Lives That Resist Telling
Lives That Resist Telling challenges the resounding scholarly silence about the lives of migrant women who identify as lesbian, queer, or nonheteronormative. Reworking social science methodologies and theories, the essays explore the experiences of migrant Latina lesbians in Los Angeles; Latina lesbians whose transnational lives span the borders between the United States and Mexico; non-heteronormative migrant Muslim women in Norway and Denmark; economically privileged Chinese lesbian or lala women in Australia; and Iranian lesbian asylum-seekers in Turkey. The authors show how state migration controls and multiple institutions of power try to subjectify and govern migrant lesbians in often contradictory ways, and how migrant lesbians cope, strategize, and respond.
The essays complicate and rework binaries of visibility/invisibility, in/out, victim/agent, home/homeless, and belonging/unbelonging. Tellability emerges as a technology of power and violence, and conversely, as a mode of healing, (re)building a sense of self and connection to others, and creating conditions for livability and queer world-making.
This book was first published as a special issue of the Journal of Lesbian Studies.
Eithne Luibhid is Professor of Gender and Womens Studies at the University of Arizona, Tucson, USA. She is the author of Pregnant on Arrival: Making the Illegal Immigrant (University of Minnesota Press, 2013) and Entry Denied: Controlling Sexuality at the Border (University of Minnesota Press, 2002); and the co-editor of Queer and Trans Migrations: Dynamics of Illegalization, Detention, and Deportation (University of Illinois Press, 2020).
First published 2021
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Chapter 4 2019 Mia Liinason. Originally published as Open Access.
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ISBN13: 978-0-367-69536-1 (hbk)
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Contents
Citation Information
Notes on Contributors
Eithne Luibhid
2 Finding sequins in the rubble: The journeys of two Latina migrant lesbians in Los Angeles
Eddy Francisco Alvarez, Jr.
3 We have to do a lot of healing: LGBTQ migrant Latinas resisting and healing from systemic violence
Sandibel Borges
4 Challenging the visibility paradigm: Tracing ambivalences in lesbian migrant womens negotiations of sexual identity
Mia Liinason
5 Coming out and going abroad: The chuguo mobility of queer women in China
Lucetta Y. L. Kam
6 Lesbian refugees in transit: The making of authenticity and legitimacy in Turkey
Elif Sar
The chapters in this book were originally published in the Journal of Lesbian Studies, volume 24, issue 2 (2020). When citing this material, please use the original page numbering for each article, as follows:
Migrant and refugee lesbians: Lives that resist the telling
Eithne Luibhid
Journal of Lesbian Studies, volume 24, issue 2 (2020) pp. 5776
Chapter 2
Finding sequins in the rubble: The journeys of two Latina migrant lesbians in Los Angeles
Eddy Francisco Alvarez, Jr.
Journal of Lesbian Studies, volume 24, issue 2 (2020) pp. 7793
Chapter 3
We have to do a lot of healing: LGBTQ migrant Latinas resisting and healing from systemic violence
Sandibel Borges
Journal of Lesbian Studies, volume 24, issue 2 (2020) pp. 94109
Chapter 4
Challenging the visibility paradigm: Tracing ambivalences in lesbian migrant womens negotiations of sexual identity
Mia Liinason
Journal of Lesbian Studies, volume 24, issue 2 (2020) pp. 110125
Chapter 5
Coming out and going abroad: The chuguo mobility of queer women in China
Lucetta Y. L. Kam
Journal of Lesbian Studies, volume 24, issue 2 (2020) pp. 126139
Chapter 6
Lesbian refugees in transit: The making of authenticity and legitimacy in Turkey
Elif Sar
Journal of Lesbian Studies, volume 24, issue 2 (2020) pp. 140158
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Eddy Francisco Alvarez, Jr. is an interdisciplinary scholar focusing on Latinx queer geographies and archives, Latinx aesthetics, and Jotera studies. He is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Chicana and Chicano Studies at California State University, Fullerton. A first-generation college student and first in his family to obtain a doctorate, he holds a Ph.D. in Chicana and Chicano Studies from the University of California, Santa Barbara. His scholarly and creative work has been published in TSQ, Aztln, Label Me Latina/o, and Bilingual Review/La Revista Bilinge. Currently, he is working on a book manuscript titled Finding Sequins in the Rubble: Space, Aesthetics and Memory in Queer Latinx Los Angeles and on a project on queer, trans, and feminist fans of Mexican pop icon Gloria Trevi. He is a board member of the Association for Jotera Arts, Activism and Scholarship (AJAAS).
Sandibel Borges is Assistant Professor in Womens and Gender Studies at Loyola Marymount. She received her Ph.D. in Feminist Studies from the University of California, Santa Barbara, and was faculty in the Womens, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Program at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, and a postdoctoral fellow in the Center for Mexican American Studies at the University of Texas at Austin. Her work investigates how heteronormativity, white supremacy, and exploitation are naturalized and institutionalized within migration processes, and their impact on Latinx LGBTQ migrants in Los Angeles, California and Mexico City, Mexico. Dr. Borgess work has appeared in