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1.
J Homosex ; 70(1): 135-148, 2023 Jan 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35904880

ABSTRACT

This essay analyzes how traditional notions of family are "queered" in contemporary memoir. I explore how heterosexual coupling becomes unnatural, undermining its equation with reproduction-and even the predictable forward march of family time becomes circular, haunted by alternate kinship models. I refer to this dynamic as "akin to kin" to consider how these representations both approximate and depart from normative ideas of family. I analyze several contemporary family memoirs to tease out moments in which "family" is imagined otherwise through queer relationalities.


Subject(s)
Feminism , Sexual and Gender Minorities , Humans , Gender Identity , Heterosexuality , Reproduction
2.
J Lesbian Stud ; 21(3): 351-369, 2017 Jul 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27611794

ABSTRACT

This interview explores how performing artist, activist, writer, director, performer Adelina Anthony stages queer women of color affects as a complex terrain to mobilize a decolonial imaginary. Anthony's characters are complex, contradictory, surly, and resilient with whom audience members connect and feel deeply. Especially for queer women of color, who rarely get to see their own experiences on film or on stage, Anthony's work provides a critical forum for discussing, imagining, naming, and envisioning the connections between our personal struggles and broader forces of imperialism, heterosexual capitalism, and settler colonialism. Through the "medicina" of gritty truth-telling and side-splitting laughter, Anthony discusses her own positionality as a coyote curandera. Through the exploratory genre of the interview, Anthony helps readers palpably engage a queer woman of color "theory in the flesh" to imagine their own creative potentialities through a compassionate lens of humility and humor.


Subject(s)
Art , Homosexuality, Female , Women , Black or African American , Female , Humans
3.
J Lesbian Stud ; 21(3): 243-253, 2017 Jul 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27617914

ABSTRACT

This introductory article considers the importance of queer woman of color theorizations of affect in thinking more fully the recent interdisciplinary turn to affect. The affective turn has vitally invited culture and feminist critics to interrogate emotion beyond the individual to examine the political and cultural production of emotion. Even as women of color are often associated with excessive affect, the theoretical contributions women of color make to the field of affect studies are often overlooked. Our introduction and this special issue more broadly examine how this solipsism shapes projects invested in critical knowledge production, as well as the stakes of centering a queer woman of color genealogy. For instance, we argue for the importance of retaining U.S. third-world feminist concepts-like interpellation, oppositional consciousness, and the generative force of negative affects-even as they fall out of favor within affect studies. Centering theory that emerges from the vexed spaces of queer women of color lived experiences generates a vital interdisciplinary conversation that contributes to the ongoing political task of mobilizing affect for social action as a critical praxis. In the articles that follow we see this critical praxis at work in the form of community organizing, music, poetry, and performance art.


Subject(s)
Affect , Ethnicity/psychology , Homosexuality, Female/psychology , Female , Humans , Residence Characteristics , Women/psychology
4.
Acute Med ; 15(2): 79-83, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27441309

ABSTRACT

A 62 year old Nepalese gentleman presented with left sided weakness and sensory loss. Initial brain CT scanning was suggestive of acute infarction but a subsequent MRI scan showed cysts with oedema. Cysticercosis serology was positive and a diagnosis of neurocysticercosis was made. The patient made almost a complete recovery after treatment with albendazole, praziquantel and steroids. Neurocysticercosis should be considered in the diffierential diagnosis when patients originating from endemic areas present with focal neurological deficit.


Subject(s)
Albendazole/administration & dosage , Glucocorticoids/administration & dosage , Neurocysticercosis , Paresis , Praziquantel/administration & dosage , Stroke/diagnosis , Anticestodal Agents/administration & dosage , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Diagnosis, Differential , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Male , Middle Aged , Neglected Diseases/diagnosis , Neglected Diseases/ethnology , Nepal , Neurocysticercosis/complications , Neurocysticercosis/diagnosis , Neurocysticercosis/drug therapy , Neurocysticercosis/physiopathology , Paresis/diagnosis , Paresis/etiology , Paresis/physiopathology , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods , Treatment Outcome
5.
Environ Sci Technol ; 47(9): 4004-13, 2013 May 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23514101

ABSTRACT

Military base closures have left 600,000 acres of U.S. land contaminated with unexploded ordnance (UXO). Recent research has demonstrated a method for quantifying the probability of residual UXO harming future land users. Here, we explore how a community neighboring a closed, UXO-contaminated military base responds to the probabilistic risk information this method produces. We explore how probabilistic information affects their risk understanding, risk management preferences, risk perceptions, and worry. We test eight different communication formats employing varying combinations of textual risk descriptions, comparative risk information, stacked bar graphs illustrating the proportion of future land users at risk, and textual summaries and/or graphical histograms presenting uncertainty. We find that stacked bar graphs double the odds of correctly reporting the probability of harm and decrease the perceived risk, compared to textual descriptions. Providing histograms or summary uncertainty information decreases the odds of correctly reporting the probability of harm by about one-half, compared to communications without uncertainty information. We also find that risk communication formats do not alter risk management preferences. We recommend that as EPA reevaluates its UXO risk management policies in the coming year, the agency shift to quantitative rather than its current qualitative approach to assessing and communicating UXO risks.


Subject(s)
Communication , Explosive Agents , Public Sector , Risk Assessment
6.
J Homosex ; 59(7): 1031-56, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22925057

ABSTRACT

This article considers the role of Audre Lorde's notion of the erotic as transformative pedagogical practices that can empower teachers and students to passionate learning and community formation. I argue that the erotic has been contained within the private sphere under neoliberalism through its articulation to heterosexuality, Whiteness, and U.S. exceptionalism. Neoliberalism contains the transformative potential of queer, feminist, and antiracist movements through circumscribing the transformative power of the erotic. When the erotic appears within the realm of the public sphere, it is articulated through the pornographic-as against the seemingly progressive agenda of neoliberalism-in order to contain its transformative effects. I then consider what it may look like, as well as what pitfalls we may face, if we engage in erotic pedagogy. I argue that the healing of the mind/body split goes beyond an intellectual exercise. Therein lies transformative power to heal both the political and the spiritual body.


Subject(s)
Cultural Diversity , Education , Erotica , Politics , Social Change , Feminism , Homosexuality , Humans , Minority Groups , Social Justice , United States
7.
J Card Surg ; 27(2): 217-9, 2012 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22458278

ABSTRACT

Traditional surgical access to the upper descending aorta is via a left thoracotomy. For postcoarctation pseudoaneurysm repair, this approach is difficult because of the risk of rupture while dissecting the aorta for proximal and distal control. Access from a median sternotomy may be safer, but is difficult because of the depth of the wound and because of the angle of approach to the distal aspect of the repair site. We describe a novel approach via a median sternotomy incision, using circulatory arrest and "elephant trunk" principles to achieve tube graft replacement of the aneurysmal section of aorta.


Subject(s)
Aneurysm, False/surgery , Aortic Diseases/surgery , Postoperative Complications/surgery , Sternotomy/methods , Vascular Grafting/methods , Aneurysm, False/etiology , Aortic Coarctation/surgery , Aortic Diseases/etiology , Cardiopulmonary Bypass , Female , Humans , Middle Aged
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