Queer Relajo
Feeling the Nightscapes of Mexicanidad
Abstract
In 2015, Mexico City declared itself a “gay-friendly” city and followed up with a gay tourist guide and new laws permitting changes to gender markers on legal documents, sanctioning same-sex marriage, and allowing joint adoption of children. At the same time, patterns of violence and discrimination against women, trans, and queer people have continued throughout the country. In Queer Relajo, David Tenorio argues that while Mexico City aims to bring visibility to queer sociality, the benefits of legitimizing queer space remain unclear. Combining readings of film, digital media, and performance with drag autoethnography, Queer Relajo quite literally plays with how relajo (or playfulness) structures the spaces of queer nightlife in urban contexts by revealing how nighttime intimacy can minimize the paralyzing effects of violence and precarity in a neoliberal Mexico. Considering the political implications of when a queer/trans person is present at night, Tenorio argues that queer feelings of play are not only essential to sexual liberation, but also resist neoliberal commodification and heteronormative extraction.
Keywords
queer play, Queer Mexico, queer relajo, nightscapes, travesti nightlife, queer nightlife, subway cruising, transfeminist praxis, Mexicanidad, queer hemispheric critique, nightly infrastructures, shadow economies, neoliberal Mexico, Mexican performance, queer Mexican culture, Mexican nightlife, queer film, joteria, queer Latinx, urban nightlife, Latin American performance, drag queens, drag performance, nightclubsDOI
10.3998/mpub.12700279ISBN
9780472905188, 9780472905188, 9780472077601, 9780472057603Publisher
University of Michigan PressPublisher website
https://www.press.umich.edu/Publication date and place
2025Series
Triangulations: Lesbian/Gay/Queer Theater/Drama/Performance,Classification
Society and culture: general
Ethnic studies
Media studies


Download