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ALLOUCHE, SABIHA (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   173947


Different Normativity and Strategic ‘Nomadic’ Marriages: Area Studies and Queer Theory / Allouche, Sabiha   Journal Article
Allouche, Sabiha Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article embraces Maya Mikdashi and Jasbir Puar’s recent recommendation ‘for a politics in queer theory that works to displace the United States as the prehensive force for everyone else’s future’ in order to ponder the scope and reach of queer theory through/as area studies (Middle East).1 The article draws upon personal experiences and narratives of homo-desiring men and women in/from Lebanon who perform hetero married life while pursuing same-sex desire elsewhere, in order to conceive ‘different normativity’ and ‘nomadic unions.’ The article posits ‘strategic nomadic marriages’ as a fluctuating and unsteady type of union that accommodates the particularity of the ‘sex/gender systems’ of global south societies.
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2
ID:   170053


Queering heterosexual (intersectarian) love in lebanon / Allouche, Sabiha   Journal Article
Allouche, Sabiha Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article draws on a year of ethnography conducted among cis heterosexual couples in contemporary urban Lebanon in order to argue that, in the absence of a serious project of national reconciliation, intersectarian love, despite its short lifespan, constitutes restorative instances in post–civil war Lebanon. Intersectarian hetero desire emerges as a counter-discourse that threatens the masculinist foundations of the Lebanese state. By tracing the timeline of love in the life of Lebanese citizens, this article places personal narratives of “impossible” intersectarian love stories in conversation with queer temporality scholarship in order to recognize the political, albeit limited, potential of romantic love. Here, societal expectations of married life are replaced by an ephemeral unity that operates in contra to hegemonic interpretations of “man and wife.”
Key Words Middle East  Lebanon  Sect  Romantic Love  Queer Theory  Affect Theory 
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