User:RjR5789/R’s Queer and Trans Social Movement Rhetoric, Queer Archives, and LGBTQ+ youth and rhetoric/Bibliography

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Bishop, Ben. “Inauthenticity, Delusion, and Victimization: Interrogating Affective Rhetoric Targeting Trans* Youth.” Communication Source, Alkek, 2023, Accessed 8 Mar. 2024. 


 * This source provides us with a look into how trans youth are marginalized and presented as 'deviant and delusional' and how the rebuttle to this type of transphobia is social movement rhetoric. it targets how anti trans rhetoric is seen and felt by trans youth and what ways it is harmful to the community.

Rand, Erin. “‘What One Voice Can Do’: Civic Pedagogy and Choric Collectivity at Camp Courage.” Routelede, Alkek, Jan. 2014, Accessed 8 Mar. 2024.


 * This article focuses on a camp that seeks to foster a community of mutual care for young people in the LGBTQ+ community, thisis done by allowing them to get to know older people in the community to show them a positive role model within their community and build trust with likeminded people who have similar experiences and struggles.

Moeggenberg, Zarah C. “Trans Oppression Through Technical Rhetorics: A Queer Phenomenological Analysis of Institutional Documents.” Oct. 2022, Accessed 2 Apr. 2024.


 * Evaluates oppressive and harmful documents in technical communication.

Cox, Matthew B. “Working Closets: Mapping Queer Professional Discourses and Why Professional Communication Studies Need Queer Rhetorics.” Jan. 2019, Accessed 2 Apr. 2024.


 * This essay specializes on queer identitiies in the workplace and how their presence/ absence impacts queer people in the workplace. This is a look into bith professional and personal lives of queer people particularly gay people.

Hsu, Jo V. “The Impossible Trans Body: Non Images of Gender in Regimes of Whiteness.” Ebsco, Dept of Rhetoric and Writing, 2023, Accessed 2 Apr. 2024.

Smilges, Jonathan. “White Squares to Black Boxes: Grindr, Queerness, Rhetorical Silence.” Shibboleth Authentication Request, 2018, www-tandfonline-
 * This essay presents questions around trans peoples bodies and how others claim to be threatened by just their presence and unable to simply exist in shared spaces because of this. In this writing he claims that trans people are not threatening in their actions but in their bodies.


 * This essay explores how queer embodiment interacts with rhetorical silence, using Grindr profiles as a case study, the author illustrates how queer people use rhetorical silence in online spaces, even when their queer identity may not be explicitly disclosed.

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