Gayted Communities : Marginalized Sexualities in Lebanon
Författare
Summary, in English
The work presented is a product of an intimate personal experience with the field (the gay community in Beirut). The analysis is based on material gathered through participation, observation, conversations, and especially interviews with eight young men.
Three kinds of intersecting orientations are investigated: those of being gay, Muslim, and male. The young men studied struggle with the expectations and stereotypes about sexual and gender identity, of what masculinity and being a man is all about, and with what is expected of them as being Muslim. One of the main arguments is that by separating the orientations and seeing how they interrelate as parallel lines, a clearer picture of the tactics that the young men studied employ when negotiating their different, and sometimes conflicting, orientations and identifications, emerges.
This dissertation advocates that marginalized sexualities should be studied and understood as provisional, discursively produced, unstable, performative, and decidedly partial identities, formed in relation to seemingly stable, normative, natural, and hegemonic identities.
Avdelning/ar
Publiceringsår
2013
Språk
Engelska
Publikation/Tidskrift/Serie
Lund Studies in History of Religions
Volym
35
Dokumenttyp
Doktorsavhandling
Förlag
Lund University
Ämne
- Philosophy, Ethics and Religion
Nyckelord
- Queer Theory
- Gay
- Homosexuality
- LGBTQ
- Sexuality
- Islam
- Muslims
- Religion
- Orientation
- Masculinity
- Filedwork
- Observations
- Interviews
- Lebanon
Status
Published
Handledare
- Jonas Otterbeck
- Philip Halldén
ISBN/ISSN/Övrigt
- ISSN: 1103-4882
Försvarsdatum
26 oktober 2013
Försvarstid
10:15
Försvarsplats
Sal 118, Centrum för teologi och religionsvetenskap, Allhelgona kyrkogata 8, Lund
Opponent
- Don Kulick (Professor)