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Publications (4 of 4) Show all publications
Shen, Q. (2025). Lino e Silva, Moisés. Minoritarian liberalism: a travesti life in a Brazilian favela. 240 pp., bibliogr. Chicago: University Press, 2022 [Review]. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 31(1), 328-329
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Lino e Silva, Moisés. Minoritarian liberalism: a travesti life in a Brazilian favela. 240 pp., bibliogr. Chicago: University Press, 2022
2025 (English)In: Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, ISSN 1359-0987, E-ISSN 1467-9655, Vol. 31, no 1, p. 328-329Article, book review (Refereed) Published
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Royal Anthropological Institute, 2025
National Category
Social Anthropology
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-548478 (URN)10.1111/1467-9655.14254 (DOI)001406214500001 ()
Available from: 2025-01-25 Created: 2025-01-25 Last updated: 2025-05-28Bibliographically approved
Shen, Q. (2024). Just for Fun: Playfulness as Self-Entrapment among Elderly Working-Class Queer Men in Shanghai. Social Analysis: Journal of Cultural and Social Practice, 68(4), 76-94
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Just for Fun: Playfulness as Self-Entrapment among Elderly Working-Class Queer Men in Shanghai
2024 (English)In: Social Analysis: Journal of Cultural and Social Practice, ISSN 0155-977X, E-ISSN 1558-5727, Vol. 68, no 4, p. 76-94Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

This article investigates queer socializing among elderly working-class queer men in Shanghai through two ethnographic examples. The first concerns the men's parodic redeployment of socialist revolutionary repertoire. By framing it as ‘just for fun’, the men precluded a politics of resistance, but this frame sometimes exceeded itself when play became a critique of the state. The second example focuses on how the ‘just for fun’ frame constrains the men's outlook on queer friendship, which was perceived as volatile and relegated as nothing—just play. However, communal activities such as commensality create a subjunctive world where this constraint could be potentially transgressed. I argue that the ‘just for fun’ frame operates as a form of self-entrapment, deliberately placing constraints on the men's queerness. This article challenges the tendency in queer scholarship, including queer anthropology, to politicize and idealize queer play.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
New York: Berghahn Books, 2024
Keywords
fun, leisure, limits, play, queer anthropology
National Category
Social Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-564280 (URN)10.3167/sa.2024.680405 (DOI)001545573000005 ()
Available from: 2025-07-31 Created: 2025-07-31 Last updated: 2025-08-27Bibliographically approved
Shen, Q. (2024). Qing Shen reviews It’s My Party: Tat Ming Pair and the Postcolonial Politics of Popular Music in Hong Kong [Review]. Positions
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Qing Shen reviews It’s My Party: Tat Ming Pair and the Postcolonial Politics of Popular Music in Hong Kong
2024 (English)In: Positions, ISSN 1067-9847, E-ISSN 1527-8271Article, book review (Other (popular science, discussion, etc.)) Published
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Duke University Press, 2024
National Category
Musicology
Research subject
Musicology
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-539516 (URN)
Note

Published online September 30, 2024

Available from: 2024-09-30 Created: 2024-09-30 Last updated: 2024-10-03Bibliographically approved
Shen, Q. (2024). Queer Fun in Shanghai: The Social Lives of Elderly Working-Class Chinese Men. (Doctoral dissertation). Uppsala: Department of Cultural Anthropology and Ethnology, Uppsala University
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Queer Fun in Shanghai: The Social Lives of Elderly Working-Class Chinese Men
2024 (English)Doctoral thesis, monograph (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

This thesis uses “play” as a core concept to examine the lives and subjectivities of older working-class queer men (mostly above 60 years old) in Shanghai. Play (玩wan in Chinese) is a distinctive feature of the everyday lives of the men, who spend a great deal of time with fellow queers engaged in a variety of leisure activities, such as hanging out in parks, eating together at home or restaurants, singing karaoke, and joining sight-seeing tours. Drawing on anthropologist Gregory Bateson’s theory of play as a kind of metacommunication that creates a play frame and a boundary between play and non-play, I examine how the play frame continually invoked by the men (“just for fun” or “just play”) is materialized, enacted, and transgressed.

Based on fourteen months of ethnographic fieldwork in Shanghai conducted between 2021 and 2022, this thesis demonstrates that queerness is centrally linked to playfulness. Playing is a process of queering through which the men actively explore alternative and ludic ways of being without any real consequences for their day-to-day lives, in which most of them are married to women. But “play” as playfulness or “just for fun” also constrains the men’s perceptions of queer identities, their relationships, and their friendships with one another.

A main argument is that unless we acknowledge the existence and perspectives of people like the men I describe in this thesis, our knowledge of queer lives will remain biased and impoverished. The old men I write about here in many ways are the opposite of the identity-based sexual rights activists who attract so much attention in the scholarly and popular literature (and who write much of that literature). The men are not oppositional, they are not activists, and they have little interest in gay rights or any kinds of sexual rights. The men’s lives reveal a form of jovial queer existence in a repressive non-Western setting. They complicate understandings about topics of importance in anthropology, such as sexual identity, aging, resistance, and vulnerability. Play is a lens that makes it difficult to view people’s actions only as either disruptions of power or enactments of power. Play highlights enjoyment, fun, and pleasure in ways that make them available to critical analysis. Play is what literary scholar Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick (2003:149) has called a “reparative practice”; one that “confers plenitude” on people and recognizes the complexities and surprises of their lives.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Uppsala: Department of Cultural Anthropology and Ethnology, Uppsala University, 2024. p. 195
Series
Dissertations and documents in cultural anthropology : DICA, ISSN 1653-0543 ; 28
Keywords
play, queer anthropology, fun, queer aging, leisure, China
National Category
Gender Studies
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-538265 (URN)978-91-506-3069-5 (ISBN)
Public defence
2024-11-08, Geijersalen 6-1023, Engelska parken, Uppsala, 09:15 (English)
Opponent
Supervisors
Available from: 2024-10-18 Created: 2024-09-11 Last updated: 2024-10-18
Organisations
Identifiers
ORCID iD: ORCID iD iconorcid.org/0009-0008-4243-0830

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