Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Cosmopolitan knowledge and the production and c...
View graph of relations

Cosmopolitan knowledge and the production and consumption of sexualized space: Manchester's gay village

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Cosmopolitan knowledge and the production and consumption of sexualized space: Manchester's gay village. / Binnie, Jon; Skeggs, Beverley.
In: Sociological Review, Vol. 52, No. 1, 01.02.2004, p. 39-61.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Binnie J, Skeggs B. Cosmopolitan knowledge and the production and consumption of sexualized space: Manchester's gay village. Sociological Review. 2004 Feb 1;52(1):39-61. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-954X.2004.00441.x

Author

Bibtex

@article{5e111e290c774cd08a22cf1bd136a6a0,
title = "Cosmopolitan knowledge and the production and consumption of sexualized space: Manchester's gay village",
abstract = "According to {\v Z}i{\v z}ek (1997) the logic of late capitalism offers opportunities for the incorporation of previously marginalised groups, whilst simultaneously dividing them at the same time. These possibilities for incorporation create divisions on the basis of gender, race, sexuality and class. Here, we examine how the capitalist desire for opening new markets for leisure consumption with new forms of branding, alongside the desire for the territorialisation of space by campaigning gay and lesbian groups, has led to the formation of a 'gay space' marketed as a cosmopolitan spectacle, in which the central issue becomes a matter of access and knowledge: who can use, consume and be consumed in gay space? We also ask what is the radical political impetus of sexual politics when commodified as cosmopolitan and incorporated spatially? The paper grounds the examination of the politics of cosmopolitanism within a specific locality drawing upon research under-taken on the contested use of space within Manchester's gay village. The paper is organised into four sections. The first examines competing definitions of cosmopolitanism, exploring how sexuality and class are framed as conceptual limits. The second describes how Manchester's gay village is imagined and branded as cosmopolitan. The third considers the navigation and negotiation of difference within this space. The final section evaluates the exclusions from cosmopolitan space and pursues the significance of this for arguments about incorporation in late capitalism.",
author = "Jon Binnie and Beverley Skeggs",
year = "2004",
month = feb,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1111/j.1467-954X.2004.00441.x",
language = "English",
volume = "52",
pages = "39--61",
journal = "Sociological Review",
issn = "0038-0261",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Cosmopolitan knowledge and the production and consumption of sexualized space

T2 - Manchester's gay village

AU - Binnie, Jon

AU - Skeggs, Beverley

PY - 2004/2/1

Y1 - 2004/2/1

N2 - According to Žižek (1997) the logic of late capitalism offers opportunities for the incorporation of previously marginalised groups, whilst simultaneously dividing them at the same time. These possibilities for incorporation create divisions on the basis of gender, race, sexuality and class. Here, we examine how the capitalist desire for opening new markets for leisure consumption with new forms of branding, alongside the desire for the territorialisation of space by campaigning gay and lesbian groups, has led to the formation of a 'gay space' marketed as a cosmopolitan spectacle, in which the central issue becomes a matter of access and knowledge: who can use, consume and be consumed in gay space? We also ask what is the radical political impetus of sexual politics when commodified as cosmopolitan and incorporated spatially? The paper grounds the examination of the politics of cosmopolitanism within a specific locality drawing upon research under-taken on the contested use of space within Manchester's gay village. The paper is organised into four sections. The first examines competing definitions of cosmopolitanism, exploring how sexuality and class are framed as conceptual limits. The second describes how Manchester's gay village is imagined and branded as cosmopolitan. The third considers the navigation and negotiation of difference within this space. The final section evaluates the exclusions from cosmopolitan space and pursues the significance of this for arguments about incorporation in late capitalism.

AB - According to Žižek (1997) the logic of late capitalism offers opportunities for the incorporation of previously marginalised groups, whilst simultaneously dividing them at the same time. These possibilities for incorporation create divisions on the basis of gender, race, sexuality and class. Here, we examine how the capitalist desire for opening new markets for leisure consumption with new forms of branding, alongside the desire for the territorialisation of space by campaigning gay and lesbian groups, has led to the formation of a 'gay space' marketed as a cosmopolitan spectacle, in which the central issue becomes a matter of access and knowledge: who can use, consume and be consumed in gay space? We also ask what is the radical political impetus of sexual politics when commodified as cosmopolitan and incorporated spatially? The paper grounds the examination of the politics of cosmopolitanism within a specific locality drawing upon research under-taken on the contested use of space within Manchester's gay village. The paper is organised into four sections. The first examines competing definitions of cosmopolitanism, exploring how sexuality and class are framed as conceptual limits. The second describes how Manchester's gay village is imagined and branded as cosmopolitan. The third considers the navigation and negotiation of difference within this space. The final section evaluates the exclusions from cosmopolitan space and pursues the significance of this for arguments about incorporation in late capitalism.

U2 - 10.1111/j.1467-954X.2004.00441.x

DO - 10.1111/j.1467-954X.2004.00441.x

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:1842429940

VL - 52

SP - 39

EP - 61

JO - Sociological Review

JF - Sociological Review

SN - 0038-0261

IS - 1

ER -