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Number of results: 9( zebracki )

Article

Amsterdam Gay Capital af  / Martin Zebracki & Emiel Maliepaard.

Geografie, 21 (2012) 1 (jan), p. 24-25
source: Geografie year: 21 (2012) 1 (jan), p. 24-25
resume: Amsterdam geniet een historische reputatie van internationale homohoofdstad. Die wordt echter bedreigd door toenemend antihomogeweld. Met homowijken wil de stad haar gayfactor versterken. Een onzalig idee.
subjects:

signature: dgb artikelen (zebra/ams)

Amsterdam Gay Capital af
dgb artikelen (zebra/ams)
Martin Zebracki & Emiel Maliepaard.
Geografie
21
(2012)
1
(jan)
24-25
N301192
Article

Geographies of Sexualities : Bodies, Spatial Encounters and Emotions  / Guest editor: Valerie De Craene.

Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie, 108 (2017) 3 (july), p. 261-360
source: Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie year: 108 (2017) 3 (july), p. 261-360
resume: Table of Contents: Introduction - Geographies of Sexualities: Bodies, Spatial Encounters and Emotions / Valerie De Craene. - p. 261-274. Original Articles - Affects, Bodies and Desire: 'Queering' Methods and Methodologies to Research Queer Migration / Cesare Di Feliciantonio and Kaciano B. Gadelha. - p. 275-288. - Feeling Bodies of Knowledge: Situating Knowledge Production Through Felt Embeddedness / John Paul Catungal - p. 289-301. - Affective Inequality and Heteronormative Discomfort / Maria Rodó-De-Zárate. - p. 302-317. - Bisexual Safe Space(s) on the Internet: Analysis of an Online Forum for Bisexuals / Emiel Maliepaard. - p. 318-330. - Contesting 'Traditional' Masculinity and Men's Sexuality in Kwadukuza, South Africa / Kopano Ratele. - p. 331-344. Window on the Netherlands - Homomonument as Queer Micropublic: An Emotional Geography of Sexual Citizenship / Martin Zebracki. - p. 345-355. Commentary - Embodied Emotions in the Geographies of Sexualities / Andrew Gorman-Murray. - p. 356-360.
subjects:

signature: cat. (geogr/sex) b

Geographies of Sexualities : Bodies, Spatial Encounters and Emotions
cat. (geogr/sex) b
Guest editor: Valerie De Craene.
Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie
108
(2017)
3
(july)
261-360
N301848
Article

Sex in the city : Gender mainstreaming urban governance in Europe : The case of Sweden and Italy  / Martin Zebracki.

Fennia : International Journal of Geography, 192 (2014) 1, p. 54-64
source: Fennia : International Journal of Geography year: 192 (2014) 1 , p. 54-64
resume: This article reviews gender mainstreaming in practices of urban governance in Europe by comparing Sweden and Italy, which have distinct welfare-state systems: that of the former is firmly embedded in institutional and social structures, whereas that of the latter is markedly more familistic. This review illustrates this relatively strong contrast case on the basis of a literature and policy analysis, and elaborates how the everyday policies of urban governance regarding the living environment are considerably more gender-sensitive in Sweden than is the case in Italy. The main explanation for this difference lies in Sweden's political socialism and longer socio-democratic tradition of incremental and equity-planning approaches in urban governance, in contrast to Italy?s social tradition of rather more conservative corporatism and patriarchal commune tactics. Socio-political and formal-institutional barriers, which are impeding both the top-down and the bottom-up implementation of gender-sensitive initiatives, could be overcome by creating more mental and formal legislative room for urban-based gender mainstreaming. Such room would challenge prevailing patriarchal societal structures and policy narratives.
subjects:

signature: dgb artikelen (zebra/sex)

Sex in the city : Gender mainstreaming urban governance in Europe : The case of Sweden and Italy
dgb artikelen (zebra/sex)
Martin Zebracki.
Fennia : International Journal of Geography
192
(2014)
1
54-64
N302088
Article

Queerying Public Art in Digitally Networked Space  / Martin Zebracki.

