Visual Identity Politics and Remix Society

Q

Queer

…“used to frighten me but now ‘for me to use the word queer is a liberation’’’
— Derek Jarman

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“Queer has a mixed history – from the 19th century onwards it has been used both as a term of abuse and as a term by LGBT people to refer to themselves. Our inspiration for using it came from Derek Jarman who said that it used to frighten him but now ‘for me to use the word queer is a liberation’. More recently, of course, it has become reclaimed as a fluid term for people of different sexualities and gender identities. Historians of sexuality have also argued that it is preferable to other terms for sexualities in the past as these often don’t map onto modern sexual identites. In addition to carrying out audience research, we took advice from Stonewall and other LGBT charities and held focus groups with LGBT people. The advice from all of these sources was overwhelmingly that we should use it. While we tried other titles, no other option captured the full diversity of sexualities and gender identities that are represented in the show.”
Text by Clare Barlow, curator of Queer British Art.

http://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-britain/exhibition/queer-british-art-1861-1967