Beyond the binary: Identity, subjectivity, and the sexual borderlands

April Scarlette Callis, Purdue University

Abstract

This dissertation investigates the tensions between hegemonic systems of classification and emergent categories by focusing on sexualities in the U.S. that exist in the borderland between heterosexuality and homosexuality. Though sexuality has been understood as a binary in U.S. society for over a century (Rubin 1984, Weeks 1985, Lancaster 2003), identities that are neither hetero- nor homosexual are beginning to emerge, becoming more visible in popular culture (Udis-Kessler 1996, Rust 2000). Recurring bisexual characters on popular television shows, the inclusion of “bisexual” to organization names, and the popularity of the initialism GLBT are just a few examples of this visibility. Situated between more normative and thus intelligible sexualities, non-binary identities such as bisexual, queer, and pansexual provide a critical site for the investigation of how sexual identity is both constructed and de/reconstructed. This dissertation examines how individuals draw on various strands of discourse to substantiate, negotiate or reject labels that fall outside of societal norms. By asking how participants conceptualize these sexualities, I address the ways that emergent identities are placed in and possibly refigure schemas of sexuality, creating an emic map of sexuality in the United States.

Degree

Ph.D.

Advisors

Blackwood, Purdue University.

Subject Area

Cultural anthropology|LGBTQ studies

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