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Gender as Spatial Identity Gender strategizing in postcolonial and neocolonial Hong Kong
Author(s) -
Leon Buker,
Gerhard Bruyns
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
cubic journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2589-7101
pISSN - 2589-7098
DOI - 10.31182/cubic.2019.2.020
Subject(s) - identity (music) , gender studies , performativity , context (archaeology) , politics , sociology , gender identity , political science , aesthetics , history , art , archaeology , law
A photo essay exploring the how gender identity is deliberately constructed through social positioning within the urban landscape of Hong Kong. Hong Kong has always had a binary identity, which continues through from the postcolonial to the neocolonial. This creates layers of additional complexity around gender identity, which is explored in terms of performativity and authenticity through both the heterosexual fluidity of foreign domestic workers and through homosexual tactics of local men, within a public park in Hong Kong. By rejecting the past through a politics of disappearance, previous boundaries around fluidity, repression, and suppression continue to influence the present in a volatile neocolonial context opening questions around what is an authentic performance of self.

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