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14. What Does It Mean to “Sound Gay”? The (Accented) Voice as Surplus Jouissance
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations vii
- Foreword: Accent Matters ix
- On Editorship and Authorship xiii
- Acknowledgments xv
- Introduction: Thinking with an Accent 1
-
Part ONE: ACCENT AS EXPERTISE
- 1. Taking Accents beyond Identity Politics? Thinking Through Two Paradigms 23
- 2. Accent Reduction as Raciolinguistic Pedagogy 37
- 3. From “Handicap” to Crip Curb Cut: Thinking Accent with Disability 54
- 4. “Accented” Latinx Textese: Bilingual Scriptural Economies and Digital Literacies 73
- 5. Everything Is Accented: Labor and the Weight of Things Unsaid 95
-
PART TWO: ACCENTED PERCEPTION
- 6. Is There a Call Center Literature? 113
- 7. Rewriting Algorithms for Just Recognition: From Digital Aural Redlining to Accent Activism 134
- 8. “SORRY HARD UNDERSTAND STRONG ACCENT!”: Racial Dynamics of Deaf Scholars of Color Working with White Female Interpreters 151
- 9. Accentings, Acoustic Surveillance, and Political Crisis in 2010s Brazil 173
- 10. “The Native Ear”: Accented Testimonial Desire and Asylum 192
-
PART THREE: A DESIRE CALLED ACCENT
- 11. Stereo Accent: Reading, Writing, and Xenophilic Attunement 211
- 12. Accenting the Trans Voice, Echoing Audio-Dysphoria 229
- 13. The Demonstration of Accent: Media, Manif, Monstrosity 245
- 14. What Does It Mean to “Sound Gay”? The (Accented) Voice as Surplus Jouissance 266
- 15. Listening with an Accent—or How to Loeribari 281
- List of Contributors 299
- Index 303
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations vii
- Foreword: Accent Matters ix
- On Editorship and Authorship xiii
- Acknowledgments xv
- Introduction: Thinking with an Accent 1
-
Part ONE: ACCENT AS EXPERTISE
- 1. Taking Accents beyond Identity Politics? Thinking Through Two Paradigms 23
- 2. Accent Reduction as Raciolinguistic Pedagogy 37
- 3. From “Handicap” to Crip Curb Cut: Thinking Accent with Disability 54
- 4. “Accented” Latinx Textese: Bilingual Scriptural Economies and Digital Literacies 73
- 5. Everything Is Accented: Labor and the Weight of Things Unsaid 95
-
PART TWO: ACCENTED PERCEPTION
- 6. Is There a Call Center Literature? 113
- 7. Rewriting Algorithms for Just Recognition: From Digital Aural Redlining to Accent Activism 134
- 8. “SORRY HARD UNDERSTAND STRONG ACCENT!”: Racial Dynamics of Deaf Scholars of Color Working with White Female Interpreters 151
- 9. Accentings, Acoustic Surveillance, and Political Crisis in 2010s Brazil 173
- 10. “The Native Ear”: Accented Testimonial Desire and Asylum 192
-
PART THREE: A DESIRE CALLED ACCENT
- 11. Stereo Accent: Reading, Writing, and Xenophilic Attunement 211
- 12. Accenting the Trans Voice, Echoing Audio-Dysphoria 229
- 13. The Demonstration of Accent: Media, Manif, Monstrosity 245
- 14. What Does It Mean to “Sound Gay”? The (Accented) Voice as Surplus Jouissance 266
- 15. Listening with an Accent—or How to Loeribari 281
- List of Contributors 299
- Index 303