Abstract
As a queer person, I often encounter invisible frontiers in my everyday life. Here, I refer to these as situated within heterosexual borderlands, through which, I argue, queer people navigate with a higher mobility than straight people.
Abstract
As a queer person, I often encounter invisible frontiers in my everyday life. Here, I refer to these as situated within heterosexual borderlands, through which, I argue, queer people navigate with a higher mobility than straight people.