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Cyber-Orientalisms and the Counterpublic Record: Arabic Digital Archives of Sexual Rights after the 2011 Uprisings

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  • معلومة اضافية
    • Contributors:
      Cooperson, Michael D.; Bosch, Stephanie F.
    • بيانات النشر:
      eScholarship, University of California
    • الموضوع:
      2022
    • Collection:
      University of California: eScholarship
    • نبذة مختصرة :
      This dissertation critically investigates the literary and artistic production that shapes and is shaped by the global movement for sexual rights throughout its iterations in the Arabic language across Southwest Asia and North Africa (SWANA). I argue that the digital magazine produced by sexual rights activists in the wake of the 2011 popular uprisings was expressly concerned with what it means to be “Arab” and fall outside of heteronormative society. These magazines function as nerve centers for queer Arabic counterpublics, and their digital nature facilitates transnational networks across precarious conduits while leaving traces of a counter-archive in cyberspace. This archive ultimately documents a historical moment of the coming together of three processes wherein contemporary forms of sexual knowledge, Arabness, and cybernetics mutually constitute each other. Following a brief introduction to the project’s historical and critical framework, the first chapter interrogates the development of an Arabic vocabulary of gender and sexuality in translation by situating the term queer (kwīr) and its variants as a concept that not only travels from the Western sexual rights milieu, but across heterogenous geopolitical contexts of SWANA and within “Arabic” itself. By looking at counterpublic approaches to translating terminology, including Lebanon Support’s bilingual Qāmūs al-Jindir and Nisreen Mazzawi’s criticism of queer theory, the chapter elaborates the networked debate around forming a lexicon. Chapter Two builds on the Arabization of queerness and vice versa by investigating the production and circulation of a queer turāth. The chapter focuses on surveys of literature and historical figure profiles to examine counterpublic conceptions of Arabo-Islamic history and their attempts to recuperate or contrive a gay or lesbian subject. The chapter elaborates how sexual nonconformity is Arabized through the figure of literary heritage, resulting in a political tool that simultaneously authenticates the intersections of ...
    • Relation:
      qt3kt923kw; https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3kt923kw
    • Rights:
      public
    • الرقم المعرف:
      edsbas.A8E08252