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Abstract
This progress report considers precarious geographies of genders and sexualities at a range of intersecting scales. In a time currently characterised as precarious, anxious and insecure, feminist and queer geographers are well placed to examine vulnerable geographies - including their own - of bodies, lives and labours. The review considers the ways precarity operates as a concept, condition and experience by first, asking what and where is precarity? Second, a recurring theme throughout feminist and queer precarious geographical literature is the importance of foregrounding relationality, the multiscalar, and marginalised bodies. Ultimately, what it means to feel ‘secure’ shifts and changes across places, genders and sexualities.
Type
Journal Article
Type of thesis
Series
Citation
Johnston, L. (2018). Gender and sexuality III: Precarious places. Progress in Human Geography, 42(6), 928–936. https://doi.org/10.1177/0309132517731256
Date
2018
Publisher
Sage
Degree
Supervisors
Rights
This is an author’s accepted version of an article published in the Progress in Human Geography. © 2017 Sage