline of Gay Bar Life in Antwerp -- References -- 11 Recovering the Gay Village: A Comparative Historical Geography of Urban Change and Planning in Toronto and Sydney -- 11.1 Introduction -- 11.2 Historical Geographies of Gay Villages: Segregation and Integration -- 11.3 Historical Geographies of Sexuality in Toronto -- 11.3.1 A Nascent Gay Village: Toronto in the 1970s -- 11.3.2 Neoliberalism and Toronto's Gay Village -- 11.3.3 Toronto's Village Today -- 11.4 Historical Geographies of Sexuality in Sydney -- 11.4.1 Consolidation of a Gay Neighborhood: Sydney in the 1970s to the 1990s -- 11.4.2 An End to Village Life in Sydney? -- 11.5 Thoughts on Historical Legacies and the Future of the Gay Village -- 11.6 Concluding Remarks: Wider Implications for Urban Planning and Policy -- References -- 12 After the Life of LGBTQ Spaces: Learning from Atlanta and Istanbul -- 12.1 Introduction -- 12.2 Centripetal and Centrifugal Forces -- 12.3 Midtown, Atlanta -- 12.3.1 Centripetal Forces in the Atlanta Case -- 12.3.2 Centrifugal Forces in the Atlanta Case -- 12.4 Beyoglu, Istanbul, Turkey.
12.4.1 Centripetal Forces in the Istanbul Case -- 12.4.2 Centrifugal Forces in the Istanbul Case -- 12.5 Discussion -- References -- Part VSignifiying Meaning and Memory Across Generations -- 13 Far Beyond the Gay Village: LGBTQ Urbanism and Generation in Montréal's Mile End -- 13.1 Introduction -- 13.2 Methodology -- 13.3 Generation Queer -- 13.4 Divergent LGBTQ Urbanisms -- 13.4.1 The Gay Village -- 13.4.2 Queer Mile End -- 13.5 Conclusion -- References -- 14 Understanding Generation Gaps in LGBTQ+ Communities: Perspectives About Gay Neighborhoods Among Heteronormative and Homonormative Generational Cohorts -- 14.1 Introduction -- 14.2 A Brief Overview of Generational Cohorts -- 14.3 The Contemporary Heteronormative Saeculum and Events that Shaped the World -- 14.4 Exploring LGBTQ+ Generations: Through the Eyes of Warhol, Vidal, Capote & -- Hudson -- 14.5 The Homonormative Saeculum and the Events that Shaped a Century of LGBTQ+ Culture -- 14.6 The Intersection of LGBTQ+ Generational Cohorts and Gay Neighborhoods -- 14.7 Future Possibilities for Gay Neighborhoods -- 14.8 Synthesis and Conclusion: Connections for LGBTQ+ People Across Generational Cohorts -- 14.9 Takeaway Messages -- References -- 15 Commemorating Historically Significant Gay Places Across the United States -- 15.1 Generations of Gay History -- 15.1.1 Violence and Commemoration -- 15.2 Significant LGBTQ+ Sites -- 15.2.1 LGBTQ+ Heritage Initiative -- 15.2.2 Protecting American LGBTQ+ Heritage -- 15.2.3 Aim of Landmarks Dedication -- 15.2.4 Initial Results of the LGBTQ Heritage Initiative -- 15.3 Current Status of the Preservation of LGBTQ+ Sites -- 15.3.1 Constancy of Application -- 15.4 The Future of Preserving the Past -- 15.5 Takeaway Messages -- References -- 16 Plateaus and Afterglows: Theorizing the Afterlives of Gayborhoods as Post-Places -- 16.1 Introduction.
