JGMC 4 (2) pp. 151–166 Intellect Limited 2018
Journal of Greek Media & Culture
Volume 4 Number 2
© 2018 Intellect Ltd Article. English language. doi: 10.1386/jgmc.4.2.151_1
www.intellectbooks.com 151
ABSTRACT
This article examines the lives of queer people as performed in the biographies of
ten interlocutors who participated in the queer political scene during the decade
2000–10. In recent years, a wide range of queer/feminist subjectivities, groups
and spaces have emerged within collective social movements in Greece. These
new approaches to radical feminism and queer life-forms often convey a sense of
discontinuity with the recent past, as queer voices have been marginalized in the
anti-authoritarian and the radical leftist political scene until recently. I argue that
the anti-authoritarian and leftist political space in and around the various social
grassroots movements constituted – in their own right – disciplinary fields as
well as gender-constructing mechanisms. Gendered subjectivities, either entirely
excluded or included on restrictive terms, exposed the limits of the political body.
In this article, I explore how these new queer contexts can work through the trau-
mas out of which they have emerged, and I argue that the emergence of a queer
political scene in Greece signals a shift from passionate attachments to new modes
of relationality. These new modes of relating expose vulnerabilities and emerge as
negotiations of intimacy between the self and the other.
KEYWORDS
queer
social movements
gender
subjectivity
language
trauma
SOULA MARINOUDI
University of Thessaly and National and Kapodistrian University of
Athens
Queer subjectivities
within political scenes:
Traumatic relations, exposed
vulnerabilities