Data di Pubblicazione:
2016
Abstract:
In this issue of Anglistica, we invited contributions that investigate the idea of “mess,” at once physically tangible and intellectually slippery, in global and transnational cultural productions and social practices. Thus, we envision “mess” as piles of seemingly unorganized materials, unsanitized spaces, dirty interstices that refuse to be cleaned and systematized. Particularly fascinating was its potential impact on the study of what J.E. Muñoz broadly defined as “minoritarian subjects”: in fact, resistance to “normalcy” and the challenge to sanctioned symbolic “order” have been at the heart of late 20th century queer, ethnic, gendered, indigenous, and other identitarian studies. In addition, the notion of mess, messing-up, mash-ups, and morphing, both as theme and as cultural practice, may signal a productive gesture that rejects hierarchical organizing and linear/causal relations of value, thriving instead in simultaneity and precariousness, in overlapping and contested spaces and conflictual, even irreconcilable, dis/identifications.
Tipologia CRIS:
7.1 Curatela
Keywords:
mess, intersectionality, queer, multiple interpellation, United States, India, Literature, Tourism, Graphic novels, Tarantino, Ruth Ozeki.
Elenco autori:
Shirley Geok Lin, Lim; Bavaro, Vincenzo
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