Queer approaches to friendship and community have been instrumental in challenging dominant normative frameworks around social interaction. By redefining what it means to be friends, these approaches...
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: Sexuality and relationships: how queerness challenges dominant norms
Queer longing is an experience that many individuals who identify as LGBTQ+ go through. It involves feeling strong emotions towards someone, regardless of their gender identity, and can be difficult...
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: Queer longing: a unique way of viewing the world and finding intimacy
How can bisexual desire illuminate the ethics of openness in human relationality?
Let's define "bisexual." It refers to attraction toward people of more than one gender. Bisexuality is often...
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: How bisexuality illuminates ethical approaches to human relationality
Polyamory is an arrangement where individuals involved agree to have romantic relationships with more than one partner at once, often in a consensual way. It can be practiced by people of any gender...
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: understanding the complexity of polyamory: exploring trust and commitment through communication and intimacy
Queer temporality refers to the unique ways that queer people experience time, which can differ from those who are heteronormative.
Queer people may have different experiences with linearity,...
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: Exploring the complexities of queer temporality: how sexuality, intimacy, and relationships are shaped by time
Imagine a world where gender and sexual orientation are no longer considered binary concepts, but rather fluid identities that exist on a spectrum. In this world, people are free to explore their own...
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: The reimagining of society: a world beyond binary gender and traditional relationships
Patriarchy is a system that privileges males over females in various ways, including physical strength, economic power, decision-making authority, and social status. In heteronormative societies...
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: How the patriarchy affects relationships and what it means for alternatives like polyamory and nonmonogamy
Queer individuals are those who identify themselves outside of traditional gender and sexual norms. They may be bisexual, pansexual, asexual, polyamorous, or something else entirely. Despite advances...
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: Navigating marriage expectations: queer individuals create alternative models for relationships.
Women's rights have come a long way since the early days of feminist activism, but there is still much work to be done when it comes to ensuring that all people - including those who identify as...
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: Lesbian separatism and its impact on queer activism: the fight for community, relationships, and rights
Imagination is an essential tool for constructing queer utopias because it allows individuals to envision alternative ways of being that challenge existing societal norms and expectations. In this...
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: Reimagining gender identity: the power of fiction and intimate relationships