Intersections

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Publication Type honors thesis
School or College College of Humanities
Department English
Faculty Mentor Disa Gambera
Creator Heman, Claire
Title Intersections
Year graduated 2015
Date 2015-08
Description This creative thesis explores the intersections of identity, gender, and sexuality, relevant topics in our times of binary gender roles and pervasive heteronormative social structures. This thesis is divided into two parts: 1) an introductory essay to place the creative work in an existing conversation, including self-analysis, relevant critical theory, and research on the necessity of visibility, and the effects of narrative on perception and creation of norms and, 2) a hybrid body of creative work that challenges the conventions of form and the barriers and parameters of normative society. The introduction brings context to these social constructions of gender, gender roles and heteronormativity, their related social power structures, and the systematic erasure of non-normative identities. Much of the presented research involves "othered" individuals, by which I mean people who fall outside the normative consciousness, such as those who are not included in a heteronormative societal framework. Visibility itself is necessary to affect people's acceptance and understanding of LGBT+ peoples, and a well-known form of visibility is the act of "coming out." The visibility of specific perspectives, such as a gay man coming out, can contribute to broadening the scope of what can be considered normal. For example, Anderson Cooper, CNN newscaster/journalist, came out in order to make it clear that gay people exist and to stop perpetuating his perceived hiding. When people become visible, as is the case when coming out/living out, they begin to positively erase their non-normative status. However, the push by the Human Rights Campaign in the 2000s for "homonormativity" erasure of LGBT+ people of color, people from low-income households and backgrounds, transgender people, and additionally other queer people due to their absence from the Non-Discrimination Act's guidelines. I have chosen to work with autoethnography as a communicative and interactive bridge between my creative work and the research. Autoethnography is a research technique that takes the form of self-reflection and writing that explores the researcher's personal experience and interaction with the research and research subjects. The creative portion of this is meant to converse with the concepts of "otherness" that exist outside of the visible spectrum of normative society. The hybrid collection of self-reflection, drama, poetry and short fiction will enact principles of visibility and education, contributing to the ever-expanding understanding and visibility of "othered" individuals.
Type Text
Publisher University of Utah
Subject Gender identity in literature; Sexual orientation in literature
Language eng
Rights Management Copyright © Claire Heman 2015
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 168,735 bytes
Identifier etd3/id/3647
Permissions Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6vm86bg
ARK ark:/87278/s6kd5660
Setname ir_htoa
ID 197198
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6kd5660
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