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In this Issue

Table of Contents

  1. Portrait of Chelsea Manning
  2. Robert Shetterly
  3. pp. 1-4
  4. restricted access
  1. Sex, Gender, and War in an Age of Multicultural Imperialism
  2. Dean Spade, Craig Willse
  3. pp. 5-29
  4. restricted access
  1. How the LGBT Community Helped Create the Caricature of Private Manning
  2. Kevin Gosztola
  3. pp. 30-46
  4. restricted access
  1. Chelsea Manning Joins the Army—Of Whistleblowers
  2. Selma James
  3. pp. 47-51
  4. restricted access
  1. U.S. National Security Culture: From Queer Psychopathology to Queer Citizenship
  2. Hamilton Bean
  3. pp. 52-79
  4. restricted access
  1. Private Manning and the Chamber of Secrets
  2. Dana L. Cloud
  3. pp. 80-104
  4. restricted access
  1. Bradley Manning, Chelsea Manning, and Queer Collaboration
  2. Victoria A. Brownworth
  3. pp. 105-117
  4. restricted access
  1. Saving Private Manning?: On Erasure and the Queer in the I Am Bradley Manning Campaign
  2. Jules Wight
  3. pp. 118-129
  4. restricted access
  1. The Politics of Abandonment: Siding with the State and Heteronormativity Against Chelsea Manning
  2. Devon Douglas-Bowers
  3. pp. 130-138
  4. restricted access
  1. Chelsea Manning: Whistleblower on San Francisco Pride
  2. Queer Strike, Payday
  3. pp. 139-147
  4. restricted access
  1. Public Access, Privacy, and Queer Politics: An Interview with Nathan Fuller
  2. Sara L. McKinnon, Nathan Fuller
  3. pp. 148-161
  4. restricted access
  1. Jodie Foster at the 2013 Golden Globe Awards: What She Said (and Didn’t) about Coming Out, Celebrity, and Queer Activism
  2. David Gudelunas
  3. pp. 162-165
  4. restricted access
  1. When the Stars Come Out: Jodie Foster’s Queer Families and the Celebrity Private Sphere
  2. Claire Bond Potter
  3. pp. 166-172
  4. restricted access
  1. Resisting the Mark: Shifting Identities and Assumptions in Foster’s Coming Out Speech
  2. Sheena Malhotra
  3. pp. 173-179
  4. restricted access
  1. Weighted Expectations upon Jodie Foster’s “[I’m not] Coming Out [to You] Speech”
  2. Dustin Bradley Goltz
  3. pp. 180-187
  4. restricted access
  1. Relationally Out: A Case For and Against the Closet
  2. Benny LeMaster
  3. pp. 188-192
  4. restricted access
  1. Anderson Cooper and Jodie Foster: The Glass Closet and Gay Visibility in the Media
  2. Nikki Usher
  3. pp. 193-198
  4. restricted access
  1. Queerness May Have Dodged a Bullet: Jodie Foster’s Neoliberal “Coming-Out” Rhetoric and the Politics of Visibility
  2. Julia Johnson, Kimberlee Pérez
  3. pp. 199-208
  4. restricted access
  1. Sounding Like a No-No: Queer Sounds & Eccentric Acts in the Post-Soul Era by Francesca T. Royster (review)
  2. Kimberlee Pérez
  3. pp. 209-211
  4. restricted access
  1. Queer Activism in India: A Story in the Anthropology of Ethics by Naisargi N. Dave (review)
  2. Santhosh Chandrashekar
  3. pp. 212-215
  4. restricted access
  1. Queer Youth Suicide, Culture and Identity: Unliveable Lives? by Rob Cover (review)
  2. Whitney Gent
  3. pp. 216-218
  4. restricted access
  1. Not the Marrying Kind: A Feminist Critique of Same-Sex Marriage by Nicola Barker (review)
  2. Ryan Conrad
  3. pp. 219-221
  4. restricted access
  1. Love and Money: Queers, Class and Cultural Production by Lisa Henderson (review)
  2. Meg Rooney
  3. pp. 222-224
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  1. Concrete and Dust: Mapping the Sexual Terrains of Los Angeles by Jeanine M. Mingé, Amber Lynn Zimmerman (review)
  2. Ulises Moreno-Tabarez
  3. pp. 225-228
  4. restricted access
  1. Flaming Souls: Homosexuality, Homophobia, and Social Change in Barbados by David A. B. Murray (review)
  2. Kenneth Lythgoe
  3. pp. 229-231
  4. restricted access
  1. Leaking Chelsea Manning
  2. Charles E. Morris III, Thomas K. Nakayama
  3. pp. vii-viii
  4. restricted access