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LGBTQ Film studies and Transnational Cultures

Class at Faculty of Humanities |
YMGS624

This text is not available in the current language. Showing version "cs".Syllabus

DEAR STUDENTS,

WELCOME TO THIS CLASS -- IF YOU REGISTERED LATER THAN OCTOBER 9, PLEASE SEND ME AN EMAIL SO THAT I CAN REGISTER YOU ONTO THE MSTEAMS PLATFORM FOR THIS CLASS AND YOU WILL GET ACCESS TO THE THURSDAY CLASS.

LOOKING FORWARD SEEING YOU IN THE CLASS.

KK  

Unless stated otherwise, the class sessions for the winter semester 2020 will be conducted online through the MSTeams platform. The classes will follow the official schedule. For more information about MSTeams and how to register, see here: https://dl.cuni.cz/ms-teams/.  Students who miss class will not be penalized, however, you will need to get in touch with the instructor for information about how make up for missed sessions. You are also required to submit all course work at the dates specified in the sylabus. If there is a serisous reason for you missing the deadline, get in touch with the instructor prior to the deadline. If the epidemiological situation permits us to return to in person classes, you will be informed ahead of time. The course management system will remain without changes throughout the semester. The exam and final evaluations will také the form indicated in the sylabus.   

Výuka v ZS 2020 probíhá do odvolání v online režimu. Výuka celého studijního programu genderových studií bude probíhat pomocí platformy MS Teams. Informace o této platformě i způsob přihlašování naleznete zde: https://dl.cuni.cz/ms-teams/. Doplňková podpora bude v rámci tohoto kurzu dostupná v moodle2. Účast na online výuce není vzhledem k potenciálně složitým individuálním podmínkám studujících povinná. Nepřítomnost na online výuce není potřeba omlouvat a dokládat doporučením lékaře/řky. O své nepřítomnosti nicméně informujte vyučující/ho a domluvte se na způsobu náhrady absence a způsobu doplnění probírané látky. Průběžné úkoly, které jsou specifikovány v sylabu a které naleznete ve studijních oporách, je třeba plnit (bez ohledu na stávající distanční režim) v zadaných termínech. Pokud z nějakého vážného důvodu nemůžete příslušný termín dodržet, informujte vyučující/ho. Odevzdávání průběžných úkolů bude probíhat pomocí  studijní opory. 

Výuka bude probíhat v časech daných rozvrhem a harmonogramem akademického roku FHS. Pokud bude během ZS 2020 znovu možné převést výuku do prezenčního či hybridního modu, budete o tom včas informováni/y. Studijní podpory však zůstanou po celou dobu beze změn. Zakončení kurzu proběhne dle podmínek stanovených v sylabu (jakékoli změny budou avizovány v dostatečném předstihu).    

Plagiarism in any form will be turned over to the ethical committee of the faculty; the procedure can result in expulsion from studies. In case of uncertainty how to quote or use primary material consult any citation manual. I will be also happy to help.  

Films screenigs to be announced  

QUEER FILM  

I. INTRODUCING QUEER FILM   8.10.  Week 1: New Queer Cinema  

I. Introducing Queer Film

What are GLBT film studies?

Is there a difference between GLBTI (Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Trans_, Intesex…) and Queer film/film criticism?

Should we care about good and positive representations of GLBTIAQ people?

Why film? And does it all matter, really?  

Reading:

Michele Aaron, “New Queer Cinema: An Introduction,” New Queer Cinema. A Critical Reader. Rutgers UP. 2004 (pp. 3-14)   

In-class:

The Haunting(sequences)

Tongues Untied (sequences)    

At home Screening:

Fabulous! The Story of a Queer Cinema (Lisa Ades and Lesli Klainberg, US, 2006) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cIod2QP2TaI&t=290s  

Assignment #1(in MSteam, deadline 14.10.)   

Recommended:

Rod Ferguson, “Race-ing Homonormativity: Citizenship, Sociology and Gay identity” inBlack Queer Studies: A Critical Anthology, Patrick E. Johnson, Mae Henderson, Eds.Durham and London: Duke University Press, 2005; pp. 52-67  

Keeling, Kara. „Joining the Lesbians: Cinematic Regimes of Black Lesbian Visibility,” inBlack Queer Studies: A Critical Anthology, Patrick E. Johnson, Mae Henderson, Eds. Durham and London: Duke University Press, 2005; (pp. 213–227)   15.10. Week 2: Transnational Contexts  

Readings:  

Robert Kulpa, Joanna Mizielinska, De-Centring Western Sexualities: Central and Eastern European Perspectives. Burlington: Ashgate, 2011; chapters: “Introduction: Why Study Sexualities in Central and Eastern Europe? pp. 1-10; “‘Contemporary Peripheries’: Queer Studies, Circulations of Knowledge and East/West Divide”, pp.11-27  

Assignment #2(in MSteam, deadline 20.10.)   

