ABSTRACT

Pursuing the discursive or material effects of relational queerness, this book reflects on how objects can illuminate, affect, and animate queer modes of being.

In the early 1990s the queer theorist Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick defined queer as “multiply transitive . . . relational and strange,” rather than a fixed identity. In spite of this, much of the queer theoretical scholarship of the last three decades has used queer as a synonym for anti-normative sexual identities. The contributions to this volume return to the idea of transitivity, exploring what happens when queer is thought of as a turning toward or turning away from a diverse range of objects, including bodily waste; frozen cats; archival ephemera; the writing of Virginia Woolf; the Pop art of Ray Johnson; the podcast S-Town; and Maggie Nelson’s memoir The Argonauts.

Relevant to those studying queer theory, this book will also be of wider interest to those researching identity and the way in which it is represented in a variety of artistic disciplines.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Angelaki.

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

Queer Objects

chapter |14 pages

Eve Sedgwick’s “Other Materials”

For Jonathan Goldberg and Michael Moon, in Appreciation

chapter |13 pages

Acts Against Nature

chapter |13 pages

Library Trolls and Database Animals

Kenneth Halliwell and Joe Orton’s Library Book Alterations

chapter |24 pages

Ray Johnson’s Anti-Archive

Blackface, Sadomasochism, and the Racial and Sexual Imagination of Pop Art

chapter |3 pages

On Ray Johnson’s Sexuality, Loves, and Friendships

An Interview between William S. Wilson and Benjamin Kahan

chapter |15 pages

Capote’s Frozen Cats

Sexuality, Hospitality, Civil Rights

chapter |13 pages

Cooper’s Queer Objects

chapter |12 pages

Objects of Desire

Masculinity, Homosociality and Foppishness in Nick Hornby’s High Fidelity and about a Boy

chapter |18 pages

Queer Objects and Intermedial Timepieces

Reading S-town (2017)

chapter |12 pages

Ephemeraphilia

A Queer History

chapter |1 pages

Dossier

The Argonauts as Queer Object

chapter |6 pages

Medea’s Perineum

chapter |5 pages

“Feral with Vulnerability”

On The Argonauts

chapter |5 pages

Theory and the Everyday