Cohen
Estes
Nicholls
Connecting the readings
Resistance and solidarity
100

What does Cohen argue that queer politics focuses on too narrowly?

It focuses solely on sexuality instead of factoring in the intersection of race, class, and gender.

100

What 2016 movement does Estes open his book with?

The Standing Rock protest against the Dakota Access Pipeline

100

Who are "The Dreamers" that Nicholls writes about?

Undocumented youth activists fighting for immigrant rights and the DREAM Act
100

What do all of these authors see as essential to liberation: individual recognition or collective struggle

Collective struggle

100

What term describes the way race, class, gender, and sexuality combine to shape experiences of oppression?

Intersectionality

200

What is the strategy seen in queer politics that seeks inclusion in existing systems and norms like marriage or the military?

Assimilationist Politics

200

True or false: Estes views the fight at Standing Rock as an isolated protest about a single pipeline

False, he views it as a history of Indigenous struggle against colonialism 

200

What was the key turning point when the Dreamers turned their fear into activism? 

"Coming out of the shadows," where undocumented youth openly declared their status

200

Cohen, Estes, and Nicholls all critique systems of what kind of power?

State and structural power that define who belongs and who is included

200

True or false: Each author argues that identity-based struggles should stay separate and focus only on their own issues

False, they all emphasize coalition and interconnection among struggles

300
Cohen's figures of the "punk", "bulldagger", and "welfare queen" illustrates what idea? 

That sexual deviance is shaped by race, gender, and class, not just sexuality

300

What does Estes mean when he says, "Our History is the Future"?

Indigenous survival and continuing resistance helps guide and fuel future liberation

300

What tension does Nicholls between Dreamer activists and larger immigrant organizations?

Larger groups preferred lobbying and negotiation, where the Dreamers preferred direct action

300

How do marginalized identities become sources of power in Estes and Cohen's texts?

Through transforming oppression into coalition and resistance

300
In Cohen's essay, who does she argue should be included in queer politics but often isn't?

Poor black women, working-class people, and others marginalized by state power

400

What political tradition does Cohen say queer politics is at risk of repeating by excluding the "undeserving"? (HINT: Seen in some Black political movements.)

The politics of respectability

400

Which systems of power does Estes argue Indigenous movements continue to resist today?

Settler colonialism, capitalism, environmental destruction

400

True or false: Nicholls argues that the Dreamer movement only fought for citizenship for youth

False, they expanded over time to broader immigrant rights and anti-deportation efforts

400

True or false: Estes and Cohen focus on one isolated identity group without connecting to others

False, each calls for intersectional solidarity

400

What do the Dreamers’ “coming out of the shadows” and the Standing Rock resistance have in common?

 Both turn marginalized identities into public acts of resistance that challenge dominant power structures.

500

What is Cohen's broader vision for a truly radical queer politics?

A focus on coalition that unites all oppressed groups against systems of normativity and state control

500

How does Estes connect Indigenous sovereignty to environmental justice

Defending the land and water is the same as defending Indigenous self-determination, as both are about life and survival

500
How does Nicholls describe the connection between identity and political power in the Dreamer movement?

Nicholls argues that identity could be used to create empathy and visibility as a form of resistance

500

What overarching message ties Estes and Cohen together?

True liberation requires dismantling systems of exclusion, not just seeking inclusion within

500

What shared idea unites all three readings about liberation?

That freedom requires dismantling systems of normativity and oppression, not simply gaining access to them.