Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/45462
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dc.contributor.authorHanson, Julie Louiseen
dc.date.issued2007en
dc.identifier.citationBody and Society, 2007; 13 (1):61-106en
dc.identifier.issn1357-034Xen
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2440/45462-
dc.descriptionCopyright © 2007 SAGE Publicationsen
dc.description.abstractThis article offers speculative analyses on embodiment and corporeality, with particular reference made to drag kinging as an embodied performance of female masculinity to both initiate and highlight these. In particular I explore and employ Karen Barad's post-humanist elaboration of performativity, and Warwick and Cavallaro's provocative discussions on the dress/body relationship to do this. This lends itself to thinking and theorizing corporeality and the socially produced body in terms not reducible to easy dualisms; for example, material/immaterial, mind/body and nature/culture divides. By maintaining a ‘tension’ between such dualisms, I hope to highlight, through personal drag king narratives and my own speculative writing, that drag kinging is much more than just a ‘performance’, but is in fact a powerful corporeal experience that I have come to term ‘drag king embodiment’.en
dc.description.statementofresponsibilityJulie Hansonen
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherSage Publicationsen
dc.subjectcorporeality; drag; embodiment; female masculinity; performanceen
dc.titleDrag kinging: Embodied acts and acts of embodimenten
dc.typeJournal articleen
dc.contributor.schoolSchool of Social Sciences : Gender, Work and Social Inquiryen
dc.identifier.doi10.1177/1357034X07074779en
Appears in Collections:Gender Studies and Social Analysis publications

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