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Sortierung:
Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- List of Illustrations -- Introduction: Stories and Selves -- 1. The Perfect Sexes of Paradise -- 2. The Monstrous Races: Mapping the Borders of Sex -- 3. The Hyena's Unclean Sex: Beasts, Bestiaries, and Jewish Communities -- 4. Sex and Order in Natural Philosophy and Law -- 5. The Correction of Nature: Sex and the Science of Surgery -- 6. The Jesus Hermaphrodite: Alchemy in the Late Middle Ages and Early Renaissance -- Conclusion: Tension and Tenses -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index
In: Postmedieval: a journal of medieval cultural studies, Band 9, Heft 2, S. 132-146
ISSN: 2040-5979
In: Women's studies quarterly: WSQ, Band 43, Heft 1-2, S. 83-86
ISSN: 1934-1520
In: GLQ: a journal of lesbian and gay studies, Band 20, Heft 4, S. 461-490
ISSN: 1527-9375
This essay focuses on "hermaphrodites" to examine how ideas about sexual difference shaped the human-nonhuman distinction in medieval Europe. When constructing a definition of the human, medieval authors repeatedly pointed to a particular kind of sexual difference as a key indicator of humanness: a binary and stable sex, a singular means of reproduction, and a restricted set of possible sexual acts. The boundaries between male and female and animal and human also intersected with how medieval authors imagined boundaries between Christians and non-Christians and Europeans and non-Europeans, who were thought to possess bodily appetites that were more animal than human in nature. During the period, some European texts ascribed hermaphroditic, monstrously misshapen genitals to those living outside the geographic bounds of Europe, linking imagined deviations in anatomy to "race," a logic that was ultimately applied to Jews and Muslims, and which had a long legacy in both Europe and the Americas. This essay argues that sexual difference is wrapped up in the very taxonomy of the human-nonhuman divide. A turn toward nonhumanism — as modern scholars have proposed in an effort to queer the liberal human subject — is thus not necessarily emancipatory, and in the premodern period it was not. While this essay makes no easy equations between medieval and modern systems of sexual and racial difference, it suggests that engagement with earlier periods of history can help us to think about species difference and its connection to sexual and racial difference in contemporary contexts.
In: TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly, Band 5, Heft 4, S. 648-657
ISSN: 2328-9260
Abstract
Special issue editors Leah DeVun and Zeb Tortorici interview Maya Mikdashi and Carlos Motta about their collaborative film, Deseos /رغبات (Desires, 2015), which places queer and gender-variant historical characters within a fluid chronological framework. In this interview, Mikdashi and Motta discuss issues such as imperial and colonial temporality, queer networks of community, and a desire for happy endings in history.
In: TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly, Band 5, Heft 4, S. 518-539
ISSN: 2328-9260
In: TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly, Band 5, Heft 4, S. 658-685
ISSN: 2328-9260
Abstract
"Trans*historicities: A Roundtable Discussion" offers reflections on how thinking about time and chronology has impacted scholarship in trans studies in recent years. Contributing scholars come from numerous disciplines that touch on history, and have expertise in far-ranging geographic and temporal fields. As a broad conversation about some of the potential possibilities and difficulties in seeking out—and finding—trans in historical contexts, this discussion focuses on the complex interrelations between trans, time, and history.