ABSTRACT

This book critically unpacks the why and how around everyday rhetorics and slogans promoting global LGBTQ equality. Examining the means by which particular discourses of progress and hope are circulated globally, it offers unique insights into how LGBTQ livelihoods, relationships, and social movements are legitimated and valued in contemporary society.

Adopting an innovative critical discourse-ethnographic approach, Comer draws on scholarship from the sociolinguistics of global mobility, queer linguistics, and digital media studies, offering in-depth analyses of representations of LGBTQ identity across a range of domains. The volume examines semiotic linkages between: LGBTQ tourism marketing; Cape Town, South Africa, as a locus for contemporary ideologies of global mobility and equality; diversity management practices framing LGBTQ equality as a business imperative; and, humanitarian discourses within transnational LGBTQ advocacy. Autoethnographic vignettes and principles from within queer theory are incorporated by Comer’s critical discourse-ethnographic approach, giving voice to personal experience in order to sharpen scholarly understanding of the relationships between everyday ‘social voices’, globalized neoliberal political economy, and the media.

Taken together, the volume expansively (if queerly) maps what Comer refers to as ‘the mediatization of equality’, and will be of interest to graduate students and scholars in critical discourse studies, sociolinguistics, and linguistic anthropology, as well as those working across such fields as media studies, queer studies, and sociology.

chapter |4 pages

San Francisco, January 2016

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chapter 1|52 pages

Introduction

The mediatized mobility of people, politics, and pride
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chapter |2 pages

Cape Town, April 2016

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chapter 2|25 pages

‘Equality on the sea’

Interrogating LGBTQ privilege in the tourism discourse of ‘Africa’s gay capital'
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chapter 3|37 pages

Representing the Spectrum

The discursive production of queer heterotopia at an LGBTQ tourism convention
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chapter |2 pages

London, June 2016

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chapter 4|37 pages

Counting ‘the cost of discrimination’

Managing LGBTQ diversity at The Economist's Pride and Prejudice
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chapter 5|43 pages

Sloganizing and ‘materializing’ equality

Scales of solidarity in the discourse of transnational LGBTQ advocacy
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chapter |2 pages

Sydney, February 2017

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chapter 6|22 pages

Conclusion

Queer cosmopolitanism and the scaling of utopia
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chapter |2 pages

Melbourne, August 2020

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