Drague et cruising

In French gay culture, drague means cruising: looking for anonymous and 
casual sexual partners. This paper, by respectively examining the 
metaphorical underpinnings of both words, French and English, throws 
doubt on the validity of this translation. Through a phenomenological 
and geographical pe...

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Main Author: Emmanuel Redoutey
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Pôle de Recherche pour l'Organisation et la diffusion de l'Information Géographique 2008-04-01
Series:EchoGéo
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/echogeo/3663
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author Emmanuel Redoutey
author_facet Emmanuel Redoutey
author_sort Emmanuel Redoutey
collection DOAJ
description In French gay culture, drague means cruising: looking for anonymous and 
casual sexual partners. This paper, by respectively examining the 
metaphorical underpinnings of both words, French and English, throws 
doubt on the validity of this translation. Through a phenomenological 
and geographical perspective, it attempts to give a nuanced examination 
of the practice and experience that each word conceals. The aim is to 
identify two figures embodied in a same person: the dragueur and the 
cruiser. I will argue that the distinction mainly rests on the 
opposition that Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari establish between ‘striated space’ and ‘smooth space’. The concluding theorical 
discussion is an attempt to understand what, in the tension between sexualization of space and eroticization of movement, guides the scripts of drague and cruising.
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institution Kabale University
issn 1963-1197
language fra
publishDate 2008-04-01
publisher Pôle de Recherche pour l'Organisation et la diffusion de l'Information Géographique
record_format Article
series EchoGéo
spelling doaj-art-3781da8e32ec4341925ab23d6a0509de2025-01-30T12:46:02ZfraPôle de Recherche pour l'Organisation et la diffusion de l'Information GéographiqueEchoGéo1963-11972008-04-01510.4000/echogeo.3663Drague et cruisingEmmanuel RedouteyIn French gay culture, drague means cruising: looking for anonymous and 
casual sexual partners. This paper, by respectively examining the 
metaphorical underpinnings of both words, French and English, throws 
doubt on the validity of this translation. Through a phenomenological 
and geographical perspective, it attempts to give a nuanced examination 
of the practice and experience that each word conceals. The aim is to 
identify two figures embodied in a same person: the dragueur and the 
cruiser. I will argue that the distinction mainly rests on the 
opposition that Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari establish between ‘striated space’ and ‘smooth space’. The concluding theorical 
discussion is an attempt to understand what, in the tension between sexualization of space and eroticization of movement, guides the scripts of drague and cruising.https://journals.openedition.org/echogeo/3663métaphorssexualitiessense and experience
spellingShingle Emmanuel Redoutey
Drague et cruising
EchoGéo
métaphors
sexualities
sense and experience
title Drague et cruising
title_full Drague et cruising
title_fullStr Drague et cruising
title_full_unstemmed Drague et cruising
title_short Drague et cruising
title_sort drague et cruising
topic métaphors
sexualities
sense and experience
url https://journals.openedition.org/echogeo/3663
work_keys_str_mv AT emmanuelredoutey dragueetcruising