
In this chapter, Greteman draws on Jane Roland Martin’s (2002) cultural wealth perspective to develop an argument about the assets of queer culture. This chapter explores how queer generations reveal the shifting terrain of sexualities, genders, and politics in order to offer up key lessons in the creation of queer culture. Queer cultures have often been seen as a problem to be solved or assimilated. However, as Greteman argues, there are cultural assets to queerness that teach important lessons about surviving and thriving amidst homophobia. Utilizing Plummer’s (2015) delineation of queer generations, for pedagogical use, the author shows how queer generations create diverse cultures that transmit lessons across one another.
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