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"We need to stop temporarily caring" : pulse, spoken word poetry, and audience counter-narrative creation

- Auteur(s)
- Trew, Hannah G.
- Titre
- "We need to stop temporarily caring" : pulse, spoken word poetry, and audience counter-narrative creation / Hannah G. Trew
- Publication
- 2019
- Content
-
Testu osoa
- Description physique
- 65 or.
- Typologie
- Document
- Eduki mota
- Master Amaierako Lana
- Notes
- Illinoiseko Unibertsitateko Master Amaierako Lana.
On June 12, 2016, 49 people were killed, and 53 people were injured in a shooting at Pulse, a popular gay club in Orlando, Florida. The Pulse Nightclub shooting was the deadliest mass shooting in the United States at that time and the deadliest violent act against the LGBTQ+ community in the United States (Hancock & Haldeman, 2017; Jackson, 2017; Walter, Billard, & Murphy, 2017). The media were divided in labeling the shooting a terrorist attack or a hate crime, creating a master narrative surrounding the shooting. However, LGBTQ+ spoken word poets rejected the media’s storylines, developing counter-narratives, and instead called attention to existing violence targeting the LGBTQ+ community and promoted healing after Pulse. To better understand the connection between the Pulse Nightclub shooting, spoken word poetry, and counter-narrative creation, I conducted focus groups where individuals watched and reacted to poems about Pulse, performed by LGBTQ+ poets. Applying Braun and Clark’s (2006) thematic analysis, I hope to uncover how the counter-narratives created by the LGBTQ+ poets influence the way their audience make sense of their own experiences.