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Dear all,

This is a friendly reminder that we are hosting the second Stadtkolloquium
seminar of 2015 *tomorrow, 19 March* at *LSE*. Please join us!

This month, we explore gender and sexuality in urban research. Olga Petri
(Cambridge Geography) will present ‘*Policing queer St Petersburg: male
homosexual experience in early 20th century Russia*’. Laura Marshall (UCL
Geography) will present ‘*(Trans)forming gender, disrupting dichotomies:
exploring the lives of people with transgender identities and experiences*’.
Both abstracts are below.

The session will take place in the LSE Old Building, 5th floor, Graham
Wallas Room (AGWR), from *16.30 to 18.00*.

As always, wine and nibbles will be provided, and drinks at the White Horse
afterwards are encouraged.

Yours truly,

The Stadtkolloquium team





*Olga Petri, PhD candidate, Cambridge Geography*

*Policing queer St. Petersburg: male homosexual experience in early
20th-century Russia*



This paper is about the policing of homosexuality and the experience of
homosexual men in St. Petersburg at the turn of twentieth century. I focus
on men’s experience because the experience of members of the other major
group targeted for sexual crimes, women prostitutes, has been thoroughly
discussed. The experience of homosexual men remains an under-researched
topic. In a city of autocratic power, policing played a multiple and
contested role in controlling and reshaping people’s experience of the
city. Published studies on homosexuality in a Russian imperial context do
not fully tackle the issue of policing of homosexual behavior in the
imperial capital. These studies shared an idea, based on contemporary
published accounts, that, in contrast, for example, to London, imperial St.
Petersburg experienced a form of relatively liberal homosexual expression
and unobtrusive policing. In this paper, I draw upon previously unpublished
materials of the Russian State Historical Archive, St. Petersburg to create
a discourse about the role of policing in the forging of the experience of
homosexual men in imperial St. Petersburg. The police attempted to
constrain homosexual behavior in the city in a manner that may have escaped
the attention of historians. The evidence suggests that the police
collected detailed information about homosexual men in each city borough,
and then used various categories of petty-crimes to persecute them and to
limit homosexual cruising in the city’s public spaces. These new materials
help to re-consider the experience of homosexual men in imperial city at a
time of dramatic change.



*Laura Marshall, MPhil candidate, UCL Geography*

*(Trans)forming gender, disrupting dichotomies: **Exploring the lives of
people with transgender identities and experiences*



My doctoral research explores the experiences of transgender people in
relation to particular socio-spatial contexts - the home, public spaces and
medical settings- across the UK.  Through this project, I position a
theoretical approach informed by strands of queer theory, transgender
studies and non-representational geographies in an interplay with
participants’ verbal, written and visual narratives.  In doing so, I am
interested in thinking through points of dissonance and resonance between
ways that transgender peoples’ identities, corporealities and
subjectivities have been theorised and lived, particularly how
participants’ narratives speak to theory in ways that are instructive.
Through this approach I seek to reveal and critically engage with
complexities and nuances relating to the spatialising of cisnormative and
heteronormative gender regimes and the production and disruption of the
hegemonic binary gender order through embodied socio-spatial relations.  In
this presentation I will draw from my previous research with transgender
men to discuss how this informs and will be developed through my doctoral
research.