Queer Sharing in the Marketized University

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Synopsis

This collection contributes to an understanding of queer theory as a "queer share," addressing the urgent need to redistribute resources in a university world characterized by stark material disparities and embedded gendered, racial, national, and class inequities.
From across a range of precarious and relatively secure positions, authors consider the changing politics of queer theory and the shifting practices of queers who, in moving from the margins toward the academic mainstream, differently negotiate resources, recognition, and returns. Contributors engage queer redistributions in all tiers of the class-stratified academy and across the UK, the US, Australia, Armenia, Canada, and Spain. They both indict academic hierarchy as a form of colonial knowledge-making and explore class contradictions via first-generation epistemologies, feminist care work in the pandemic, Black working-class visibility, non-peer institutional collaborations, and student labor.
The volume reflects a commitment to interdisciplinary empirical and theoretical approaches and methodologies across anthropology, Black studies, cultural studies, education, feminist and women’s studies, geography, Latinx studies, performance studies, postcolonial studies, public health, transgender studies, sociology, student affairs, and queer studies. This book is for readers seeking to better understand the broad class-based knowledge project that has become a defining feature of the field of queer studies.

Book details

Series:
Routledge Advances in Critical Diversities
Author:
Churnjeet Mahn, Matt Brim and Yvette Taylor
ISBN:
9781000773187
Related ISBNs:
9781032066578, 9781032066585, 9781003203254
Publisher:
Taylor and Francis
Pages:
224
Reading age:
Not specified
Includes images:
Yes
Date of addition:
2022-11-30
Usage restrictions:
Copyright
Copyright date:
2023
Copyright by:
selection and editorial matter, Churnjeet Mahn, Matt Brim and Yvette Taylor 
Adult content:
No
Language:
English
Categories:
Nonfiction, Sociology