个人即国家

Liam Barrowcliffe
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文分析了丹麦和爱尔兰的女同性恋、男同性恋或双性恋(LGB)群体如何看待自己与国家霸权叙事的关系。从两个国家背景中收集和分析了一系列个人叙事,作为叙事文本,分析了它们在更广泛的国家话语中代表地位、代理和归属感的方式。LGB的生活通常被简化为国家叙事中的立法转折点,但这项研究将重点转移到无数其他有助于他们国家自我意识的形成性经历上。虽然大量的工作集中在LGB(TQ)和国家认同的交叉点是有害的,导致了诸如同性恋民族主义的理论,但本文认为这种关系更加微妙,并且能够超越接受/拒绝或包容/排斥的二分法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Personal is National
This article analyses how those who identify as lesbian, gay or bisexual (LGB) in Denmark and the Republic of Ireland see themselves in relation to hegemonic narratives of the nation. A range of personal narratives from the two national contexts were collected and analysed as narrative texts for the ways they represented positionality, agency and belonging in the wider discourse of the nation. LGB lives are often reduced to legislative turning points in national narratives, but this study shifts the focus onto the myriad of other formative experiences that contribute to their national sense of self. While a significant body of work has focused on the intersection of LGB(TQ) and national identity as harmful, leading to theories such as homonationalism, this article sees the relationship as more nuanced, and capable of going beyond acceptance/rejection or inclusion/exclusion dichotomies.
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