"Where Is the Safe Space?!" single work   essay  
Issue Details: First known date: 2024... 2024 "Where Is the Safe Space?!"
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'Drag queen storytime (DQS), also known as drag (queen) story-hour, has been implemented in selected libraries and schools across North America, Oceania, and the United Kingdom, to open safe spaces for drag queens to read children’s books that may involve LGBTQA+ characters or subject matters. Unfortunately, despite its popularity with many children and families, DQS has faced intense public protests regarding the perceived LGBTQA+ themed texts, and violent threats against the performers and organisers. Underpinned by queer, transgender, and feminist theory as well as intersectionality, this creative essay probes the current affairs of DQS as it relates to LGBTQA+ human rights. As a platform to highlight LGBTQA+ digital, visual, and print texts, this essay channels the authors’ ‘inner drags’ and draws on queer narrative inquiry to critically reflect and face our own fear and vulnerability in professional and queer undertaking. Using a recent DQS incident as a case in point, we demonstrate how unleashing our inner queerness through drag can empower us as queer academics and allies to counter ‘dragphobia’ and celebrate gender and sexuality diversity. This creative work aspires to provide provocations for further exploration of queer inclusivity across social, cultural, and political intersections, with the intent to promote LGBTQA+ inclusive practices.' (Publiation abstract)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Axon : Creative Explorations Translate | Transform | Transdiscipline : Collaborative Practice across Divides vol. 14 no. 1 July 2024 28720630 2024 periodical issue

    'Drawing on Susan Leigh Star’s theory of boundary objects, this article explores the dynamics of collaborative practices across boundaries, focusing on the concepts of translation, transformation, and transdisciplinarity. As artist-scholars and as editors, we examine how the ‘Collaborative practice across divides’ issue of Axon facilitates collaboration by maintaining a common identity while adapting to local needs, and we prioritise process, practice, and relational movement. The integration of feminist environmental humanities perspectives further emphasises the relational and ethical dimensions of such work, and shows how diverse ways of knowing and doing can coexist and foster creative resistance. We reflect on the challenges and synergies encountered in our collaborative editorial process, emphasising the importance of backstage labour and the epistemological implications of our work. Within our framework, this issue of Axon itself becomes a boundary object, bridging various disciplinary and social worlds, and inviting readers to engage with the content in a transformative manner. Through this exploration, the article underscores the significance of embracing the uncertainties and relational complexities inherent in collaborative, transdisciplinary endeavours.' (Vahri McKenzie, Jo Pollitt, E Sun : Introduction)

    2024
Last amended 3 Sep 2024 08:31:38
https://www.axonjournal.com.au/issues/14-1/where-safe-space "Where Is the Safe Space?!"small AustLit logo Axon : Creative Explorations
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