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18 Jan

Why we must always query the ‘self-care’ of Queer

Why we must always query the ‘self-care’ of Queer
Within the age of makeover reality shows, the Fab Five’s assistance is just as individualistic and exclusive as the remaining, despite the emotional backstories Netflix’s tagline for its 2018 hit reality show, Queer Eye, is: ‘Greater than only a makeover.’ The show is all about self-care, which is interpreted for its global audience as DIY grooming, healthy eating, and checking in with yourself. When Audre Lorde, a black lesbian activist, first used the term self-care in A Burst of Light – written after her cancer diagnosis – she was talking about self-preservation as an act of “political warfare”, a prioritising of the self in a world that wishes you to die. On Queer...
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20 Dec

Larry Owens on Broadway’s beauty standards as a queer

Larry Owens on Broadway’s beauty standards as a queer
Fresh from his role as Usher, in Michael R. Jackson’s off-Broadway A Strange Loop, the musical comedian demands to be seen, heard and adored “I feel like I successfully created a latest form of leading man for the musical theatre.” These are the words of Larry Owens, the supernova comedian, musical performer, and, as of this summer, uncanny stage star. Owens has never played coy about his many gifts—the booming voice; the immediate, startling connection to his audiences; and his deeply articulate showbiz vocabulary. And he has never shied away from what sets him apart within the industry: He's black. He's queer. He's of size.  This summer, Owens starred in Michael R. Jackson’s off-Broadway...
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6 Dec

The unconventional history of the queer fat liberation movement

The unconventional history of the queer fat liberation movement
Should you think fat liberation began in 2011 with Tumblr feminism and fat fashion blogs, you’re improper “Don’t assume… I don’t like my body,” begins a manifesto shared at a 1989 Fat Women’s conference in London. Generally known as the “Fat Dykes Statement”, it contained a listing of 29 assumptions, from serious points (“Don’t assume… I feel your body is best than mine”) alongside more playful ones, which emphasise the ludicrousy of assuming anything a couple of person based on their body shape (“Don’t assume… I would like a Food regimen Coke”).  Should you think fat liberation began in 2011 with Tumblr feminism and fat fashion blogs, you’ve never had the pleasure of interacting...
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11 Aug

These photos rejoice queer hedonism within the north

These photos rejoice queer hedonism within the north
Gut Level is the Sheffield-based queer-led collective occupying Barbican’s The Curve throughout June, with a celebration of finding ‘joy in precariousness’ In 2019, 4 friends – Adam, Frazer, Hannah and Katie – took over an abandoned constructing in a Sheffield railway arch, and began throwing “word-of-mouth parties” for his or her friends, advertised through a secret Facebook group. 4 years and two venue changes later, Gut Level – as they’re collectively known – has been tasked with taking up London’s Barbican Curve throughout June, as a part of RESOLVE Collective’s Them’s The Breaks. In addition to workshops, events and a ‘cretinous’ afterparty on June 3, the exhibition will feature images from venues and collectives...
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