Presented By: Spectrum Center
The House We Live In
Queer Habitations in the 21st Century - Martin Manalansan
This is the inaugurla IRWG-Women's Studies MLK Day Lecture and is part of the Lesbian, gay, Queer Research Initiative (LGQRI).
This presentation reports ethnographic microstudy of a household inhabited by unrelated, mostly undocumented queers of color in the Jackson Heights neighborhood of Queens, New York City. It examines particular forms of sociality that shape how lives are embodied and how bodies are lived amidst cramped quarters and a dwindling world of opportunities. The analysis revolves around the ideas of precarity and stasis and the (im)possibilities of triumphalist futures and unbridled optimism.
Martin Manalansan is a sociocultural anthropologist interested in framing issues of gender and sexuality within processes of globalization and transnationalism. His book, Global Divas: Filipino Gay Men in the Diaspora (2003), is a critical ethnography of Filipino gay men living in New York.
This presentation reports ethnographic microstudy of a household inhabited by unrelated, mostly undocumented queers of color in the Jackson Heights neighborhood of Queens, New York City. It examines particular forms of sociality that shape how lives are embodied and how bodies are lived amidst cramped quarters and a dwindling world of opportunities. The analysis revolves around the ideas of precarity and stasis and the (im)possibilities of triumphalist futures and unbridled optimism.
Martin Manalansan is a sociocultural anthropologist interested in framing issues of gender and sexuality within processes of globalization and transnationalism. His book, Global Divas: Filipino Gay Men in the Diaspora (2003), is a critical ethnography of Filipino gay men living in New York.