Similar Items: The Double Edge of Visibility and Invisibility: Cassils and Queer Exhaustion
- Queer Excess and Hybrid History in Elizabeth Cary’s Edward II
- Tobaron Waxman’s Red Food: Jewish Ritual, Mourning, and Queer Utopia
- Visible and invisible forces
- Queer Cinema and Melodrama: A Perspective from Queer Directors
- Interpreting the Legal Archive of Visual Transformations: Textual Articulations of Visibility in Evidentiary Procedures and Documentary Formats of Colonial Law
- Enchanted Encounters with Eamon Grennan’s ‘Double-Life Creatures’ in Plainchant