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Homonationalism across borders. Exploring cross-border exchange and strategic homonationalism in the construction of progressive nationalism

Liinason, Mia LU (2023) In Sexualities 26(1-2). p.86-104
Abstract
While scholars have shown the significance of transnational exchanges for shaping feminist and LGBTI+ connectivities across borders to challenge national exclusions and global divides, less attention has been directed at exploring the complex and ambiguous ways in which transnational collaborations and cross-border exchanges also may facilitate and support national agendas. That is what this article sets out to explore. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork with LGBTI+ actors in a Scandinavian context, this article uses the notion of strategic homonationalism to examine the ambiguous ways in which transnational, diasporic, and refugee LGBTI+ politics and locations in the Scandinavian region strategically engage with regulatory notions of... (More)
While scholars have shown the significance of transnational exchanges for shaping feminist and LGBTI+ connectivities across borders to challenge national exclusions and global divides, less attention has been directed at exploring the complex and ambiguous ways in which transnational collaborations and cross-border exchanges also may facilitate and support national agendas. That is what this article sets out to explore. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork with LGBTI+ actors in a Scandinavian context, this article uses the notion of strategic homonationalism to examine the ambiguous ways in which transnational, diasporic, and refugee LGBTI+ politics and locations in the Scandinavian region strategically engage with regulatory notions of liberal-mindedness and with exclusionary discourses of genuine LGBTI+ subjectivity in this context. Rather than being restricted to national contexts, I show, forms of progressive nationalism may be facilitated by crossborder exchange of various kind. Influenced by scholars who argue for the need to bring back a focus on racialization and national belonging in analyses of the making of sexualized and/or gendered difference, the article attends to the complex politics involved in inhabiting the impossible position of not being able to “not want rights.” To this end, this article reworks homonationalism, from a concept that emerges or is rooted in a US context, to a concept that travels and is differently shaped and picked up in various located sites, showing that homonationalism in a Scandinavian context takes shape through a moralistically superior position. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Homonationalism,, Sexuality, Transnationalism, national exclusion, Scandinavia
in
Sexualities
volume
26
issue
1-2
pages
20 pages
publisher
SAGE Publications
external identifiers
  • scopus:85138269981
ISSN
1363-4607
DOI
10.1177/13634607221112647
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
50d72bf5-b570-412e-86e7-19f0f9f2206e
date added to LUP
2022-10-31 09:19:13
date last changed
2023-09-29 07:54:42
@article{50d72bf5-b570-412e-86e7-19f0f9f2206e,
  abstract     = {{While scholars have shown the significance of transnational exchanges for shaping feminist and LGBTI+ connectivities across borders to challenge national exclusions and global divides, less attention has been directed at exploring the complex and ambiguous ways in which transnational collaborations and cross-border exchanges also may facilitate and support national agendas. That is what this article sets out to explore. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork with LGBTI+ actors in a Scandinavian context, this article uses the notion of strategic homonationalism to examine the ambiguous ways in which transnational, diasporic, and refugee LGBTI+ politics and locations in the Scandinavian region strategically engage with regulatory notions of liberal-mindedness and with exclusionary discourses of genuine LGBTI+ subjectivity in this context. Rather than being restricted to national contexts, I show, forms of progressive nationalism may be facilitated by crossborder exchange of various kind. Influenced by scholars who argue for the need to bring back a focus on racialization and national belonging in analyses of the making of sexualized and/or gendered difference, the article attends to the complex politics involved in inhabiting the impossible position of not being able to “not want rights.” To this end, this article reworks homonationalism, from a concept that emerges or is rooted in a US context, to a concept that travels and is differently shaped and picked up in various located sites, showing that homonationalism in a Scandinavian context takes shape through a moralistically superior position.}},
  author       = {{Liinason, Mia}},
  issn         = {{1363-4607}},
  keywords     = {{Homonationalism,; Sexuality; Transnationalism; national exclusion; Scandinavia}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1-2}},
  pages        = {{86--104}},
  publisher    = {{SAGE Publications}},
  series       = {{Sexualities}},
  title        = {{Homonationalism across borders. Exploring cross-border exchange and strategic homonationalism in the construction of progressive nationalism}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/13634607221112647}},
  doi          = {{10.1177/13634607221112647}},
  volume       = {{26}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}