Authors
Louisa Allen, Lucy Cowie, John Fenaughty
Publication date
2020/9/18
Journal
Higher Education Research & Development
Volume
39
Issue
6
Pages
1075-1090
Publisher
Routledge
Description
This article explores an apparent contradiction in LGBTTIQA+ students' narratives around how safe they feel on campus. While declaring they feel ‘safe’ and supported by other students and staff, participants’ narratives contain a myriad of examples indicating they feel ‘unsafe’. These incidents emerge during photo-elicitation interviews where participants discuss photos they have taken of being LGBTTIQA+ on campus. This talk reveals episodes of name-calling, fear of coming out, lack of gender-neutral toilets and inclusive practices for pursuing discrimination. Instead of dismissing the discrepancy between these examples of discrimination and participants’ declaration that they feel ‘safe’ as illusionary, we seek to understand what this might reveal about the nuances of queerphobia’s operation on campus. We argue that participants’ state of feeling simultaneously ‘safe and unsafe’ is reflective of inconsistencies in …
Total citations
20202021202220232024269207
Scholar articles
L Allen, L Cowie, J Fenaughty - Higher Education Research & Development, 2020