ACME : An International Journal of Critical Geographies, 16 (2017) 3, p. 440-474
source: ACME : An International Journal of Critical Geographies year: 16 (2017) 3 , p. 440-474
resume: There is an increasing interest among geographers in studying social engagement with public artwork, but there remains a lack of scholarship on how such engagement operates in digitally networked space. This article examines this gap on the basis of a virtual ethnography involving (social) media analysis on encounters with Paul McCarthy's temporary installation Tree in Place Vendôme, Paris, 2014. This artwork, a 24-metre inflatable resembling a giant butt plug, unleashed a heated debate over social media about the artwork's (mis)uses of the locality and urban public sphere. From this case study, remembering/forgetting and materiality/digitality emerged as ambiguous appropriations/qualities of this public artwork. Accordingly, experiences foremostly navigated between obscene and misplaced values (e.g., postmodern/'sexualised' artwork style vs. classical site architecture and romantic urban imagery) and between ludic and radical responses (including comic, anti-permanence and anti-heteropatriarchal messaging). Considering the ambiguous and sexuality-related ramifications, I pursue "queerying" as method for examining online mediated public-art engagement. The study demonstrates how receptions and interactions digitally intertwined with the temporary material artwork - where the examined digital material was not an intentional part of the artwork as initiated by the artist. Specifically, the queerying analysis shows how dialectical online and offline public-art engagements with Tree negotiated (i.e. mediated) and augmented one another and offered alternative ways for conceptualising user agency and spatial connectivity. This study offers scholars a critical geographical mode for inquiring into the bottom-up digital co-production of public art and how online media can be employed both as research sites and tools.
subjects:

signature: dgb artikelen (zebra/que)

Queerying Public Art in Digitally Networked Space
dgb artikelen (zebra/que)
Martin Zebracki.
ACME : An International Journal of Critical Geographies
16
(2017)
3
440-474
N302090
Article

Critical Geographical Queer Semiotics  / Martin Zebracki and Tommaso M. Milani.

ACME : An International Journal of Critical Geography, 16 (2017) 3, p. 427-439
source: ACME : An International Journal of Critical Geography year: 16 (2017) 3 , p. 427-439
resume: This Themed Section assembles scholarship on sexual and queer geographies and socio-linguistics to pursue - what we, a collaborating geographer and semiotician, frame as - critical geographical queer semiotics. We regard this as an on-going episteme-techne research frontier at the crossroads of language-focused geographical inquiry and the unfolding sociolinguistic subdiscipline of linguistic landscaping. At the core of critical geographical queer semiotics are simultaneous knowledge-doings to challenge signs and symbols at the nexus of sexuality, identity and space. This entails a perpetual, unfinished language-driven project, uncovering how text is intrinsically informed by other texts. Text therefore encompasses a dynamic socio-spatiality interwoven fabric, and can be articulated along multi-scalar, multi-temporal as well as multi-semiotic dimensions of, in this case, everyday sexual citizenship. Hence, critical geographical queer semiotics probes into the processes of how discursive systems constitute and deconstruct sexuality-modulated identities of what is known and sensed as "place" . Importantly, we embrace critical geographical queer semiotics as an interdisciplinary and transnational commitment to catalyse place meanings across different language contexts beyond the Anglo-Saxon dominion.
subjects:

signature: dgb artikelen (zebra/mil)

Critical Geographical Queer Semiotics
dgb artikelen (zebra/mil)
Martin Zebracki and Tommaso M. Milani.
ACME : An International Journal of Critical Geography
16
(2017)
3
427-439
N302094
Article

Homomonument as Queer Micropublic : An Emotional Geography of Sexual Citizenship  / Martin Zebracki.

Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie, 108 (2017) 3 (july), p. 345-355
source: Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie year: 108 (2017) 3 (july), p. 345-355
resume: Emotions have remained under-addressed in scholarship on public memorial art, particularly with sexuality content. This case study on the Amsterdam-based Homomonument attends to this gap by differentiating emotions according to multi-scalar, multi-temporal and multi-semiotic dimensions of everyday lived experiences of sexual citizenship. Based on discourse analysis of secondary materials and social media coverage, supplemented with auto-ethnographic experience, the study explores how present-day feelings of respect, agitation and celebration around Homomonument are mediated at intersecting levels of the body, local community, broader society and especially emergent virtual community spaces. Such understanding requires critical interfaces with reminiscences, contemporary values and normativities, and future imaginaries. Specifically, this paper puts in perspective how Homomonument operates as queer micropublic: a space for intercultural encounter and 'queerying' sexual difference. This appears to be a multifaceted meaningful process, too: Homomonument ambiguously holds contesting, reconciling, indifferent and empathic sentiments alongside belongings and sexual identity expressions in quotidian life.
subjects:

signature: cat. art. (geogr/sex) b

dgb artikelen (zebra/hom)

Homomonument as Queer Micropublic : An Emotional Geography of Sexual Citizenship
cat. art. (geogr/sex) b dgb artikelen (zebra/hom)
Martin Zebracki.
Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie
108
(2017)
3
(july)
345-355
N302199
Article

Gay monuments in queer times: Amsterdam's Homomonument and the politics of inclusive social practice  / Martin Zebracki, Freek Janssens and Robert M. Vanderbeck.

