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      The Life and Afterlife of Gay Neighborhoods : Renaissance and Resurgence 

      After the Life of LGBTQ Spaces: Learning from Atlanta and Istanbul

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      Springer International Publishing

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          Abstract

          Many gay villages (or “gayborhoods”) arose in the wake of the gay liberation movement attracted a good deal of academic research within the last 40 years. Unfortunately, this hyper focus on certain spaces often populated by white gay men has frequently eclipsed research on other types of LGBTQ areas as well as other geographies beyond the global north. This chapter aims to address this gap, taking an ordinary cities perspective (Robinson, 2006) and asking how we can develop models that are conceptually useful for understanding the life of a more diverse array of LGBTQ spaces across the globe. To answer this question we avoid linear models of change by developing a new model based on a conceptual framework derived from physics: centripetal and centrifugal forces. The advantage of this model is its explicit recognition of the ways that social, economic, and political forces and their manifestations influence queer spaces. We use two cases from relatively under-studied regions; Atlanta and Istanbul to illustrate the utility of this framework. The “in-betweenness” of these cities, linking south and north as well as west and east, makes them a haven for queers and others fleeing the conservative surroundings in the search for more attractive and welcoming places for marginalized LGBTQ individuals. This chapter draws on the authors’ lived experiences, prior research, and additional interviews to conduct a relational reading of queer spaces with emphasis on the ways that LGBTQ people circulate and congregate in a wider range of urban areas. This comparative strategy and relational reading of queer spaces expands the narrow focus from normalized narratives of gayborhoods to a broader “analysis of the heterogeneity and multiplicity of metropolitan modernities” (Roy 2009, p. 821) of queer spaces.

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          The 21st-Century Metropolis: New Geographies of Theory

          Ananya Roy (2009)
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            (Hetero)Sexing Space: Lesbian Perceptions and Experiences of Everyday Spaces

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              Planning and Social Control: Exploring the Dark Side

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                Author and book information

                Book Chapter
                2021
                March 20 2021
                : 261-285
                10.1007/978-3-030-66073-4_12
                491b2211-318b-47cf-93e8-e5970af07889
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