<i>Liveable Lives</i> is timely contribution to queer scholarship in decoding gender-sexual politics within the homonationalist discourse when the idea of a progressive nation majorly pivots on juridico-political legislative reforms, including equalities legislation around employment, same sex marriage, adoption and parental rights, etc. Following real life experiences of LGBTIQ+-identifying citizens in the UK and India, the book raises politically nuanced questions while debunking hegemonic gender-sexual practices and normative regimes of liveability – say, homonormativity – which are integral to nationalist imaginaries of assimilating queers.
Kaustav Bakshi, Jadavpur University, Kolkata.
<i>Liveable Lives </i>is a positive and critical assessment of the multiple and contradictory ways in which our LGBTQ lives become liveable across two nations, India and Great Britain. Building on Butler’s ‘good life’, the authors extend understandings of liveabilities through decolonial reflections and participants’ narratives. Creative transnational methodologies produce rich accounts of legal reforms and citizen rights, the everydayness of living and surviving, and the power of street theatre and workshops. This book is a vibrant and compelling framework for social transformation.
Lynda Johnston, Professor of Geography, University of Waikato, Aotearoa New Zealand
A fascinating and transgressive book on what makes the lives of LGBTQ people liveable from a feminist queer approach. A great example of how to explore the understandings of liveabilities through transnational activist/academic engagements and through the application of a nuanced feminist and decolonial framework.
Maria Rodó-Zárate, Pompeu Fabra University, Barcelona, Spain
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Kath Browne is a Geography Professor at University College Dublin, Ireland. She currently leads the Beyond Opposition research, an ESRC consolidator project that seeks to investigate the experiences of people who do not support some or all of the changes to sexual and gender equalities in the 21st century and explore new ways of engaging difference, differently. She is the co-author of Heteroactivism (Zed, 2020), and co-editor of After Repeal (Zed, 2020), and Lesbian Feminism (Zed, 2019).
Niharika Banerjea is Professor at the Jindal Global Law School, O.P. Jindal Global University, India. She is co-editor of Lesbian Feminism (Bloomsbury, 2019).