Sexuality and Borders in Right-Wing Times: a conversation

Main author: Tudor, Alyosxa
Other authors: Ticktin, Miriam
Format: Journal Article           
Online access: Click here to view record


Summary: We respond to prompts about the relationships between race, migration, and sexuality, as these intersecting differences have been forced into the same frame by the violent practices of right-wing regimes, and brought into relief by Covid19. Even as we have long known that sexual politics are a way to govern bodies, and to distribute uneven states of vulnerability, we are seeing new incarnations of government. What we aim to point out is how people who are seen as “different” are being attacked, maimed, dispossessed and murdered. But perhaps more importantly, we insist on the specific nature of right-wing times because these regimes not only encourage attacks on people, but on the very idea that such people should exist, have rights and be recognized and understood; that there are areas of scholarship that center them, or areas of law that try to address the inequalities that dispossess them.
Other authors: Ticktin, Miriam
Language: English
Published: Taylor and Francis 2021