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Sexuality, Subjectivity, and LGBTQ Militancy in the United States

Guillaume Marche Katharine Throssell

9789089649607
200 pages
Amsterdam University Press
Overview
As LGBTQ movements in Western Europe, North America, and other regions of the world are becoming increasingly successful at awarding LGBTQ people rights, especially institutional recognition for same-sex couples and their families, what becomes of the deeper social transformation that these movements initially aimed to achieve? The United States is in many ways a paradigmatic model for LGBTQ movements in other countries. Sexuality, Subjectivity, and LGBTQ Militancy in the United States focuses on the transformations of the US LGBTQ movement since the 1980s, highlighting the relationship between its institutionalization and the disappearance of sexuality from its most visible claims, so that its growing visibility and legitimation since the 1990s have paradoxically led to a decrease in grassroots militancy. The book examines the issue from the bottom up, identifying the links between the varying importance of sexuality as a movement theme and actors’ mobilization, and enhances the import of subjectivity in militancy. It draws attention to cultural, sometimes infrapolitical, forms of militancy that perpetuate the role of sexuality in LGBTQ militancy.
Author Bio
Guillaume Marche, professor of American studies (society, politics, and culture) at Université Paris-Est Créteil (France), specializes in contemporary social movements in the US. His publications deal with the LGBTQ movement, sexuality, subjectivity, and collective mobilization. His current work also addresses the use of activists’ biographies as sociological sources as well as infrapolitical forms of intervention in public spaces (e.g., graffiti and LGBTQ theatricality).