Beställningsvara. Skickas inom 10-15 vardagar. Fri frakt för medlemmar vid köp för minst 249 kr.
Gender Variances and Sexual Diversity in the Caribbean: Perspectives, Histories, Experiences is a collection of critical perspectives on fundamental questions of how sexual orientation and gender in Jamaica and the wider Caribbean are conceived, studied, discoursed and experienced. Bringing together and updating existing and in-progress scholarly work on minority genders and sexualities in the region, this collection seeks to provide a fresh set of lenses through which to examine the issues affecting people in the Caribbean who fall outside the traditional binary categories of heterosexual males or heterosexual females.Opening with a variety of perspectives – from the biological to the religious and historiographical – the volume explores definitions of sex and gender as well as constructions of sexuality among Commonwealth Caribbean scholars, and the ways in which the Judaeo-Christian tradition popular in the region has responded to these. Other chapters examine the socializing forces that reinforce or challenge conventional conceptions of gender and sexuality, and how these result in the constraining forces of social exclusion and discrimination that many members of the LGBTQ community in the region experience. The book ends with chapters that interrogate the normative standards of gender and sexuality that have traditionally underlain Caribbean popular culture. Additionally, there is an exploration of how anti-gay discourse in Jamaican dancehall, embedded in a language linked to the country's vernacular nationalism, has been neutralized by a coalition of local and international LGBTQ activists.
Marjan de Bruin is Chair of the technical working group Equity, Diversity and Inclusion, the University of the West Indies, Mona, Jamaica.R. Anthony Lewis is Associate Professor, Language Teaching and Research Centre, the University of Technology, Kingston, Jamaica.
Introduction1. "Gender" in Caribbean Discourse: Ruptures, Revisions, Reconstructions2. Conceptualizing Sex/Gender Diversity: Considerations for the Caribbean3. The Variability of the Sexes from a Sociobiological Perspective4. "Male and Female Created He Them": Calling for a New Discourse on Gender and Sexual Diversity in the Jamaican Church5. Taboo and Obligation: Normative Pressures on Sexuality and Gender in the Caribbean and the Rise of Hard Masculinity6. "Bring It Cross?": Sexuality and "Passing" in Jamaica7. The Myth of the "Free Pass" in Jamaica: An Assessment of the Representation of Women Who Love Women in the Media8. The Impact of Jamaican Popular Culture in Shaping Normative Conceptions of Gender and Sexuality9. Dem Bow: Translation, Globalization and Dancehall's Recalibrated Anti-Gay DiscourseContributors