Department of Communication Studies, Eastern Illinois University, Charleston, Illinois 61920, USA.
J Homosex. 2012;59(7):957-81. doi: 10.1080/00918369.2012.699835.
In this article, we use personal narrative to explore allies and alliance building between marginalized people working in and through higher education, with an eye toward interrogating the ways in which ideologies of neoliberalism work to maintain hierarchy through the legitimation of othering. Inspired by Conquergood (1985 ), who calls scholars to engage in intimate conversation rather than distanced observation, we offer our embodied experiences as a way to use the personal to reflect on the cultural, social, and political. Our narratives often recount being out of place, moments of incongruence, or our marked otherness. Through the sharing of these narratives, we will demonstrate the possibility for ally building based in affective connections forged through shared queer consciousness, paying particular attention to the ways in which neoliberal ideologies, such as individualism and postracism, may advance and impede such alliances.
在本文中,我们使用个人叙事来探索处于边缘地位的人在高等教育内外开展工作并以此为途径建立同盟的现象,着眼于探究新自由主义意识形态如何通过将他人他物合法化来维持等级制度。受 Conquergood(1985)的启发,他呼吁学者们进行亲密对话,而不是进行远距离观察,我们提供我们的亲身经历,以此将个人经历与文化、社会和政治联系起来进行反思。我们的叙述经常讲述不适应的时刻、不一致的时刻,或者我们明显的他者性。通过分享这些叙述,我们将展示基于通过共同的酷儿意识建立情感联系的同盟建设的可能性,特别关注新自由主义意识形态(如个人主义和后种族主义)如何促进和阻碍这种同盟。