Queer Beirut
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Sofian Merabet
About this book
Gender and sexual identity formation is an ongoing anthropological conversation in both Middle Eastern studies and urban studies, but the story of gay and lesbian identity in the Middle East is only just beginning to be told. Queer Beirut is the first ethnographic study of queer lives in the Arab Middle East. Drawing on anthropology, urban studies, gender studies, queer studies, and sociocultural theory, Sofian Merabet’s compelling ethnography suggests a critical theory of gender and religious identity formations that will disrupt conventional anthropological premises about the contingent role that society and particular urban spaces have in facilitating the emergence of various subcultures within the city.
From 1995 to 2014, Merabet made a series of ethnographic journeys to Lebanon, during which he interviewed numerous gay men in Beirut. Through their life stories, Merabet crafts moving ethnographic narratives and explores how Lebanese gays inhabit and perform their gender as they formulate their sense of identity. He also examines the notion of “queer space” in Beirut and the role that this city, its class and sectarian structure, its colonial history, and religion have played in these people’s discovery and exploration of their sexualities. In using Beirut as a microcosm for the complexities of homosexual relationships in contemporary Lebanon, Queer Beirut provides a critical standpoint from which to deepen our understandings of gender rights and citizenship in the structuring of social inequality within the larger context of the Middle East.
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Frontmatter
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Contents
vii -
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List of Illustrations
ix -
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Acknowledgments
xi -
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Prologue. Itinerant Journeys
xv -
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Introduction
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1. Producing Queer Space in Beirut: Zones of Encounter in Post-Civil- War Lebanon
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2. Producing Prestige in and around Beirut: The Indiscreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie and the Assertion of a Queer Presence
43 -
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3. Walking through the Concrete Jungle: The Queer Urban Stroller Traveling amid de Certeau, Benjamin, and Bourdieu
69 -
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4. Queer Performances and the Politics of Place: The Art of Drag and the Routine of Sectarianism
91 -
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5. The Homosexual Sphere between Spatial Appropriation and Contestation: Collective Activism and the Many Lives of Young Gay Men in Beirut
112 -
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6. The Queering of Closed and Open Spaces: Spatial Practices and the Dialectics of External and Internal Homophobia
134 -
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7. The Gay Gaze and the Politics of Memory: A Stroll on the Corniche and a Walk through Zoqāq al-Blāṭ
156 -
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8. “Seeing Oneself” and the Mirror Stage: The Ḥammām and the Gay Icon Fairuz
187 -
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9. Phenomenology and the Spatial Assertion of Queerness: Spatial Alienation, Anthropology, and Urban Studies
210 -
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10. Raising the Rainbow Flag between City and Country: Dancing, Protesting, and the Mimetics of Everyday Life
227 -
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Conclusion. Struggling for Difference
246 -
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Notes
249 -
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Glossary of Transliterated Arabic Terms
261 -
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Bibliography
265 -
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Index
275