Pavan Mano
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Heteronormativity (un)contested – or, the will to assimilation
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Chapter 5 thinks through Pink Dot – the largest and most well-known LGBT movement in Singapore. It locates the social movement as the product of a long process of anti-politicization that has delegitimized overt displays of dissent and point-blank refusal of state narratives in favour of an assimilationist approach that emphasizes consensus between civil society and state actors. This, together with the reification of kinship in Singapore, helps explain why Pink Dot’s demands have generally been limited to little more than integration into the heteronormative present. Whilst remaining cognizant of the real constraints on civil society and movement organizers, I read Pink Dot as exemplifying a tactic that seeks to domesticize Singaporean sexual minorities by creating a subject position compatible with the nation. I would like to suggest that this reflects the limits of imbricating queerness with nationalism in Singapore.

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Straight nation

Heteronormativity and other exigencies of postcolonial nationalism

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