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Beauty and power : transgendering and cultural transformation in the southern Philippines

By: Series: Explorations in anthropologyPublisher: Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2020Description: 1 online resource (276 pages)ISBN:
  • 9781859739259
  • 9781003084778
  • 100308477X
  • 1000181391
  • 9781000188028
  • 1000188027
  • 9781000184570
  • 1000184579
  • 9781000181395
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • HQ77.2.P6
Online resources:
Contents:
Introduction: Transvestite Performances -- 1. On Location(s): Cultural Crossings and Transformational Genders -- 2. Gender, History and Power: The Politics of Identities and Identifications -- 3. On the Engenderment of Gay/Bantut Sexuality -- 4. Growing Up Gay: Narrative Themes in Gay Life-Histories -- 5. Beauty and Vulgarity: Occupational Reinventions and Aesthetic Circumscriptions of the Gay/Bantut -- 6. Imagining Love: Cartographies of Homosocialities and Transgenderal Identities -- 7. Anomalous Bodies: Transgenderings and Cultural Transformations.
Summary: This compelling study of gender and sexual diversity in the Southern Philippines addresses general questions about the relationship between the making of gender and sexualities, the politics of national and ethnic identities and processes of cultural transformation in a world of contract labourers and transnational consumers. The book focuses, in particular, on the meaning and experience of local 'gays' -- transvestite/transgender-homosexual men -- who are at once celebrated as purveyors of beauty (defined in terms of a global American otherness) and valorized as impotent men and defiled women. In short, America functions both as a sign of their abjected status and as a space for imagining and reformulating various gendered identities. This innovative work -- one of the first ethnographic studies to be published in the aftermath of the region's civil unrest -- will be of interest to anyone working on gender, the body and sexuality. Not only does it extend the boundaries of cross-cultural studies of non-mainstream genders and sexualities by directly engaging the entanglement of local sensibilities with global images and discourse, but it also demonstrates that there is nothing ambiguous about ambiguity -- gendered, sexual or otherwise. Rather, this ambiguity is the specific product of different historical relations of power through which various cultural subjects are created and re-create themselves.
List(s) this item appears in: eBooks - Fashion & Sustainability
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
E-Book E-Book Whitecliffe Library Online Resource E-Collection E-BOOK (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Online Access - Please see the link E59

"First published 1997 by Berg Publishers."

Includes bibliographical references.

Introduction: Transvestite Performances -- 1. On Location(s): Cultural Crossings and Transformational Genders -- 2. Gender, History and Power: The Politics of Identities and Identifications -- 3. On the Engenderment of Gay/Bantut Sexuality -- 4. Growing Up Gay: Narrative Themes in Gay Life-Histories -- 5. Beauty and Vulgarity: Occupational Reinventions and Aesthetic Circumscriptions of the Gay/Bantut -- 6. Imagining Love: Cartographies of Homosocialities and Transgenderal Identities -- 7. Anomalous Bodies: Transgenderings and Cultural Transformations.

This compelling study of gender and sexual diversity in the Southern Philippines addresses general questions about the relationship between the making of gender and sexualities, the politics of national and ethnic identities and processes of cultural transformation in a world of contract labourers and transnational consumers. The book focuses, in particular, on the meaning and experience of local 'gays' -- transvestite/transgender-homosexual men -- who are at once celebrated as purveyors of beauty (defined in terms of a global American otherness) and valorized as impotent men and defiled women. In short, America functions both as a sign of their abjected status and as a space for imagining and reformulating various gendered identities. This innovative work -- one of the first ethnographic studies to be published in the aftermath of the region's civil unrest -- will be of interest to anyone working on gender, the body and sexuality. Not only does it extend the boundaries of cross-cultural studies of non-mainstream genders and sexualities by directly engaging the entanglement of local sensibilities with global images and discourse, but it also demonstrates that there is nothing ambiguous about ambiguity -- gendered, sexual or otherwise. Rather, this ambiguity is the specific product of different historical relations of power through which various cultural subjects are created and re-create themselves.

Mark Johnson University of Hull.

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