💫New publication out this week!

Thrilled to share that my article co-authored with @LilMissHotMess, “Drag pedagogy: The playful practice of queer imagination in early childhood” has been published in Curriculum Inquiry. Link below, and here’s a quick 🧵: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/03626784.2020.1864621
👑 First, a bit of background. This article came out of 2 years of theorizing and writing with @LilMissHotMess, thinking together about what drag offers as a pedagogical encounter. I learned so much from her about drag history and cultural production.
👑 In the article, we build from José Esteban Muñoz in an exploration of what Drag Queen Story Hour offers as an artful provocation beyond common approaches to LGBT education.
👑 We propose that DQSH offers a particular kind of queer framework, which we call “drag pedagogy,” that provides opportunities to build from queer knowledge to imagine new ways of being together. We outline 5 key themes in this approach:
👑 1: Play as Queer Praxis. Drag is firmly rooted in play as a site of queer pleasure, resistance, and self fashioning. It has no explicit purpose, but invites a kind of creative world building that we think is both urgent and exciting as an educational project.
👑 2: Teaching Through Aesthetic Transformation. Throughout history, the “look” of a teacher has been heavily constrained by white patriarchy. We argue that the presence of drag artists in educational spaces delightfully & artfully challenges those constraints.
👑 3: Strategic Defiance. This one is my fave. Drag is all about breaking accepted rules. When an audience member challenge a queen, she rarely resorts to punishment. Instead, a skilled queen often aims to form a sense of solidarity with a heckler. I love this approach!
👑 4: Camp & Embracing Shame as Curriculum. Drag ultimately intends to reveal rather than deceive, often playing with matters made into individual shame in order to defang & destigmatize them. In an early childhood context, DQSH sometimes does this by reading “Everyone Poops”💩
👑 5: Moving from Empathy to Embodied Kinship: In recent years, empathy has been the central focus of many common approaches to LGBT education. DQSH does something different by aiming toward a relational teaching practice that engages with queer art forms.
👑 If/when that link runs out, please email either of us and we can help you get past the velvet rope outside the Taylor & Francis club 😒 (which is to say, we’ll get it to you)
👑 And check out the organization at http://www.dragqueenstoryhour.org  & invite a queen to do a virtual reading at your local library! 📚 We could all use a little more sparkle in these times.
👑 Many thanks @LilMissHotMess for being my pedagogical drag mama. 💄 💋
As an aside, we think this *might* be the first educational research article co-authored by a drag queen under her drag name! 🎉
We think this article will be most useful for teacher education, elementary ed/ ECE, queer/trans studies, gender studies, and anti-oppressive ed. It also provides analysis on the educational value of @DQSHtweets that may be useful for queer/trans activists and advocates.
We are also looking for a popular press outlet like
@TeenVogue
or something similar where we can write a shorter version of this argument for a wider public audience. If you know an editor, please send them our way!
You can follow @HarperKeenan.
Tip: mention @twtextapp on a Twitter thread with the keyword “unroll” to get a link to it.

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