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1、Pride and Prejudice: Legalising Compulsory Heterosexuality in Boston and New Yorks Annual St Patrick Day ParadesSally R. Munt & Katherine ODonnellSally R Munt is Professor of Media and Cultural Studies at the University of Sussex, Brighton, UK. She has published several books in cultural, gender, an
2、d queer studies, her most recent project is Queer Feelings: Sex, Class & Emotion in Contemporary Culture to be published by Ashgate.Katherine ODonnell is Lecturer in Womens Studies, University College Dublin, Ireland. She has published widely in literary history, queer studies and feminism, her fort
3、hcoming monograph is entitled Edmund Burkes Irish Accent.AddressesProfessor Sally R. Munt, Department of Media and Film, School of Humanities, University of Sussex, Sussex House, Brighton, BN1 9RH, UK.For mailing use home address: 15 Herbert Road, BRIGHTON BN1 6PB, UKEmail: s.r.muntsussex.ac.ukDr Ka
4、therine ODonnell, WERRC (Womens Education, Research & Resource Centre), School of Social Justice, Hanna Sheehy Skeffington Building, University College DublinBelfield, Dublin 4, IRELANDEmail: Katherine.ODonnellUCD.ie, Ph: 353-1-716-8581, Fax: 353-1-716-1195AbstractThis article discusses the vicious
5、territorial disputes surrounding the tradition of St Patricks Day Parades through the city streets of New York and Boston, USA. It documents the legal arguments mounted successfully to exclude Irish lesbian, gay and transgender participants from the march, exploring what ideologies of nation-space a
6、nd public space underpin them. It argues that the progression through urban space of the marches enforces compulsory heterosexuality, through actual and semiotic exclusion. Irish-American nationalism can be read as illustrative of the heterosexualisation of nationalism. It was the unquestioned assum
7、ption that being homosexual is antithetical to being Irish that provided the fundamental premise from which it was logically and successfully argued in the US courts: that the Irish Lesbian and Gay Organization is a violent, obscene enemy bent on the destruction of Irish ethnicity and Irish communit
8、ies. By contrast, the article holds up the Parades in Cork and Dublin as designated inclusive and multicultural events, the nation-space of the Irish Republic economically liberated and wishing to communicate modernity to its citizens.KeywordsNation space, nationalism, St Patricks Day Parades, stree
9、t marches, heterosexuality.Word Count7,779 Endnotes 1,546Pride and Prejudice: Legalising Compulsory Heterosexuality in Boston and New Yorks Annual St Patrick Day Parades This paper relies on the Irish Lesbian and Gay Archive: IQA, which has a comprehensive news clippings archive (over 250,000 clips
10、from Irish national and regional media, spanning over three decades. We owe a debt to the meticulous archive of one of the founder members of ILGO, Anne Maguire, which is deposited at the Lesbian Herstory Archive in Brooklyn, New York and on her, as yet, unpublished monograph entitled When All the W
11、orld is Bright and Gay. One of the authors of this article, Katherine ODonnell, was one of the organisers of the lesbian float in Corks St Patricks Day Parade in 1992 and was one of a number of lesbians and gays sent by that community to New York in solidarity with ILGO in 1993. She marched in St Pa
12、tricks Day Parade in Boston in 1993 and also marched as part of an ILGO San Francisco contingent in the St Patricks Day Parade in later years. ODonnell was part of the large contingent of lesbians and gays from Ireland who protested and was arrested and detained in prison at the tenth anniversary of
13、 ILGOs exclusion from the parade in 2001. There is currently legal action being taken by US Human Rights lawyers who are protesting that this detention of the ILGO protestors was unlawful, of which she is a co-plaintiff.When the Irish Lesbian and Gay Organization ILGO applied to march in the New Yor
14、k St. Patricks Day Parade of 1991, they were told that there was no room by the organisers of the parade, the Ancient Order of Hibernians. ILGOs on-going struggle for inclusion in the worlds largest celebration of Irish ethnicity became a major news item that rumbled on seasonally for a number of ye
15、ars across the USA, in Ireland, in the international gay community and amongst the international Irish diaspora. Fourteen years after its first application to join the parade, ILGO is not only still prohibited from marching - remarkably, in the land of the brave and the free - ILGO is even legally p
16、rohibited from holding a protest at its own exclusion.This article makes a number of arguments, chiefly being that it was the unquestioned assumption that being homosexual is antithetical to being Irish that provided the fundamental premise from which it was logically and successfully argued in the
17、US courts, that the Irish Lesbian and Gay Organization is a violent, obscene enemy bent on the destruction of Irish ethnicity and Irish communities. The marches in New York and also in Boston exposed aspects of nationalistic sentiment that emphatically rendered its nostalgic, phantasmatic quality. I
18、rish-American nationalism can be read as illustrative of the heterosexualisation of nationalism, a move illustrating the disjunction between the homogenised, idealised semiotic nation, and the complex, heterogenous lived experience of its natives. The Ireland being celebrated in the parades is a his
19、torical sentiment, a nation made static in the minds of its ethnic descendants by nostalgia and loss. What identity-based marches such as the Annual St Patricks Day make abundantly clear is that the traditional segmentation of the urban space, visualised and auralised through the compartments of the
20、 march with flags, banners, and bands, is not so much a sign of strategic inclusion, as a very moving and vital force of exclusion.Nations and NationalismIn 1882 Ernest Renan gave his now famous lecture “What Is A Nation?” in which he observed:. the essence of a nation is that all individuals have m
21、any things in common, and also that they have forgotten many things.RENAN Ernest “What is a Nation?” reprinted in BHABHA op cit. pp8-22p.11Nationalism is defined by Ernest Gellner as primarily “a principle which holds that the political and national unit should be congruent”Ibid p.1.Nations as a nat
22、ural God-given way of classifying men, as an inherent.political destiny, are a myth; nationalism, which sometimes takes pre-existing cultures and turns them into nations, sometimes invents them, and often obliterates pre-existing cultures.GELLNER Ernest Nations and Nationalism Blackwell, Oxford,1983
23、:48-9.However, there are fissures within nationalism, as Eric Hobsbawm points out:First, official ideologies of states and movements are not guides to what is in the minds of even the most loyal citizens or supporters. Second, and more specifically, we cannot assume that for most people national ide
24、ntification - when it exists - excludes or is always or ever superior to, the remainder of the set of identifications which constitute the social being. In fact it is always combined with identifications of another kind, even when it is felt to be superior to them. Thirdly, national identification a
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