Recommended:  

Rafael de la Dehesa, “Third-World Gays” and Western Baggage in the Early Construction of an International Gay and Lesbian Liberation Movement http://sfonline.barnard.edu/thinking-queer-activism-transnationally/   in Czech:

Zdeněk Sloboda, Czeslaw Walek, Romana Schlesinger,
”PRIDE: Promotion of homosexualism, manifestation of pride, or big party? The interview with Czeslaw Walek, a director of Prague Pride, and with Romana Schlesinger, a director of Bratislava Pride”, Gender, rovné příležitosti, výzkum14 (2): 52-55; link http://www.genderonline.cz/uploads/020793204beeaa1600f6ecc68e4aaa7b7409c440_rozhovor-pride-walek-schlesinger.pdf  

Kathi Wiedlack, “Red” vs. the Lesbians—Russian Characters, US-Nationalism and New Cold War Cultures in Orange Is The New Black” The Body in Feminist Theories and Methodologies, a special issue of Gender, Research, eds. Kateřina Kolářová and Jaroslava Marhánková Hasmanová, 17 (1): 29-40 http://www.genderonline.cz/en/issue/40-volume-17-number-1-2016-embodiment-and-corporeality-in-feminist-theory-and-research/472  

Kuhar, Roman and Takacs, Judit. Eds., Beyond the Pink Curtain. Everyday Life of LGBT People in Eastern Europe,Ljubljana: Peace Institute, 2007.   

Reddy, Gayatri, With Respect to Sex: Negotiating Hijra Identity in South India. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005; chapter “Crossing ‘lines’ of Subjectivity: Transnational Movements and Gay Identifications”,  (pp. 211-222)   

Gopinath, Gayatri. Impossible Desires: Queer Diasporas and South Asian Public Cultures. Durham: Duke University Press, 2005; chapter “Bollywood/Hollywood. Queer Cinematic Representation and the Perils of Translation” (pp. 93-130)  

Briggs, Laura, Gladys McCormick, and J. T. Way. "Transnationalism: A Category of Analysis." American Quarterly60.3 (2008): 625-48    

After-class screening (voluntary):

Todd Haynes, Poison or Safe    22.10. Week 3 Queer Exceptionalism  

Anne Mulhall, “The republic of Love: On the complex achievement of the same sex marriage referendum in Ireland“; available at:https://bullybloggers.wordpress.com/2015/06/20/the-republic-of-love/  

MA Students also: Moussawi, Ghassan. „Queer exceptionalism and exclusion: Cosmopolitanism and inequalities in “gay-friendly” Beirut“.The Sociological Review, 66. 1.(2017):174–190.  

Assignment #3(in MSteam, deadline 27.10.)   

Recommended:


“The Miseries of Marriage: What Do Queers Lose When We “Win?”, The ASA 2015 panel   

El-Tayeb, Fatima. “‘Gays Who Cannot Properly be Gay’: Queer Muslims in the Neoliberal European City.” European Journal of Women's Studies19.1 (2012): 79-95.  

Puar, Jasbir, “The Golden Handcuffs of Gay

Annotation

The interdisciplinary fields of gender, sexuality and queer studies have considered representations of lgbt/queer people central to how compulsory heterosexuality and normative definitions of gender identities works and affect us—regardless of our desires and identifications. The emergence of new queer cinema in the 1990s pushed the field beyond asking ‘is this a good or bad portrayal of a lesbian/gay/transgender character?’ and opened new ways/queer ways of artistic expression as well as new avenues of critical explorations into cultural politics of global capitalism.

Foregrounding the cultural politics of race, ethnicity and structures of inequalities, following questions transpire as pressing: In what ways were glbt and queer identities incorporated into the nation-states? In what ways is the call and celebration of (sexual) diversity embedded in the neoliberal ideology of privatized and individualized ‘choices’ that underpin demontage of ‘the public’ and ‘the social’? How have the lgbt and queer identities been circulated globally? And how are they implicated in imperialism? For instance, how are cultural formations such as pink economy, or queer tourism functioning vis-à-vis global capitalism? And what conflicts have materialized over the ways in which to articulate non-normative desires and identities? What various forms of activism and cultural critique and strategies of dis/identification have developed over the transnational lgbtq cultures? The transnational setting of this class (and classroom) will encourage us to reflect upon transnational translations between the ‘West’ and ‘post-socialist’ and post-colonial contexts and ask, what modes of expression does the subaltern queer and the post-socialist inarticulate crip develop? And lastly, how can we—drawing on the late queer theorist José Muñoz—think the possibility of critical imaginaries and visions of the political that transgress the pragmaticism of ‘presentness’?