16.2 The Phenomenology of Place -- 16.3 Post-Phenomenological Perspectives -- 16.4 Plateaus and Afterglows -- 16.5 Post-Placing Gayborhoods -- 16.6 Conclusion: Beyond the Gayborhood in Space, Time, and Scholarship? -- References -- Part VI Epilogue -- 17 After/Lives: Insights from the COVID-19 Pandemic for Gay Neighborhoods -- 17.1 Introduction: Once More, Without Human Contact? -- 17.2 Do Places Matter? Empirical Trends for the Future of LGBTQ+ Spaces -- 17.3 Concluding Remarks: Beyond the Master Metaphor of the Gayborhood? -- References -- Index.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910473456803321
Bitterman Alex  
Springer Nature, 2021
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Pluralistic struggles in gender, sexuality and coloniality : challenging Swedish exceptionalism / / edited by Erika Alm, Linda Berg, Mikela Lundahl Hero, Anna Johansson, Pia Laskar, Lena Martinsson, Diana Mulinari, Cathrin Wasshede
Pluralistic struggles in gender, sexuality and coloniality : challenging Swedish exceptionalism / / edited by Erika Alm, Linda Berg, Mikela Lundahl Hero, Anna Johansson, Pia Laskar, Lena Martinsson, Diana Mulinari, Cathrin Wasshede
Autore Alm Erika
Edizione [First edition, 2021.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Springer Nature, 2021
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (xiii, 316 pages) : colour illustrations; digital, PDF file(s)
Disciplina 305.3
Soggetto topico Gender identity
Queer theory
Identity politics
Culture
Gender
Soggetto non controllato Gender and Sexuality
Queer Theory
Politics and Gender
Culture and Gender
Gender Studies
Queer Studies
Gender and Culture
communities of belonging
homonationalism
femonationalism
decoloniality
intersectionality
transnationalism
Open Access
Gender studies, gender groups
Gay & Lesbian studies
Politics & government
Cultural studies
ISBN 3-030-47432-1
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto 1. Introduction; Erika Alm, Linda Berg, Mikela Lundahl Hero, Anna Johansson, Pia Laskar, Lena Martinsson, Diana Mulinari and Cathrin Wasshede -- 2. Public Intimacy and “White Feminism”: On the Vain Trust in Scandinavian Equality; Mikela Lundahl Hero -- 3. We Were Here, and We Still Are: Negotiations of Political Space Through Unsanctioned Art; Linda Berg and Anna Sofia Lundgren -- 4. 1 May – Muslim Women Talk Back: A Political Transformation of Secular Modernity on International Workers’ Day; Lena Martinsson -- 5. Fat, Black and Unapologetic: Body Positive Activism Beyond White, Neoliberal Rights Discourses; Anna Johansson -- 6. Rainbow Flag and Belongings/Disbelongings: Öckerö Pride and Reclaim Pride in Gothenburg, Sweden 2019; Cathrin Wasshede -- 7. Pink Porn Economy: Genealogies of Transnational LGBTQ organising; Pia Laskar -- 8. A State Affair?: Notions of the State in Discourses on Trans Rights in Sweden; Erika Alm -- 9. “Pain is hard to put on paper”: Exploring the Silences of Migrant Scholars; Despina Tzimoula and Diana Mulinari -- 10. Contesting Secularism: Religious and Secular Binary Through Memory Work; Linda Berg, Anna Johansson, Pia Laskar, Lena Martinsson, Diana Mulinari and Cathrin Wasshede.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910420942203321
Alm Erika  
Springer Nature, 2021
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Reading Sideways : The Queer Politics of Art in Modern American Fiction / / Dana Seitler
Reading Sideways : The Queer Politics of Art in Modern American Fiction / / Dana Seitler
Autore Seitler Dana
Pubbl/distr/stampa New York, NY : , : Fordham University Press, , [2019]
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (209 pages)
Disciplina 809.93357
Soggetto topico Arts in literature
Soggetto non controllato Aesthetics and Politics
American fiction
Gender and Sexuality
Queer Aesthetics
ISBN 0-8232-8264-3
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Front matter -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Introduction -- 1. Strange Beauty -- 2. Small Collectivity and the Low Arts -- 3. The Impossible Art Object of Desire -- 4. Willa Cather and W. E. B. Du Bois Go to the Opera -- Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Index
Record Nr. UNINA-9910793413703321
Seitler Dana  
New York, NY : , : Fordham University Press, , [2019]
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Reading Sideways : The Queer Politics of Art in Modern American Fiction / / Dana Seitler
Reading Sideways : The Queer Politics of Art in Modern American Fiction / / Dana Seitler
Autore Seitler Dana
Pubbl/distr/stampa New York, NY : , : Fordham University Press, , [2019]
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (209 pages)
Disciplina 809.93357
Soggetto topico Arts in literature
Soggetto non controllato Aesthetics and Politics
American fiction
Gender and Sexuality
Queer Aesthetics
ISBN 0-8232-8264-3
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Front matter -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Introduction -- 1. Strange Beauty -- 2. Small Collectivity and the Low Arts -- 3. The Impossible Art Object of Desire -- 4. Willa Cather and W. E. B. Du Bois Go to the Opera -- Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Index
Record Nr. UNINA-9910811023503321
Seitler Dana  
New York, NY : , : Fordham University Press, , [2019]
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Translating feminism in China : gender, sexuality and censorship / / Zhongli Yu
Translating feminism in China : gender, sexuality and censorship / / Zhongli Yu
Autore Yu Zhongli
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Taylor & Francis, 2015
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (212 p.)
