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Homonationalism’s Viral Travels

Journal of Homosexuality, 2022
First defined by Jasbir Puar in 2007, homonationalism refers to the collusion between LGBTQ subjects or rights discourses and nationalism. This definition contrasts with previous transnational queer and feminist analyses. Homonationalism instead describes a form of national homonormativity and sexual exceptionalism in which some LGBTQ subjects are ...
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Homonationalism

International Feminist Journal of Politics, 2016
This article tracks Jasbir Puar's term “homonationalism” as its meaning has transformed in her scholarly work as well that of Maya Mikdashi. I argue that homonationalism has evolved from its original formulation as, in part, a critique of politics, into, in its current guise, a diagnostic of international political relations.
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Homonationalism and Media

2020
Homonationalism, as defined by Jasbir Puar, refers to the growing embrace of LGBT rights by (mostly Western) nations, as well as the parallel complicity of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) individuals and associations with nationalist politics. First developed in the context of the U.S.
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Rethinking Homonationalism

International Journal of Middle East Studies, 2013
In my 2007 monograph Terrorist Assemblages: Homonationalism in Queer Times (hereafter TA), I develop the conceptual frame of “homonationalism” for understanding the complexities of how “acceptance” and “tolerance” for gay and lesbian subjects have become a barometer by which the right to and capacity for national sovereignty is evaluated.
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SETTLER HOMONATIONALISM

GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies, 2010
Settlement conditions the formation of modern queer subjects and politics in the United States. This essay newly interprets the settler formation of U.S. queer modernities by inspiration of Jasbir Puar's critique of homonationalism. Puar argues that homonationalism produces U.S.
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AMBIVALENT HOMONATIONALISMS

Interventions, 2013
Prompted by a concern with the territorial and affective governance of transnational queer migration, and with a focus on state regulations of ‘same-sex’ family class migration in Canada, this essay explores the psychic and geopolitical economies of locating ‘home’ vis-a-vis (homo)nationalized belongings.
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Olympic homonationalisms

Public, 2016
Abstract This photo essay examines modern queer politics and anti-colonial resistance in the Olympic cities of Vancouver, Sochi, London and Rio de Janeiro. Photos of advocacy and protests illustrate different forms of homonationalism gay and lesbian in each host city. These are juxtaposed with photos of indigenous, anti-colonial protests
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Re-Reading Homonationalism: An Israeli Spatial Perspective

Journal of Homosexuality, 2017
In this article we stress the need for specifically located understandings of the concept of homonationalism, by introducing an analysis of spatial and political power relations dissecting disparate constructions of LGBT arenas. The article explores three spaces: Tel-Aviv-an urban space of LGBT belonging; Jerusalem-the Israeli capital where being an ...
Gilly, Hartal, Orna, Sasson-Levy
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Semiotics of Homonationalism

2019
Abstract This chapter discusses homonationalism as an analytical concept, which was developed originally to describe how queer identities get mobilized instrumentally to align with neoliberal agendas of nation-states. The chapter also discusses how this concept has been harnessed in newer ways to “do” a tactical politics of resistance by
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The Rise and Fall of Homonationalism in Singapore

positions: asia critique, 2015
Pinkwashing and homonationalism are recent terms coined to describe the identification of sexual minorities with the neoliberal state; the former is usually used to critique certain policies within the State of Israel meant to promote its society as tolerant of diversity, the latter with the movement for same-sex marriage and participation in the armed
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