Reseña del editor:
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., New York, Wien. This book examines homosexual rights as human rights in the light of recent insights of cultural theory into identity, cultural values, rights discourse and homosexuality. The focus of the study is on the activist who is regarded as both the representative of perspectives, actions and attitudes as well as the embodiment of tensions and broader struggles that reflect and rupture dominant discourses of power. The book interrogates the homosexual activist and the theory and practice of human rights in three distinct nations: Indonesia, Singapore and Australia. It discusses and analyses the ways in which activists in these three polities devise strategies of survival and negotiate the limits of justice. The interface between Australia and Southeast Asia is a poignant context, which highlights different and overlapping (Western and Asian) perspectives on notions of rights, law, identity, activism, culture and sexuality. Contents: Apartheid of Homosexuality - Homosexual Rights as Human Rights - Theorising the Homosexual Activist - Homosexuality and Human Rights in Indonesia, Singapore and Australia - Queer(y)ing Human Rights in the Twenty First Century.
Biografía del autor:
Baden Offord teaches in the School of Arts and Social Sciences, and is Co-Director of the Centre for Peace and Social Justice at Southern Cross University, Australia.
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