Apr 18, 2024  
2015-2016 
    
2015-2016 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

GSS 321 - Sex Outside the City


Instructor
Horowitz

Since the early 1990s, many queer theorists have reasserted the centrality of western cities to the formation of queer subjectivities. But more recent scholarship has challenged this assumption, suggesting that not only have LGBTQ identities historically developed in suburban, rural, and non-western locales, but that the dominant urban narrative reinforces white, upper-class maleness as the norm of queer life. This course examines the ways in which space is queered and queerness emerges in response to metropolitan, non-metropolitan, Western, and non-Western space. We will examine the queer convergence of the public and the private, the processes by which space is simultaneously raced and gendered, the relationship between sexuality and built environments, and the role of capitalism and neoliberalism in producing queer individuals and networks.

 Satisfies a major requirement in Gender and Sexuality Studies -Histories and Geneologies Track

Satisfies a minor requirement in Gender and Sexuality Studies - elective

Students entering 2012 and after: satisfies liberal studies distribution requirement.