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Love and Pride in the times of DOMA

James, Faith LU (2019) SIMV18 20191
Graduate School
Master of Science in Social Studies of Gender
Abstract (Swedish)
This qualitative study explores the ways children of same-sex attracted (SSA) parents engage in everyday political resistance. Poststructuralism, Queer Theory, Intersectionality, and theoretical notions of resistance and politicization of identities are foundations of this work. Narrative methodology was used to analyze eight interviews with adult children of SSA parents along with relevant previous studies. In this study I establish that children of SSA parents born in the 1980s/1990s in the US form a political generation with a particular politicized identity. They engage in everyday political resistance against the dominant narrative in the US that families are formed by married, procreative, heterosexual couples – the master-narrative... (More)
This qualitative study explores the ways children of same-sex attracted (SSA) parents engage in everyday political resistance. Poststructuralism, Queer Theory, Intersectionality, and theoretical notions of resistance and politicization of identities are foundations of this work. Narrative methodology was used to analyze eight interviews with adult children of SSA parents along with relevant previous studies. In this study I establish that children of SSA parents born in the 1980s/1990s in the US form a political generation with a particular politicized identity. They engage in everyday political resistance against the dominant narrative in the US that families are formed by married, procreative, heterosexual couples – the master-narrative of the US family. This resistance manifests through disclosure practices and narrativization. I categorize the key disclosure practices as 1) political disclosure 2) non-political disclosure 3) political nondisclosure, and the key resistance narratives as 1) normality 2) pride 3) family. These everyday practices are political resistance because they challenge the hegemony of the master-narrative and demand a new political order in which the institution of family is not dictated by the heterosexual matrix. This highlights the salience of narrative and disclosure practices in understanding politics and the political. (Less)
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author
James, Faith LU
supervisor
organization
alternative title
Everyday political resistance of adults who grew up with same-sex attracted parents
course
SIMV18 20191
year
type
H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
subject
keywords
Everyday Political Resistance, Disclosure Practices, Resistance Narratives, Children of SSA parents, Queer / LGBTQIA+ Families
language
English
id
8982164
date added to LUP
2019-08-23 13:53:47
date last changed
2019-08-23 13:53:51
@misc{8982164,
  abstract     = {{This qualitative study explores the ways children of same-sex attracted (SSA) parents engage in everyday political resistance. Poststructuralism, Queer Theory, Intersectionality, and theoretical notions of resistance and politicization of identities are foundations of this work. Narrative methodology was used to analyze eight interviews with adult children of SSA parents along with relevant previous studies. In this study I establish that children of SSA parents born in the 1980s/1990s in the US form a political generation with a particular politicized identity. They engage in everyday political resistance against the dominant narrative in the US that families are formed by married, procreative, heterosexual couples – the master-narrative of the US family. This resistance manifests through disclosure practices and narrativization. I categorize the key disclosure practices as 1) political disclosure 2) non-political disclosure 3) political nondisclosure, and the key resistance narratives as 1) normality 2) pride 3) family. These everyday practices are political resistance because they challenge the hegemony of the master-narrative and demand a new political order in which the institution of family is not dictated by the heterosexual matrix. This highlights the salience of narrative and disclosure practices in understanding politics and the political.}},
  author       = {{James, Faith}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Love and Pride in the times of DOMA}},
  year         = {{2019}},
}