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    queer studies

    Explore "queer studies" with insightful episodes like "Episode 19 - Shire Quick Post - NZ Trip, 'Something Mighty Queer' Seminar, and Recent Tolkien Scholarship", "Episode 16 - Queer Tolkien Anthology Interview with Robin Reid, Chris Vaccaro, and Steve Yandell", ""Das Mittelalter war auch queer" | Beowulf, Riesen, Mittelalterrezeption", "Youngwoo Park: The Korean Queer Community, Christians, and Positivity | Korea Deconstructed #037" and "Queering the Past(s)" from podcasts like ""Queer Lodgings: A Tolkien Podcast", "Queer Lodgings: A Tolkien Podcast", "Science S*heroes", "Korea Deconstructed" and "Reimagining Ancient Greece and Rome: APGRD Podcast"" and more!

    Episodes (8)

    Episode 19 - Shire Quick Post - NZ Trip, 'Something Mighty Queer' Seminar, and Recent Tolkien Scholarship

    Episode 19 - Shire Quick Post - NZ Trip, 'Something Mighty Queer' Seminar, and Recent Tolkien Scholarship

    For our first episode of 2024, we take a look through the Quick Post as Alicia is joined by 'Producer' Tim to recount the highlights of their December trip to New Zealand in December to a decidedly jealous Grace and Leah. Then we excitedly gush together about the upcoming online seminar we're hosting on Feb 17th-18th, 'Something Mighty Queer', featuring many of our pals and past podcast guests. We hope to see you there, Lodgers and Birches! To finish off, we summarize some recent developments in Tolkien scholarship, including a run of excellent and much-needed work by Tom Emanuel, some wonderful pieces by our friends in a recent issue of Mallorn, and also one obnoxious article that will not go unchallenged.

    Register for the Mythopoeic Society's Online Midwinter Seminar 'Something Mighty Queer' here: https://mythsoc.org/oms/oms-2024.htm

    Episode 16 - Queer Tolkien Anthology Interview with Robin Reid, Chris Vaccaro, and Steve Yandell

    Episode 16 - Queer Tolkien Anthology Interview with Robin Reid, Chris Vaccaro, and Steve Yandell

    We have a special treat for you this month - Leah, Alicia, and Grace welcome not one... not two... but three guests! They are the editors of the forthcoming edited anthology '"There Are Many Paths to Tread": Queer Approaches to Tolkien's Middle-earth' from McFarland (due to release in 2025), and each is a well-known Tolkien scholar in their own right - Robin Reid, Chris Vaccaro, and Steve Yandell. Join us as we discuss the landscape of Queer and Intersectional Tolkien studies, why they're important, and what these important and fresh outlooks can contribute to Tolkien scholarship.

    "Das Mittelalter war auch queer" | Beowulf, Riesen, Mittelalterrezeption

    "Das Mittelalter war auch queer" | Beowulf, Riesen, Mittelalterrezeption
    Alan Lena van Beek ist Senior Scientist an der Universität Salzburg und im Forschungsgebiet der Germanistischen Mediävisitik unterwegs. Alan wurde 2020 mit dem Thema "Riesen in der Literatur des Mittelalters" im Fach Deutsche Sprache und Literatur promoviert.
    Alans Forschungsschwerpunkte sind unter anderem Ältere Deutsche Literatur, Riesen und Steine in der Literatur des Mittelalters, Game Studies, Queer Studies und Digital & Data Literacy.

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    Wir danken Almut Schwacke für unser Intro und Julius Herold für seine Unterstützung beim Cover.
    Science S*heroes kontaktieren? Geht am besten über Twitter unter @ScienceSheroes oder per Mail an sciencesheroes@gmail.com

    Youngwoo Park: The Korean Queer Community, Christians, and Positivity | Korea Deconstructed #037

    Youngwoo Park: The Korean Queer Community, Christians, and Positivity  | Korea Deconstructed #037

    Youngwoo Park majors in Italian Area Studies and International Studies at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies. His fields of interest include human rights, development cooperation, and the sociology of gender and race. Youngwoo is currently working as a translator in the Department of Operations and Support for the Seoul Queer Culture Festival.

    Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/youngwoo-park-419524214/?originalSubdomain=kr

    Korea Deconstructed by David Tizzard

    ▶ Get in touch: datizzard@swu.ac.kr

    ▶ Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/user?u=62047873

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    ▶ Listen on podcasts: https://koreadeconstructed.libsyn.com...

    Queering the Past(s)

    Queering the Past(s)
    A podcast with Nancy Rabinowitz, Marcus Bell, and Eleonora Colli ‘Queering the Past(s)’ is a new interactive online resource supported by The Classical Association, which has been developed by a team of teachers and scholars to address an important gap in school education on LGBTQ+ subjects and to use information from antiquity to help students gain confidence in addressing modern critical (and contentious) issues.

    Queer Andromeda

    Queer Andromeda
    A podcast with Hannah Greenstreet and Charlotte Vickers Hannah Greenstreet and Charlotte Vickers are, respectively, the writer and director of the TORCH-funded project Andromeda - a queer retelling of Euripides' lost play. Recorded ahead of a full production at Camden People's Theatre, Hannah and Charlotte discuss the project, its process, and the importance of centring queer experience in storytelling. Introduced by Giovanna Di Martino, and produced by Giovanna Di Martino and Claire Barnes. Recorded in July 2021.

    Queer Cosmopolitanism in the Expatriate Literature of Berlin

    Queer Cosmopolitanism in the Expatriate Literature of Berlin
    Ben Robbins considers queer cosmopolitanism in the work of Anglophone writers who lived in Berlin during the era of the Weimar Republic. This paper analyses a selection of Anglophone literature set in Weimar Berlin by the American and British writers Robert McAlmon, W. H. Auden, Christopher Isherwood, John Lehmann, and Stephen Spender. Not only were these writers themselves queer expatriates in Berlin during the 1920s and early 1930s, but they produced narratives of queer expatriation. I argue that these texts should be treated as a common literature that collectively explores a form of ‘queer cosmopolitanism’ in which sexual minorities disconnect from primary national identifications in order to form new international communities of belonging. As such, within this literature traditional definitions of the cosmopolitan are reformulated and resignified to accommodate the experience of oppressed minorities, whose transnational movements are catalysed under great social pressure.
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