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Intellect is thrilled to announce that the new issue of Queer Studies in
Media & Popular Culture (2.1) is now available.



For more information about this issue please click here
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-issue,id=3264/> or email
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Articles within this issue include:



Sex, lies and the locker room: A critical discourse analysis of athletes
coming out in the media
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=23427/>

*Authors: *Cu-Hullan Tsuyoshi McGivern and Paul Chamness Miller

Page Start: 9



Oppression and hostility is still evident towards LGBT athletes within
modern sport organisations, where hegemonic masculinities contribute to the
opposition to LGBT members of the athletic community. Given the homophobia
that continues to impact sport, the aim of this study is to ascertain,
through the lens of grounded theory, what discourses are used to address
the coming out of professional athletes in online news sites and the
hegemonic power that is reflected through that discourse. Through the
analysis, four themes emerged as significant. One particular theme stood
out as the most substantial: the locker room seen as a space where
masculinity is negotiated, suggesting the possibility that many
masculinities exist within that milieu. The study’s findings highlight the
urgency that is needed in order to make sport a safe and non-hostile space
for all athletes.



What’s so funny about a snowman in a tiara? Exploring gender identity and
gender nonconformity in children’s animated films
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=23426/>

*Authors: *G. Patterson and Leland G. Spencer

Page Start: 73



The year 2014 has been dubbed the ‘trans tipping point’, a new era of
acceptance towards trans and gender-nonconforming identities. In addition,
in recent years, children’s animated film has seen an influx of characters
and storylines that appear to celebrate gender diversity. Using inductive
and deductive thematic analysis, this article examines the gendered
messages in top-grossing children’s animated films from 2012 to 2015.
Drawing from our analysis, it argues that such alleged gender diversity
applies only to a narrow subset of characters in children’s animated film –
and these same characters also often function to reinforce oppressive ideas
about gender, race and sexuality. Ultimately, despite the visibility of
gender diverse characters in and outside children’s film, this article
cautions against premature celebrations that would regard such visibility
as progress.



Gay ghetto comics and the alternative gay comics of Robert Kirby
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=23428/>

*Authors: *Sina Shamsavari

Page Start: 95



This article focuses on North American gay comics, especially the ‘gay
ghetto’ subgenre, and on the alternative gay comics that have been created
in response to the genre’s conventions. Gay comics have received little
scholarly attention and this article attempts to begin redressing this
balance, as well as turning attention to the contrasts between different
genres within the field of gay comics. Gay ghetto comics and cartoons
construct a dominant gay habitus, representing the gay community as
relatively stable and unified, while the alternative gay male comics
discussed critique the dominant gay habitus and construct instead an
alternative gay – or ‘queer’ – habitus. The article focuses on the work of
Robert Kirby, an influential cartoonist and editor of gay comics
anthologies, and particularly on his story ‘Private Club’, in order to
explore some of the typical themes and concerns of alternative gay ghetto
comics.
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