Articles
Macho Sluts and Love Lies Bleeding: Patrick Califia’s lesbian erotic classic lives on
I got my hands on Macho Sluts as a young dyke. Reading my way through my lover’s collection of erotic literature was an initiation of sorts.
The Huxleys are back for another episode of Queer Fashion Files! This time, they talk about ‘The Winner Takes It All’: a high-camp sport and fashion event.
As Victoria talked more openly to peers about sex, her interest in it and its relationship to fatness grew.
We always shared war stories, but seeing the violence livestreamed from Gaza made sharing survival stories feel even more necessary.
Reading literature can help us tend to ourselves as if we were a sapling. Emerging into a non-binary self is like reaching for sunlight.
To celebrate the upcoming art exhibition ‘The Future Feels Familiar’, as part of LCI Melbourne, we interviewed artists J Davies and Scarlett Mallia.
I will not allow Zionism, imperialist governments or the state of Israel to take my compassion or empathy from me. Compassion is the key to our collective liberation.
Welcome to Archer Magazine #20: the RESISTANCE issue. Join our launch event on 30 August 2024.
For this month’s Queer Fashion Files, we’re featuring fashion photographer Ella Maximillion.
Archer Magazine #20: the RESISTANCE issue out 2024. Queer experience cannot be watered down into a single concept, but one thread that connects us all is resistance.
Queer admin is about refusing to be forced into categories you don’t belong in. It’s squeezing your identity onto the side of an A4 registration form.
Archer Asks: Essayist and critic Cher Tan on weirdness, hyperreality and capitalism
“If we were to jointly refuse normalisation, then there’d be no outsiders.” Cher Tan chats to Archer Magazine about her debut book, ‘Peripathetic: Notes on (un)belonging’.
Paranormal topics are often misunderstood, feared, and vilified – just like many of us in the queer community.
Queer sci-fi sees a future outside of binary genders, sexualities and relationship structures that have hurt us for generations.
It appears the only way society has allowed femme rage is when it is displayed by white, conventionally attractive women, and portrayed through the aestheticised lens of film.
For this month’s Queer Fashion Files, we’re featuring Sable Jewellery by Scarlett Bronte.
“Everything that I make is a mirror, a reflection of my identity, because it comes from me.” Iniko chats to Archer Magazine about their music and upcoming tour.
I taught Bewitched in relation to many topics, but it was my own relationship to bisexuality that changed the way I read the show.
My sense of beauty remains hazy, haunted by the spectre of revolutionary China: a world I know intimately and yet not at all.
I have not known miscarriage or baby loss. But this image, of a mother waking up to exile from her child, her entire body flung, is deeply familiar and deeply consoling.
Join us for a night of innuendo, prizes, power ballads, queer icons, cheap drinks, bingo numbers, and community togetherness.
If you are an Aboriginal child whose parents have been criminalised, police officers see you as a criminal, too.