This editorial frames a thematic issue around queer knowledge, non-binary power, and the study of religion or spirituality. It argues that contemporary spiritualities can both contest and reproduce power relations around gender and sexuality.
The piece matters because it makes the archive’s conceptual commitments explicit: queer studies and religious studies are not separate shelves here, but overlapping tools for understanding how identity and authority are organized.
The author note identifies Lepage as an independent researcher with a doctorate in religious studies from UQAM, and the full text is openly available.