-
Recent Posts
Archives
Categories
- chapter or section ideas
- coming out
- facts and statistics
- inspiration
- jealousy
- literature review
- love
- poly in the media
- question and answer
- questions
- quotes
- relates to Chapter 2
- relates to Chapter 4
- resources/reading recommendations
- science
- societal repression/control
- spirituality
- terminology
- thanks
- Uncategorized
- writing process
Meta
Here there’s talk about…
- Allison Carr
- Anapol
- Blush: Faces of Shame
- brave narrative
- CCCC
- cheating
- Cindy Selfe
- coming out
- compassion
- compersion
- Conference on College Composition and Communication
- contingency
- definition
- discourse
- documentary
- Elspeth Probyn
- emotions
- Ethan Philbrick
- family
- fear
- feminism
- future
- Global Glue Project
- Hannah Rule
- heteronormativity
- hierarchy
- injustice
- intellectual property
- Jason Clevenger
- jealousy
- Jonathan Alexander
- Judith Butler
- Kathleen Fitzpatrick
- Kristine L. Blair
- love
- Malea Powell
- marriage
- Media
- Megan Adams
- monogamy
- mononormativity
- narrative
- NRE
- Oxford English Dictionary
- Parker Palmer
- partnerships
- poly-single
- polyandry
- polygamy
- post process theory
- PPT
- process
- psychology
- questions
- quote
- relationship anarchy
- relationship orientation
- revolution
- role models
- romance
- romantisexual
- Sara Ahmed
- science
- serial monogamy
- sexual fidelity
- sexuality
- shame
- stories
- swing culture
- swingers
- swinging
- technology
- The Freebie
- The Promise of Happiness
- time
-
Join 41 other subscribers
Tag Archives: Judith Butler
A rather rambly, joyous post
I personally do not know anyone who has come to identify as poly who has not come to it through the event of falling in love. (Though, of course, I’m sure such cases have happened. I just personally have never … Continue reading
Posted in inspiration, love, quotes, resources/reading recommendations, societal repression/control
Tagged Judith Butler
5 Comments
Judith Butler, Play, Gender, Desire, Sex
In the classic academic text Gender Trouble, Judith Butler argues that gays, lesbians, bisexuals, and others with non-normative sexualities shouldn’t attempt to overthrow the oppressive, heteronormative language of sexuality that our culture makes and enforces, but, rather, these people (and … Continue reading