Heteronormative bodies,queer futures: toward a theory of interpersonal panopticism |
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Authors: | Jimmie Manning Danielle M. Stern |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Communication, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, IL, USA;2. Department of Communication, Christopher Newport University, Newport News, VA, USA |
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Abstract: | This essay examines the policing of sexual bodies via interactive online technologies. We draw from scholarly discourses regarding surveillance, queer theory, and affect to construct what we call interpersonal panopticism. Interpersonal panopticism serves as a theoretical account of the fluid nature of watching and being watched in relationships, especially in consideration of how intimate relationships and sexualities are surveilled and controlled in a digital era. To articulate the utility and potentials of this theoretical approach, we offer five cultural propositions that serve as a basis for interpersonal panopticism. Collectively these propositions illustrate the utility and potentials of unpacking the interplay of surveillance, heteronormativity, and affect through an interpersonal panoptic lens. |
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Keywords: | Affect theory interpersonal communication queer theory sexuality surveillance/privacy |
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