TY - JOUR
T1 - Caging and Uncaging Pride
T2 - Di(s)visibility and the Borders of Budapest Pride
AU - Renkin, Hadley Z.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2024/5/19
Y1 - 2024/5/19
N2 - In 2008, following right-wing attacks in 2007, Budapest’s Pride march was ‘caged’ by a cordon of police barricades which remained until repudiated by march organisers in 2017. Both caging and uncaging resulted in fundamental transformations of the march, its spectacle of identity, politics, and belonging, and the meanings of Hungarian sexual politics. Grounded in ethnographic research from 1999 to the present, this paper explores the implications of these transformations for Budapest Pride’s layered visibilities and invisibilities, and their borders of desire, being, politics, and belonging. Weaving together queer concepts of ‘disidentification’, anthropological thinking on ‘friction’, and postsocialist analysis of queer ‘in/visibility’, I argue that that Budapest Pride’s shifting caged and uncaged state renders it a critical site of ‘di(s)visibility’: contingent frictions, simultaneously productive and destructive, between queer and other visibilities and invisibilities, whose ambiguous, ambivalent relations both crystallise and dissolve multiple borders of identity, politics, and belonging.
AB - In 2008, following right-wing attacks in 2007, Budapest’s Pride march was ‘caged’ by a cordon of police barricades which remained until repudiated by march organisers in 2017. Both caging and uncaging resulted in fundamental transformations of the march, its spectacle of identity, politics, and belonging, and the meanings of Hungarian sexual politics. Grounded in ethnographic research from 1999 to the present, this paper explores the implications of these transformations for Budapest Pride’s layered visibilities and invisibilities, and their borders of desire, being, politics, and belonging. Weaving together queer concepts of ‘disidentification’, anthropological thinking on ‘friction’, and postsocialist analysis of queer ‘in/visibility’, I argue that that Budapest Pride’s shifting caged and uncaged state renders it a critical site of ‘di(s)visibility’: contingent frictions, simultaneously productive and destructive, between queer and other visibilities and invisibilities, whose ambiguous, ambivalent relations both crystallise and dissolve multiple borders of identity, politics, and belonging.
KW - postsocialism
KW - pride marches
KW - queer
KW - Sexual politics
KW - visibility
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85193601295&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/00141844.2024.2349656
DO - 10.1080/00141844.2024.2349656
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85193601295
SN - 0014-1844
JO - Ethnos
JF - Ethnos
ER -