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[Commlist] New Special Issue on Global Queer and Feminist Visual Activism
Mon Jan 09 18:20:33 GMT 2023
*New Special Issue on Global Queer and Feminist Visual Activism *
Colleagues working in the fields of visual political communication;
social movements and media studies, digital media activism; and gender,
sexuality or visual culture may be interested in a new special issue on
*Global Queer and Feminist Visual Activism*, just published. It is Open
Access andyou can read and download articles from the/Journal of
Cultural Analysis and Social Change/website:
https://www.lectitopublishing.nl/journal-of-cultural-analysis-and-social-change/volume-7/issue-2
<https://www.lectitopublishing.nl/journal-of-cultural-analysis-and-social-change/volume-7/issue-2>
In the current context of gender backlash, forms of queer and feminist
activism are increasingly important, and so too is the scholarship that
engages with them. Queer and feminist visual activism has varied origins
in different global contexts and has emerged in a fluid cultural field
of visual arts, popular culture, and protest aesthetics. This special
issue is interested in queer and feminist expression through images and
their context of production, mediation and re-mediation. Across 12
articles we explore the aesthetics and performativity of visual
activism, and the opportunities it affords social justice actors, with
the aim to expand on existing scholarship both geographically and
conceptually. The history of global feminist and queer activism has too
often been dominated by Western perspectives. This special issue seeks
to foreground activism from across the globe, to reflect the
international perspectives and agendas increasingly central to
contemporary queer and feminist activism. The articles address work from
South Africa, China, Brazil, Lebanon,Cote d’Ivoire,the UK, and the
United States. They engage with a range of diverse topics, including
trans Instagrammers, feminist fibre art, queer Roma self-representation,
queer /learning disability filmmaking, sexual health activism and sexual
violence in the museum. Taking the notion of social practice as an
integral part of the ‘process’ of visual activism, we identify three
emerging themes across the articles in this special issue: refusal, care
and thriving.
In our introduction,we engage with the richness of activist aesthetics
at the intersections of popular culture, subculture, art and activism,
and other forms of visual political communication, not by attempting to
contain these manifestations, but by offering a set of navigational
tools. We conceive of three primary forms of queer and feminist visual
practice – protest, process and product – each with its own histories
and epistemologies. Each of these forms offers the capacity for
resistance and collaboration. By opening up cross- and
inter-disciplinary perspectives, and conversations across diverse global
contexts, struggles and possibilities, we aim to expand on existing
scholarship both geographically and conceptually. A central motivation
for this work has been to think beyond the image; to be able to capture
and engage with the activist communities (and the activism) behind and
alongside the image and produced through the image.
Feel free to share with students and your wider networks.
Olu Jenzen & Tessa Lewin, Guest Editors,/Journal of Cultural Analysis
and Social Change/
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