Abstract. Mary Bernste and Mary C. Burke analyze cultural reprentatns of and disurse about gay marriage mastream and LGBT newspapers Vermont. Th
Contents:
* queer discourse analysis *
Sendly, I sctize the ways which films image their nonheterosexual characters, remark on inty polics, and ntribute to or disavow hetero- and homonormative disurs the Turkish natnal ntext. This mon discursive trap sts all women as homogeno and rerc stereotypil genred dichotomi by sentialisg women as victims and peacemakers, vers men as perpetrators and protectors.
21The disurs trouble the domant notn of men as perpetrators engaged vlence, aggrsn, and risk-seekg behavurs and are important not only for ristg sentialist, homogeno reprentatns of men, but also as a potentially powerful rource for workg wh men towards genr transformatn and a more fundamental renceptualizatn of peace and vlence (Hearn et al. SA played a historil role phg for the promotn and protectn of the human rights of the lbian, gay, bisexual, transgenred, tersex, queer, asexual and other (LGBTIQA+) muny. Further to this, the nstctn of discrimatn and homophobic vlence is amed agast the backdrop of “negative social norms and stereotyp”, which aptly attribut the difficulti experienced by many South Ain queer people to factors the societal/normative realm.
When nnectg this to queerns, one do not have to look far to observe how homophobia and transphobia have been utilized by those power to persecute queer-intifyg people. The social stigma surroundg homosexualy rms the public about what is acceptable behavr and what is viant.