This article examines the relationship between queer citizenship, state violence and the exclusion of racialized, homophobic ‘others’. Drawing on semi-structured interviews with LGBT people in Oslo, Norway, I investigate the presence of racialization in narratives of homophobic hate crime. The findings suggest that racialization structures narratives of risk assessment among several of the participants. However, in these narratives, racialization often operates through place-specific references, rather than racial and ethnic markers of identity. The narrative work thus displays ambivalence and a disassociation from racism. I argue that these narratives feed on an already established conflation of space, ethnicity, religion and homophobia, to which both mainstream media and part of the LGBT community contribute.
CITATION STYLE
Klatran, H. K. (2023). Queer citizens and the perils of the neoliberal city: Racialized narratives of homophobic hate crime in Oslo, Norway. Sexualities, 26(3), 261–276. https://doi.org/10.1177/13634607211019365
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