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Queering critical literacies: disidentifications and queer futurity in an afterschool storytelling and roleplaying game

Authors :
Karis Jones
Scott Storm
Source :
English Teaching: Practice & Critique. 20:534-548
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Emerald, 2021.

Abstract

Purpose This paper aims to describe the critical literacies of high school students engaged in a youth participatory action research (YPAR) project focused on a roleplaying game, Dungeons and Dragons, in a queer-led afterschool space. The paper illustrates how youth critique and resist unjust societal norms while simultaneously envisioning queer utopian futures. Using a queer theory framework, the authors consider how youth performed disidentifications and queer futurity. Design/methodology/approach This study is a discourse analysis of approximately 85 hours of audio collected over one year. Findings Youth engaged in deconstructive critique, disidentifications and queer futurity in powerful enactments of critical literacies that involved simultaneous resistance, subversion, imagination and hope as youth envisioned queer utopian world-building through their fantasy storytelling. Youth acknowledged the injustice of the present while radically envisioning a utopian future. Originality/value This study offers an empirical grounding for critical literacies centered in queer theory and explores how youth engage with critical literacies in collaboratively co-authored texts. The authors argue that queering critical literacies potentially moves beyond deconstructive critique while simultaneously opening spaces for resistance, imagination and utopian world-making through linguistic and narrative-based tools.

Details

ISSN :
11758708
Volume :
20
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
English Teaching: Practice & Critique
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........a7ffeee39fdffb59bfa3aebdeaca9105
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1108/etpc-10-2020-0131