An edition of Seen/Unseen ii (2022)

Seen/Unseen ii

Seen/Unseen ii
Glen Kalliope Rodman, Amalia V ...
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Last edited by MARC Bot
December 9, 2022 | History
An edition of Seen/Unseen ii (2022)

Seen/Unseen ii

"Often when we say we feel seen, we mean that we feel understood. We might feel seen when we successfully communicate something important and personal to another person, or when we connect with a piece of art in a way that inspires a new understanding of ourselves or the world.

SEEN/UNSEEN 2 is Shapeless Press’ third compilation of Trans and Nonbinary art and writing, and our second in the SEEN/UNSEEN series. What is the utility of being or feeling seen, as a Trans or Nonbinary person? How can we be seen in ways that empower rather than endanger us? And what does this zine have to do with it? I’m not referring to representation. “Representation” as we consider it in 2022, can mean too many different things. Often, the very concept is fraught with tokenization, neoliberal co-opting of radical politics and rainbow capitalism. “Representation” may mean a token trans character on a show made by cis writers and aimed at cis viewers. It may mean a single trans spokesperson on a panel of cis people, addressing a cis audience. It may mean respectability politics, an effort to “prove” to cis consumers that Trans and Nonbinary people are “safe,” “normal,” or worthy of care. In order for us to build our own self-concepts and affirm our subjectivity in the face of the dominant narrative, Trans people need more than representation. As Rita Felski writes, “We can only live our lives through the cultural resources that are available to us.” Trans people deserve to live lives richly informed by an abundance of Trans stories. Not necessarily art about transness, but art made by Trans and Nonbinary people for other Trans and Nonbinary people, in which our subjectivity is simply a given"--Preface

Publish Date
Publisher
Shapeless Press
Language
English
Pages
34

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Edition Availability
Cover of: Seen/Unseen ii
Seen/Unseen ii
2022, Shapeless Press
in English

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Book Details


Table of Contents

Preface -- Glen K. Rodman
It's worth it -- Mattie Schwartz
If I were a flower, would you still love me? -- Danny Valero
Disidentifying with Dysphoria -- Eamon Schlotterback
Multiple works -- Cameron Velez
For the love of sex -- Rena Yehuda Newman
VENMO -- Wendy Wildshape
The Glance -- Cora Kenfield
Watermelon Head - Self Portrait -- Oliver Lowell
Pre-transitions -- Mx. Enigma
Cat gender -- Steph Ferreira aka StephTheGirl
The line cook escapes from Hudson -- Daisy Thursday
Written here, as sand : Thoughts on Trans historiography of past as present and Untitled (Riis in Winter) -- Jess Saldaña.

Edition Notes

Ebook published in Simplebooklet format. Does not display in all browsers.

Published in
[New York, NY]
Series
Seen/Unseen -- 2, Seen/Unseen -- 2

The Physical Object

Pagination
1 online resource (34 pages)
Number of pages
34

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL43615675M
OCLC/WorldCat
1350537611

Source records

marc_columbia MARC record

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December 9, 2022 Created by MARC Bot import new book