Guest editorial: Queer theory and criminology
Guest editorial: Queer theory and criminology
In 2015, queer theorist Heather Love called for her fellow queer scholars to recognise the centrality of the study of norms and deviance to ‘the intellectual genealogy’ of queer studies. She argued that queer approaches and understandings, with their ‘embrace of a politics of stigma’ and ‘reliance on a general category of social marginality’, were ‘borrowed’ from mid-20th century social science studies of deviance (Love, 2015: 75). For most criminologists, it is axiomatic that this tradition is equally central to our own genealogy, and our concerns with deviance, normativity, social control and the production of power and marginalisation. Despite this shared set of concerns, queer theory and criminology have little contemporary crossover. We share Love’s concern around this state of affairs, but where she is primarily concerned about the stakes for queer studies, the focus of our Special Issue is on what criminologists can gain from greater engagement with the analytic and conceptual tools of queer theory.
504–509
Lamble, Sarah
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Serisier, Tanya
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Dymock, Alex
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Carr, Nicola
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Downes, Julia
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Boukli, Avi
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21 October 2020
Lamble, Sarah
be66c684-e238-4667-9b2f-3e8db79a4cba
Serisier, Tanya
c96a1cda-dad6-4b76-98c0-ca25e2ade555
Dymock, Alex
811a35a2-705b-40ff-aea1-60a1b82e66a3
Carr, Nicola
7839561e-ad73-47f3-b4d8-c4cd3cff65ee
Downes, Julia
651fe0b1-2039-4df9-a042-de9224f6613e
Boukli, Avi
4a3963f7-7d82-485b-889b-a7cb7ae11888
Lamble, Sarah, Serisier, Tanya, Dymock, Alex, Carr, Nicola, Downes, Julia and Boukli, Avi
(2020)
Guest editorial: Queer theory and criminology.
Criminology & Criminal Justice, 20 (5), .
(doi:10.1177/1748895820947448).
Abstract
In 2015, queer theorist Heather Love called for her fellow queer scholars to recognise the centrality of the study of norms and deviance to ‘the intellectual genealogy’ of queer studies. She argued that queer approaches and understandings, with their ‘embrace of a politics of stigma’ and ‘reliance on a general category of social marginality’, were ‘borrowed’ from mid-20th century social science studies of deviance (Love, 2015: 75). For most criminologists, it is axiomatic that this tradition is equally central to our own genealogy, and our concerns with deviance, normativity, social control and the production of power and marginalisation. Despite this shared set of concerns, queer theory and criminology have little contemporary crossover. We share Love’s concern around this state of affairs, but where she is primarily concerned about the stakes for queer studies, the focus of our Special Issue is on what criminologists can gain from greater engagement with the analytic and conceptual tools of queer theory.
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Published date: 21 October 2020
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Local EPrints ID: 472035
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/472035
ISSN: 1748-8958
PURE UUID: b6e1ba32-ffc0-4741-b144-7f51c272e48f
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Date deposited: 24 Nov 2022 17:31
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:14
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Author:
Sarah Lamble
Author:
Tanya Serisier
Author:
Alex Dymock
Author:
Nicola Carr
Author:
Julia Downes
Author:
Avi Boukli
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