Category: Pride Month Series

  • Understanding Queer Erasure in Media

    Queer erasure is not always absence. Sometimes it is a changed line, a censored relationship, a sanitized character, or a love story rewritten as friendship. This post explores how queer erasure evolved from criminalization and moral panic into modern media censorship, localization changes, and corporate-controlled visibility.

  • The Hidden History of Queer Representation in Media

    The history of queer representation in media reveals its longstanding presence, often masked due to censorship and societal norms. Queer audiences have learned to interpret coded messages and subtext, thus fighting for visibility and acknowledgment. Representation today reflects decades of struggle for authenticity, complexity, and power in storytelling.