Constellations: Limits and Inspirations of Mapping A Queer New York
Time: Thu 2022-11-10 17.30
Video link: https://kth-se.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_VeULBIcaTw2hVT0ebzcTdQ
Participating: Jen Jack Gieseking - cultural, digital, and urban geographer
Queering the City webinar series
Constellations: Limits and Inspirations of Mapping A Queer New York
The path to lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) liberation has been narrated through a claim to long-term territory in the form of urban neighborhoods and bars. Lesbians and queers fail to attain or retain these spaces over generations—as is often the case due to lesser political and economic power—so what then is the lesbian-queer production of urban space in their own words? Drawing on interviews, archival research, and data visualizations with and about lesbians and queers in New York City from 1983 to 2009, my participants queered the fixed, neighborhood models of LGBTQ space inproducing what I call constellations. Like stars in the sky, contemporary urban lesbians and queers often create and rely on fragmented, fleeting experiences in lesbian-queer places, evoking patterns based on generational, racialized, and classed identities. Lesbians and queers are connected by overlapping, embodied paths and stories that bind them over generations and across many identities, like drawing lines between the stars that come and go in the sky. This queer feminist contribution to critical urban theory extends current models of queering and producing urban space, and pushes us to think about the production of urban public spaces as well as private spaces.
A webinar series in 2022 organized by KTH Safeplaces network and RFSL – The Swedish Federation for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer and Intersex Rights in cooperation with several national and international organizations.
Register here
kth-se.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_VeULBIcaTw2hVT0ebzcTdQ
More information
Web address for further information
Contact
Marianna Patelida
patelida@kth.se