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#im so happy to hear yioure taking that class good on you
rattusrattus3 · 4 years
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Hey! I hope this isn't super weird or anything, but I'm writing a paper for my queer theory class about the relationship between queer and punk identity and I was wondering if you personally felt like there was a relationship between your queer and punk identities, I'm trying to make sure that there is actually something to this and it isn't just something that me and the people I know are perceiving? Again I hope this isnt super weird and I'm sorry if it is! Have a good day!!!
aegszdfxcghvbjklm,. bcfi !!!!!!!! FUCK YES i LOVE THIS 
i 10000% feel there is a relationship with my punk and queer identieis, in fact my thesis im working on is DIY fashion and queerness lmao (and several of my uni friends would agree that queerness and punk is correlated, esp because within the subculture we are more free from heteronormative and capitalist expectations like makeup is only for girls and ripped clothes are not professional so theyre not ok etc etc)
heres some sources i used that might be helpfulf to u, the more relevant ones are at the top! (sci hub if u cant find them)
 Gunn, M. (2016). CLOTHING AS A PERFORMATIVE CHALLENGE TO HETERONORMATIVITY. 18, 175.    PLEASE LOOK AT THIS PLEASE I BEG U 
   Aberle, C. (n.d.). “Serious is Bad”: A Queer Reading of Punk, Midwest Emo, and Connecticut DIY. 65.       
Sharp, M., & Nilan, P. (2015). Queer punx: Young women in the Newcastle hardcore space. Journal of Youth Studies, 18(4), 451–467. https://doi.org/10.1080/13676261.2014.963540   
Cherry, B., & Mellins, M. (2011). Negotiating the Punk in Steampunk: Subculture, Fashion & Performative Identity. Punk & Post Punk, 1(1), 5–25. https://doi.org/10.1386/punk.1.1.5_1    
  Downes, J. (2012). The Expansion of Punk Rock: Riot Grrrl Challenges to Gender Power Relations in British Indie Music Subcultures. Women’s Studies, 41(2), 204–237. https://doi.org/10.1080/00497878.2012.636572   
  Dunn, K., & Farnsworth, M. S. (2012). “We ARE the Revolution”: Riot Grrrl Press, Girl Empowerment, and DIY Self-Publishing. Women’s Studies, 41(2), 136–157. https://doi.org/10.1080/00497878.2012.636334    
Garrison, E. K. (2000). U.S. feminism—Grrrl style! Youth (Sub)cultures and the technologics of the Third Wave. Feminist Studies, 26(1), 141–170. https://doi.org/10.2307/3178596      
Persephone Is Pissed! Grrrl Zine Reading, Making, and Distributing Across the Globe. Hecate, 30(2), 156–175.   
 Dwyer, A. (2009). Identifiable, queer and risky: The role of the body in policing experiences for LGBT young people. In M. Segrave (Ed.), Proceedings of the 2009 Australian and New Zealand Critical Criminology Conference (pp. 69–77). Monash University Criminology, School of Political and Social Inquiry. http://www.arts.monash.edu.au/criminology/c3-conference-proceedings/index.php  
 Geczy, A., & Karaminas, V. (2013). Queer style. Bloomsbury.  
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