Disciplina 495.1803305
418.033
Collana Routledge Advances in Translation Studies
Soggetto topico Translating and interpreting - China
Gender identity - China
Feminism - China
Soggetto non controllato Censorship
cultural context
Feminist
Gatekeeping
Gender and Sexuality
Global Women's Movement
Language and ideology
Localization
Social movements
Women's rights
ISBN 0-367-13379-2
1-315-75309-X
1-317-62001-1
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Contents -- List of tables -- Acknowledgements -- List of abbreviations -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 Gender, feminism, and translation: Key terms and concepts -- 1.2 TSS and TVM: Gender, sexuality, and censorship -- 1.3 Overview of chapters -- 1.4 Examples, back-translations, strategy terms, and Chinese names and sources -- 2 Feminist translation: Practice, theory, and studies -- 2.1 Feminist approaches to translation -- 2.1.1 Feminist translation strategies: Flotow's summary -- 2.1.2 Feminist translation strategies: Massardier-Kenny's redefinition. -- 2.1.3 Feminist translation strategies: Maier's outline -- 2.1.4 Feminist translation strategies: Wallmach's analysis -- 2.2 Feminist translation studies: Within and outside China -- 2.2.1 Feminist translation studies outside China -- 2.2.1.1 Feminist translation studies in the 1980s -- 2.2.1.2 Feminist translation studies in the 1990s -- 2.2.1.3 Feminist translation studies in the twenty-first century -- 2.2.1.4 Sexuality in translation studies -- 2.2.2 Feminist translation studies within China -- 2.2.2.1 Emergence of feminist translation studies in the 1990s. -- 2.2.2.2 Development of feminist translation studies in the twenty-first century -- 3 Contextualising the Chinese translations of The Second Sex and The Vagina Monologues -- 3.1 Le Deuxième Sexe and The Second Sex -- 3.2 Chinese translations of The Second Sex -- 3.3 The Vagina Monologues -- 3.4 Chinese translations of The Vagina Monologues -- 4 Translating the female body and female sexuality in The Second Sex -- 4.1 Translating the female body -- 4.1.1 Women's physical appearance -- 4.1.2 Women's psychology of their bodies -- 4.2 Translating female sexuality -- 4.3 Summary -- 5 Translating the female body and female sexuality in The Vagina Monologues -- 5.1 Translating 'vagina' -- 5.2 Translating sexual violence -- 5.3 Translating misogyny -- 5.4 Summary -- 6 Translating lesbianism in The Second Sex and The Vagina Monologues -- 6.1 Lesbianism in the Chinese translations of The Second Sex -- 6.2 Lesbianism in the Chinese translations of The Vagina Monologues -- 6.2.1 'The vagina workshop' -- 6.2.2 'The Little Coochi Snorcher That Could' -- 6.2.3 'The Woman Who Loved to Make Vaginas Happy' -- 6.3 Summary -- 7 Censorship, sexuality, and translation 7.1 Censorship, translation, and translation publishing -- 7.2 Translation publishing from 1980 to 2009 -- 7.2.1 Revival and fluctuation from 1980 to 1989 -- 7.2.2 Depression and reformation from 1990 to 1999 -- 7.2.3 Market-oriented development from 2000 to 2009 -- 7.3 Censorship of sexuality and the Chinese translations of The Second Sex -- 7.4 Censorship of sexuality, and the Chinese translations of The Vagina Monologues -- 7.5 Summary -- 8 Conclusion: Gender, feminism, and translation studies -- 8.1 Gender, translation strategies, and translation effects -- 8.2 Female/male: Essentialism? -- 8.3 Feminist translation studies: Where are we going? -- Bibliography -- Index.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910494570503321
Yu Zhongli  
Taylor & Francis, 2015
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui