1st Edition

Queer Objects

Edited By Guy Davidson, Monique Rooney Copyright 2019
232 Pages
by Routledge

232 Pages
by Routledge

232 Pages
by Routledge

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... Read more

Foreword  Introduction  1. Eve Sedgwick’s "Other Materials"  2. Acts Against Nature  3. Solid Objects and Modern Tonics, or, who’s Afraid of the Big Camp Woolf?  4. Library Trolls and Database Animals: Kenneth Halliwell and Joe Orton’s Library Book Alterations  5. Ray Johnson’s Anti-Archive: Blackface, Sadomasochism, and the Racial and Sexual Imagination of Pop Art  6. On Ray Johnson’s Sexuality, Loves, and Friendships: An Interview Between William S. Wilson and Benjamin Kahan  7. The Shameless Performativity of Camp in Patrick White’s The Twyborn Affair  8. Tom Ripley, Queer Exceptionalism, and the Anxiety of Being Close to Normal  9. Capote’s Frozen Cats: Sexuality, Hospitality, Civil Rights  10. Cooper’s Queer Objects  11. Objects of Desire: Masculinity, Homosociality and Foppishness in Nick Hornby’s High Fidelity and About a Boy  12. Queer Objects and Intermedial Timepieces: Reading s-town (2017)  13. Ephemeraphilia: A Queer History  Dossier: The Argonauts as Queer Object  14. Medea’s Perineum  15. "Feral with Vulnerability": On The Argonauts  16. Theory and the Everyday  17. On Being a Good-Enough Reader of Maggie Nelson’s The Argonauts  18. In the Margins with The Argonauts

Biography



Guy Davidson is Associate Professor of English Literature at the University of Wollongong, Australia. His most recent book is Categorically Famous: Literary Celebrity and Sexual Liberation in 1960s America (2019).



Monique Rooney teaches literature, film and television in the English Program at the Australian National University. She is the author of Living Screens: Melodrama and Plasticity in Contemporary Film and Television (2015). She is the editor of Australian Humanities Review.