Sexualities (2021) 0, p. 1-33
source: Sexualities (2021) 0 , p. 1-33
resume: Despite growing debate about the role of monuments in diverse societies, there has been insufficient attention to contestations that have emerged involving 'gay' or 'queer' monuments. This article examines the politics of inclusion and exclusion that can stem from the social practices that evolve around these monuments, particularly as the imperatives and priorities of LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer) activism evolve while monuments, created in a particular historical and geographical context, are in some sense 'set in stone'. Drawing on an intensive, mixed-methods case study of the Homomonument in Amsterdam, the article develops a grounded critique of processes of inclusion and exclusion specifically in relation to Black, bisexual and transgender people. With a focus on dance parties organised at the Homomonument, the article calls for more research that analyses monuments as sites of practice.
subjects:

signature: dgb artikelen (zebra/gay)

Gay monuments in queer times: Amsterdam's Homomonument and the politics of inclusive social practice
dgb artikelen (zebra/gay)
Martin Zebracki, Freek Janssens and Robert M. Vanderbeck.
Sexualities
(2021)
0
1-33
N308855
Article

Queer Monuments: Visisblity, (Counter)actions, Legacy  / Martin Zebracki, Ryan Leitner.

Journal of Homosexuality, 69 (2022) 8, p. 1342-1371
source: Journal of Homosexuality year: 69 (2022) 8 , p. 1342-1371
resume: This article synthesizes original comparative perspectives of visibility, (counter)actions, and legacy regarding queer monuments: public artworks dedicated to, and questioning or queering normativities around, the lives of LGBT+ people. It pursues a dialogic, interdisciplinary, and multisite and intercultural argument, drawing from approaches and preliminary insights from a scholarly project (Queer Memorials) and artist's project (Strange Inheritance) with topical case studies covering North America and Europe. After abductive ethnography, the analysis oscillates between theory/literature and scholarly and creative practice. It attends to the critical roles queer monuments have played in engaging with how sexual 'others' have fallen in and out of place through social struggles, radical politics, and collective memory. The peer exchange provides a cross-case taxonomy of queer monuments - roles, navigating between sorrowful, celebratory, provocative, and informative types and values. It advocates both arts-based enquiry and practice as grounded pathways for narrating queer monuments - activist potential to memorialize, and visibilize, sexual and gender minorities and their overlapping rights in/to space.
subjects:

signature: ts.

Queer Monuments: Visisblity, (Counter)actions, Legacy
ts.
Martin Zebracki, Ryan Leitner.
Journal of Homosexuality
69
(2022)
8
1342-1371
N308856
Article

Gay monuments in queer times: Amsterdam's Homomonument and the politics of inclusive social practice  / Martin Zebracki, Freek Janssens and Robert M. Vanderbeck.

Sexualities, 26 (2023) 3 (mar), p. 298-330
source: Sexualities year: 26 (2023) 3 (mar), p. 298-330
resume: Despite growing debate about the role of monuments in diverse societies, there has been insufficient attention to contestations that have emerged involving 'gay' or 'queer' monuments. This article examines the politics of inclusion and exclusion that can stem from the social practices that evolve around these monuments, particularly as the imperatives and priorities of LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer) activism evolve while monuments, created in a particular historical and geographical context, are in some sense 'set in stone'. Drawing on an intensive, mixed-methods case study of the Homomonument in Amsterdam, the article develops a grounded critique of processes of inclusion and exclusion specifically in relation to Black, bisexual and transgender people. With a focus on dance parties organised at the Homomonument, the article calls for more research that analyses monuments as sites of practice.
subjects:

signature: ts.

Gay monuments in queer times: Amsterdam's Homomonument and the politics of inclusive social practice
ts.
Martin Zebracki, Freek Janssens and Robert M. Vanderbeck.
Sexualities
26
(2023)
3
(mar)
298-330
N312133

Query:

( zebracki )

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