cloth 1-56639-623-9 $85.50, Jun 98, Available
paper 1-56639-624-7 $35.95, Jun 98, Available
256 pp
5.5x8.25
The dynamics of identity politics frequently have been studied from the perspective of "outsider" groups, those outside the bounds of the imagined community. But how does this dynamic play out in the construction of the "national imaginary"? How do nations themselves respond to identity politics, especially the politics of sexuality and sexual orientation?
A Nation by Rights will help reformulate how we use rights-to what end and through what means. It is clear that same-sex acts and identities have been deployed in the construction of national cultures, especially in times of crisis. It is also evident that identity politics in the future will become increasingly globalized and articulated to rights discourse. Through five diverse case studies, Carl F. Stychin examines how sexuality and sexual orientation intersect with gender, race, ethnicity, and religion in the ongoing formation of national identity, all within an era of increasing economic, political, and cultural globalization.
Case one: The controversy over the right of lesbians and gays to march in Boston's St. Patrick's Day parade, which exemplifies a fundamental rights dispute, the place of identity politics in American life, the role of rights discourse in shaping an American national identity, and the construction of identities within public space.
Case two: South Africa, to examine how rights discourse can figure when previously divided groups attempt to come together and when the language of rights is central to the formation of a national identity.
Case three: Quebec, to illustrate how sexual identities have been employed to help consolidate national identities where nation and nation-state fail to meet.
Case four: The "supranational" identity being imagined in the European Union, where rights discourse may serve as a bond of commonality (and a source of division) in the future.
Case five: Australia's use of the language of international human rights, which has been successfully deployed in the struggle to decriminalize same-sex sexual acts.
Stychin conveys the complexity and range of national responses to sexual identities and identity politics to achieve a deeper understanding of the meaning, capabilities, and limitations of rights discourse more generally.
Excerpt available at www.temple.edu/tempress
Acknowledgments
1. Introduction
2. The Nation's Rights and National Rites
3. Righting Wrongs
4. Queer Nations
5. Eurocentrism
6. Reimagining Australia
7. Concluding Remarks
Notes
References
Index
Carl F. Stychin, currently Senior Lecturer in Law, Keele University, is the author of Law's Desire: Sexuality and the Limits of Justice, and co-editor (with Didi Herman) of Legal Inversions: Lesbians, Gay Men, and the Politics of the Law (Temple, 1995). |
Sexuality Studies/Sexual Identity
Queer Politics, Queer Theories, edited by Craig Rimmerman.
The last ten years have seen the growth of rich research in the politics of sexuality. Queer Politics, Queer Theories, edited by Craig Rimmerman, aims at developing this research both within and across disciplines. The series will focus on politics in the broadest sense: not only state- and government-oriented studies, but also community politics and the internal politics of new social movements. Such work may originate in political science, sociology, economics, American studies, philosophy, law, history, or anthropology. The series will be defined not by particular academic disciplines but by the questions raised in it. The keys are a concern for the play of power and meaning in discussions of sexuality, and/or a reading of the role of sexuality and sexual identities in conceptions of social and political studies or in our common life.
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