“Queers in the front”: the ethics and affects of queer-led social justice
Abstract
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- “Queers in the front”: the ethics and affects of queer-led social justice
- Creators
- Elizabeth Handschy
- Contributors
- Erica Prussing (Advisor)Elana Buch (Committee Member)Laura Graham (Committee Member)Theodore Powers (Committee Member)Margot Weiss (Committee Member) - Wesleyan UniversityEmily Wentzell (Committee Member)
- Resource Type
- Dissertation
- Degree Awarded
- Doctor of Philosophy (PhD), University of Iowa
- Degree in
- Anthropology
- Date degree season
- Autumn 2021
- Publisher
- University of Iowa
- DOI
- 10.17077/etd.006290
- Number of pages
- xiv, 235 pages
- Copyright
- Copyright 2021 Elizabeth Handschy
- Language
- English
- Description bibliographic
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 213-235).
- Public Abstract (ETD)
My dissertation, based on 12 months of participant observation with three activist organizations in Portland, Maine, extends scholarship on activism and emotions by describing how queer activists are charting new emotional terrain as they advocate for multiple social justice projects, such as workers’ rights, harm reduction, and anti-racism, through the lens of their queer identities. All of the organizations with which I worked had significant queer leadership and membership, but were not explicitly queer organizations.
Creating new emotional and moral modes of experience is a key project of my research participants, in addition to policy or other activist goals. Queerness as a political project that includes multiple experiences of gender and sexuality, but also other transformative experiences of love and care, is at the center of these emotional and moral modes, which I call “queer capacious love and care.” Examples include getting people who use drugs access to affirming health services and advocating for the lowest-paid workers to have access to paid time off so they can care for themselves and loved ones.
In reworking activist emotional and moral practices, queer activists also create new meanings for both advocacy tactics and the nonprofit form. The calculous they make about tactics is not narrowly about efficacy, but includes decisions about how to best care for one another in the process of activism. Within the constraints of an unequal society, my research participants attempt to care for one another in ways that counter how inequality shapes who normally gives and receives care.
- Academic Unit
- Anthropology
- Record Identifier
- 9984210642002771