Queering “The Children's Movement”

IF 1 4区 社会学 Q2 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY
K. Cheang
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This essay argues that the queer figure of the child that crops up curiously in (post–)Umbrella Movement Hong Kong is a defining political signifier for characterizing the city's youthful protesters and imagining alternative futures for Hong Kong. In many mainland Chinese media outlets, the youthfulness of the Hong Kong demonstrators is often emphasized to critique their fixation on the Western ideology of democracy. For the young resisters and their sympathizers, childishness connotes a different script of identity: it entails a narrative of temporal suspension in the face of assimilation into a Chinese homogeneity. By, for example, comparing the political star Joshua Wong to Peter Pan, who refuses to grow up, or by assigning uniform-wearing grade-school students the role of “the keepers of the Umbrella Movement,” prodemocratic cultural narratives keep alive the possibility of a political alterity that resists the neoliberal, temporal mandates of Hong Kong's government and mainland China. Theorizing that possibility in the context of temporal, queer, children's, and postcolonial studies, this essay contends that the future of resistance in Hong Kong will follow a lateral horizon, a sideways course that will put minor dissenters into new and nonheteropatriarchal relations with the existing order of the city.
追寻“儿童运动”
这篇文章认为,在香港雨伞运动(后)中奇怪地出现的儿童酷儿形象是描述这座城市年轻抗议者和想象香港未来的一个定义性政治符号。在许多中国大陆媒体中,香港示威者的年轻性经常被强调,以批评他们对西方民主意识形态的执着。对于年轻的抵抗者和他们的同情者来说,幼稚意味着一种不同的身份脚本:它需要一种面对同化为中国同质的暂时中止的叙事。例如,通过将政治明星黄之锋(Joshua Wong)与拒绝长大的彼得·潘(Peter Pan)进行比较,或者通过将穿着制服的高中生赋予“雨伞运动的守护者”的角色,民主文化叙事保持了对抗香港政府和中国大陆的新自由主义临时授权的政治冲突的可能性。本文在时间、酷儿、儿童和后殖民研究的背景下对这种可能性进行了理论化,认为香港未来的抵抗将沿着一个横向的地平线,一条横向的道路,将小的持不同政见者带入与城市现有秩序的新的非异父关系中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Glq-A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies
Glq-A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
46
期刊介绍: Providing a much-needed forum for interdisciplinary discussion, GLQ publishes scholarship, criticism, and commentary in areas as diverse as law, science studies, religion, political science, and literary studies. Its aim is to offer queer perspectives on all issues touching on sex and sexuality. In an effort to achieve the widest possible historical, geographic, and cultural scope, GLQ particularly seeks out new research into historical periods before the twentieth century, into non-Anglophone cultures, and into the experience of those who have been marginalized by race, ethnicity, age, social class, body morphology, or sexual practice.
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