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- Exile and Pride: Disability, Queerness, and Liberation
- How to Be a Muslim: An American Story
- March: Books One, Two, and Three
- Queer: A Graphic History
- So You Want to Talk About Race
- The Far Away Brothers: Two Young Migrants and the Making of an American Life
- Waking Up White, and Finding Myself in the Story of Race
- We Should All Be Feminists
- Whistling Vivaldi: How Stereotypes Affect Us & What We Can Do
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Queer: A Graphic History
Meg-John Barker and Julia Scheele
Sexuality, Gender
From identity politics and gender roles to privilege and exclusion, Queer explores how we came to view sex, gender and sexuality in the ways that we do; how these ideas get tangled up with our culture and our understanding of biology, psychology and sexology; and how these views have been disputed and challenged.
Along the way we look at key landmarks which shift our perspective of what’s ‘normal’, such as Alfred Kinsey’s view of sexuality as a spectrum between heterosexuality and homosexuality, Judith Butler’s view of gendered behavior as a performance, the play Wicked, which reinterprets characters from The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, or moments in Casino Royale when we’re invited to view James Bond with the kind of desiring gaze usually directed at female bodies in mainstream media.