Catalogue > By Keyword > hate crime
3 results | Page 1 of 1
Cruising the Dead River: David Wojnarowicz and New York's Ruined Waterfront
Artist/Author: Fiona Anderson | Reference: P4086 | ISBN: 9780226603759 | Type: Publication
Draws on Wojnarowicz’s work to explore the role of abandoned landscape in this explosion of queer culture in NYC.
Part of the Library of Performing Rights (P3041).
activism
AIDS
Alvin Baltrop
America
crime
criminal
cruising
derelict
discrmination
erotic
film
gay
gender
gentrification
Gordon Matta-Clark
Greenwich Village
hate crime
health
history
HIV
Jean Genet
journal
lesbian
LGBTQ
Manhattan
medicine
New York
performance
Peter Hujar
pier
politics
queer
queerness
radical
redevelopment
regeneration
ruin
sex
sexuality
Stonewall
urban
USA
violence
visual art
warehouse
waterfront
West Willage
Queer Lovers and Hateful Others: Regenerating Violent Times and Places
Artist/Author: Jin Haritaworn | Reference: P3720 | ISBN: 978-0745330617 | Type: Publication
Berlin is once more capital of queer arts and tourism. Queerness is more visible today than it has been for decades, but at what cost? This book argues that queer subjects have become a lovely sight only through being cast in the shadow of the new folk devil, the ‘homophobic migrant’ who is rendered by society as hateful, homophobic and disposable.
Part of the Library of Performing Rights (P3041)
activism
affect
AIDS
archive
assimilation
backwardness
border
capitalism
citizenship
city
class
colonialism
community
crime
death
degeneracy
demonstration
diversity
drag
ethics
Europe
family
gay-friendly
gender
gentrification
Germany
globalisation
hate crime
history
HIV
homophobia
human rights
integration
labour
media
migrant
migration
moral panic
neglect
neoliberalism
normativity
Other
overty
patriarchy
policing
policy
politics
protection
queer
queer body
racism
regeneration
safe space
Sara Ahmed
segregation
trans
transgender
value
victim
violence
visibility
The Garden
Artist/Author: Derek Jarman | Reference: D2047 | Type: DVD
Jarman’s ‘powerful and moving series of allegorical dremascapes’, concerning christianity, oppressive attitudes towards homosexuality and the AIDS crisis.