Since the
2000s, China’s media industrialization and cultural globalization have
encouraged a burgeoning “queer pop”——that is, a soaring proliferation of
non-normatively gendered and/or sexualized narratives and performances,
cultural productions and inventions, artistic expressions and gestures, and
social relations and kinship systems in China’s media, cultural, and creative
industries and spaces.
In the meantime, digital production and cyber
distribution technologies, social networking sites (both online and offline),
and cellular phone applications available to self-identified LGBTQ groups have
become increasingly accessible and diversified.
In the parallel off-screen
public space, China has also witnessed several waves of LGBTQ and feminist
sociopolitical movements, following the decriminalization and depathologization
of homosexuality in 1997 and 2001 respectively. Some queer and feminist
movements were significantly shaped by transnational queer and feminist currents,
such as the most recent #MeToo anti-sexual harassment movement at China-based
universities.
At this
seemingly liberating moment, questions particularly pertinent to ask are: Can
queer pop in post-2000 China be considered “gaystreaming,” “queerbaiting,”
“post-gay,” “post-queer,” “homonormativity,” or “fan service” with Chinese
characteristics (Green 2002; Gross 2001; Ng 2013, 2017; Wood 2013)? In what
ways has the convergence of transcultural LGBTQ and feminist politics, digital
technologies, and entertainment media contributed to the flourishing of this
Chinese pop cultural terrain? How and why can certain forms of queer
entertainment survive in a society in which LGBTQ (as well as highly
politicized feminist) identities and activisms remain largely censored,
discriminated against, and demonized? Can queer aesthetics, performances, and
narratives speak to and reflect on the intersectional struggles and alliances
of gender, sexual, ethnic, and class-based minorities within contemporary
China’s nationalistic discourses? If so, how? What are the connections and
differences between media that represent cross-dressing, homosociality, and
androgyny; pop cultural productions for, by, or about self-identified LGBTQ
groups; and off-screen LGBTQ lives and realities in and outside of China?
This
special issue of Feminist Media Studies explores these pressing questions by
calling for a broadened understanding of “queer” as non-normative ways of
seeing, being, negotiating, performing, and becoming. Queerness in this sense
can be expressed in forms of aesthetics, as possibilities of imagining and
desiring, and through practices of identifying/disidentifying. It can defy
sociopolitical ideals or trespass on sociocultural registers in
heteronormative, patriarchal societies. In this vein, queer pop in post-2000
China does not limit itself to LGBTQ-themed media and pop cultures. It also
manifests in the mainstream media and cultural spaces and negotiates with
imaginations about ethnicity, class, religion, and nation-state in and beyond
China’s geopolitical boundaries.
This issue
aims to interrogate the manners in which queer pop appropriates digital tools,
media information, global capitals, and communicative platforms to negotiate
with official media and political policies. It also explores the means by which
queer pop cashes in on androgynous and transgender representations, same-sex
intimacies, and non-heterosexually structured lifestyles and relationships. It
thus brings to light how China’s queer pop carefully positions itself in
relation to more politically sensitive and often severely censored LGBTQ media
productions and social activism. In addition, the issue strives to unsettle the
dichotomous logic too often employed in understanding a series of sociocultural
categories and identifications, not only surrounding gender and sexuality, but
also concerning ethnicity, class, and geopolitics. In particular, it is
interested in contributions that deal with the queer agency, promises, and
frustrations of ethnic and linguistic minority groups in a predominantly
Mandarin-speaking, Han-Chinese-centric public space.
Potential
topics may include but are not limited to:
- Indie films, TV shows, and music groups that appropriate gender and sexual non-normativities
- Queer pop phenomena facilitated by cyber communication and digital tools, such as cyber lesbian and gay stardom, transnational queer fandoms of local and foreign media, digital queer films, LGBTQ-themed media produced and distributed by online broadcasters, and online gaming, cosplay, and live streaming
- Case studies of queer pop that reconfigures China-centrism, Chineseness, and nationalism, or brings linguistic, religious, and ethnic minorities (within or beyond China’s geopolitical boundaries) into Chinese mainstream media and cultural spaces
- China’s political regulations and media censorship systems that catalyse, manifest in, or frustrate the emergence and development of queer pop
- Queer pop’s interplay with global feminism, transfeminism, global LGBTQ cultures, local feminist histories and post-feminist politics
- Non-identitarian forms of queer practices in Chinese media, cultural, and creative industries, such as cross-dressing performances, transgender celebrity personas, pink economy, and queer-friendly fashion and merchandise
Submission
Instructions
Please
submit a 350-word abstract as well as a short (2-page) CV to Jamie J. Zhao by
1st November 2018. Authors whose abstracts are selected will be notified by
15th December 2018 and asked to submit complete manuscripts by 15th May 2019.
Acceptance of the abstract does not guarantee publication of the paper, which
will be subject to peer review.
Editorial
information
Guest
Editor: Jamie J Zhao, University of Warwick, UK (J.Zhao.14@warwick.ac.uk)
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario