Queerly

Month

November 2010

5 posts

“Erasing pain, struggle and hate by pretending it never happened is disingenuous and never, ever a good idea.” —

Queering SFF: Writing Queer—Languages of Power | Tor.com | Science fiction and fantasy | Blog posts

From the same post — this one sentence is extremely important for anyone who has read a lot of science fiction, since so much science fiction is casually set in futures where race, class, and gender issues are airily dismissed, as though a jetpack where a panacea for bigotry.

(via kukkurovaca)

Nov 16, 20105 notes
“Erasing pain, struggle and hate by pretending it never happened is disingenuous and never, ever a good idea.” —

Queering SFF: Writing Queer—Languages of Power | Tor.com | Science fiction and fantasy | Blog posts

From the same post — this one sentence is extremely important for anyone who has read a lot of science fiction, since so much science fiction is casually set in futures where race, class, and gender issues are airily dismissed, as though a jetpack where a panacea for bigotry.

(via kukkurovaca)

Nov 16, 20105 notes
“Though I feel like I shouldn’t need to say this, I’ll put it out there: none of this means you should exploit the potential suffering of a queer character just because they aren’t straight. This should not be the only aspect of their personality or even a big part of it. It is a part of their lives, yes, but it’s not the only part, much like their sexuality isn’t the only thing that makes them who they are. Ignoring the struggle is bad, capitalizing on it for melodrama is almost worse. I see a bit too much of that lurking around, usually secondary LGBT characters who exist in the story solely to be tormented and queer and sad. (They usually die by the end, too.) No, no, no. Just no.” —

Queering SFF: Writing Queer—Languages of Power | Tor.com | Science fiction and fantasy | Blog posts

Okay, last one. But seriously, go read this post.

READ

(via kukkurovaca)

Nov 16, 20103 notes
Kinky and Thanksgiving  → tumblr.com

Thanksgiving Potluck for the BDSM Community at the SF Citadel

Nov 16, 2010
#Thanksgiving #SF Citadel #Kinky Thanksgiving
“

There was a muchacha who lived near my house. La gente del pueblo talked about her being una de las otras, “of the Others.” They said that for six months she was a woman who had a vagina that bled once a month, and that for the other six months she was a man, had a penis and she peed standing up. they called her half and half, mita’ y mita‘, neither one nor the other but a strange doubling, a deviation of nature that horrified, a work of nature inverted. But there is a magic aspect in abnormality and so-called deformity. Maimed, mad, and sexually different people were believed to posess supernatural powers by primal cultures’ magico-religious thinking. For them, abnormality was the price a person had to pay for her or his inborn extraordinary gift.

There is something compelling about being both male and female, about having an entry into both worlds. Contrary to some psychiatric tenets, half and halfs are not suffering from a confusion of sexual identity, or even from a confusion of gender. What we are suffering from is an absolute despot duality that says we are able to be only one or the other. It claims that human nature is limited and cannot evolve into something better. But I, like other queer people, am two in one body, both male and female. I am the embodiment of the heiros gamos: the coming together of opposite qualities within.

”
—Gloria Anzaldúa’s Borderlands: The New Mestiza / La Frontera (Aunt Lute Books, 1999 (orig  published in 1987), p. 19).
Nov 5, 2010
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