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Violent Intimacies: The Trans Everyday and the Making of an Urban World

20 January 2025, 4:00 pm–5:00 pm

Violent Intimacies: The Trans Everyday and the Making of an Urban World

The Takhayyul Project hosts gender scholar, Dr Asli Zengin, to discuss her recent book at UCL.

Event Information

Open to

All

Availability

Yes

Organiser

UCL Institute for Global Prosperity

Location

Lecture Theatre 118,
Chandler House, 2 Wakefield St,
London
WC1N 1PF

The Takhayyul Project welcomes hosts anthropologist and gender scholar, Dr Asli Zengin, for a special talk about her recent book: “Violent Intimacies: The Trans Everyday and the Making of an Urban World”. This event is supported by the Gender and Feminisms Research Network (GFRN) and the Middle East Research Centre (MERC), both based at the UCL Institute of Advanced Studies.

Abstract

'In Violent Intimacies, Aslı Zengin traces how trans people in Turkey creatively negotiate and resist everyday cisheteronormative violence. Drawing on the history and ethnography of the trans communal life in Istanbul, Zengin develops an understanding of cisheteronormative violence that expands beyond sex, gender and sexuality. She shows how cisheteronormativity forms a connective tissue among neoliberal governmentality, biopolitical and necropolitical regimes, nationalist religiosity and authoritarian management of social difference. As much as trans people are shaped by these processes, they also transform them in intimate ways. Transness in Turkey provides an insightful site for developing new perspectives on statecraft, securitization and surveillance, family and kin-making, urban geography, and political life. Zengin offers the concept of violent intimacies to theorize this entangled world of the trans everyday where violence and intimacy are co-constitutive. Violent intimacies emerge from trans people’s everyday interactions with the police, religious and medical institutions, street life, family and kinship, and trans femicides and funerals. The dynamic of violent intimacies prompts new understandings of violence and intimacy and the world-making struggles of trans people in a Middle Eastern context.'

Taken from Duke University Press

About the speakers

Aslı Zengin is Assistant Professor of Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Rutgers University. Her research lies at the intersection of ethnography of trans, queer, sex worker and sex/gender transgressive lives; scientific and legal regimes of sex, gender and sexuality; critical studies of violence and sovereignty; death, funerals, cemeteries and afterlives; as well as transnational aspects of LGBTQ and feminist movements in the Middle East with a special focus on Turkey.