Queering Safe Spaces


Being Brave beyond Binaries

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By Son Vivienne
Imprint:
LEXINGTON BOOKS
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
Weight:
580 g
Pages:
274

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Description

Son Vivienne is chief operating officer at Transgender Victoria, a not-for-profit community-led organization advocating for gender-diverse wellbeing and peer-support.


List of Figures



Preface



Acknowledgments



Part One: Safe Spaces



Chapter 1: A Framework for Interpretation



Chapter 2: Histories of Safe Spaces



Chapter 3: The Safety Trap



Chapter 4: Bodies at Borders: Breaching the Binary



Part Two: Safe Enough in Practice



Chapter 5: Devising ‘Safe Enough’



Chapter 6: Intimate Encounters



Chapter 7: Mediated Storytelling



Part Three: Safety, Security and Risk



Chapter 8: Beneath the Surface—Embodiment and Passing



Chapter 9: Queering the Binaries



Chapter 10: How to be Brave (or Triggers to Watch Out For)



References



About the Authors


This is a complex and beautifully researched book, grounded in community, cultural, activist, and creative work. In the weaving of interviews, anecdotes, histories, and autoethnographic reflections, Vivienne investigates how ideas of ‘safe space’ play out in, with and through marginalized communities, often to negative effect. This vital and timely work asks what we might do, individually and collectively, to create ‘brave spaces.’ It argues that binary modes of thinking inhibit nuanced understandings of difference and offers a ‘how-to’ section that addresses the practicalities of sustaining a trauma-informed model of working with groups. Vivienne’s nonbinary and neurodiverse approaches to reading and writing the politics of ‘safety’ and cancel culture presents a model for moving from the utopic naivety of ‘space spaces’ to brave, trauma-informed and resilient spaces where we can turn our attention to what matters: action, activism, connection, and community. This book is a love letter, a dreamscape, and a call to each other’s arms.

— Quinn Eades, La Trobe University



This book is a lifeline to those who are bearing the brunt of progress in identity politics. It challenges all of us to unpack and accept the answers to the politically charged question: what is a safe space?

— Todd Fernando, Victorian Commissioner for LGBTIQ+ Communities


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