TY - JOUR
T1 - "That's so gay!"
T2 - A study of the deployment of signifiers of sexual and gender identity in secondary school settings in Australia and the United States
AU - Rasmussen, Mary Louise
PY - 2004/12
Y1 - 2004/12
N2 - While notions of "choice", essentialism and sexual identity have become somewhat passe in the academy, the controversy associated with these notions has not waned within secondary educational settings. Official curriculum and pedagogy in Australia and the United States is still, I will demonstrate, very much constrained by this hackneyed debate. In the first part of this article my focus is primarily on tropes of choice. I ponder how such tropes are utilised, prohibited and circumvented within the confines of the school. This analysis is informed by interviews I conducted with people who work to support lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender teachers and students in secondary school settings. Given the tenuous position of choice in official discourses of schooling, I go on to consider how the language young people use has the potential to disturb hetero and homo normalising practices. I do this by conceiving familiar and unfamiliar sexual and gender identity categories as catachreses. My focus is on the now ubiquitous term "that's so gay" where "gay" comes to signify all things uncool and nerdish. This strategy is provoked, in part, by my frustration with t advocates for lesbian and gay identified youth who underscore the "victimhood" of these young people via an insistence that terms such as "that's so gay" be read as always, and, in every way, a homophobic slur. By conceiving "that's so gay" as catachresis it is possible to see how such terms can simultaneously sustain and disrupt the normalising practices that objectify schooling's subjects.
AB - While notions of "choice", essentialism and sexual identity have become somewhat passe in the academy, the controversy associated with these notions has not waned within secondary educational settings. Official curriculum and pedagogy in Australia and the United States is still, I will demonstrate, very much constrained by this hackneyed debate. In the first part of this article my focus is primarily on tropes of choice. I ponder how such tropes are utilised, prohibited and circumvented within the confines of the school. This analysis is informed by interviews I conducted with people who work to support lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender teachers and students in secondary school settings. Given the tenuous position of choice in official discourses of schooling, I go on to consider how the language young people use has the potential to disturb hetero and homo normalising practices. I do this by conceiving familiar and unfamiliar sexual and gender identity categories as catachreses. My focus is on the now ubiquitous term "that's so gay" where "gay" comes to signify all things uncool and nerdish. This strategy is provoked, in part, by my frustration with t advocates for lesbian and gay identified youth who underscore the "victimhood" of these young people via an insistence that terms such as "that's so gay" be read as always, and, in every way, a homophobic slur. By conceiving "that's so gay" as catachresis it is possible to see how such terms can simultaneously sustain and disrupt the normalising practices that objectify schooling's subjects.
KW - "Choice"
KW - "That's so gay!"
KW - Catachresis
KW - Essentialism
KW - Sexual identity
KW - Trope
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=34247654365&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1 080/1035033042000285103
DO - 10.1 080/1035033042000285103
M3 - Article
SN - 1035-0330
VL - 14
SP - 289
EP - 308
JO - Social Semiotics
JF - Social Semiotics
IS - 3
ER -