Queer Chimerica
A Speculative Auto/Ethnography of the Cool Child
Abstract
Blending archival work, ethnography, and cultural analysis with memoir, graphic arts, and science fiction, Queer Chimerica unpacks the ways in which the transnational circulation of queer culture, politics, and institutions are structured through the antagonist interdependence of China and the United States. By examining the intersecting timelines of the rise of queer theory and the rise of China in the late Cold War era, Shana Ye explores the relationship between the discourse of queer fluidity and capital’s demands for labor flexibility.
Drawing on rare archival material and oral historical accounts of queer life from the 1950s to the late 2010s, the author shows how these accounts make sense of the variegated landscapes of desires, transformations, and conundrums in postsocialist China. The author illustrates party cadres in the Cultural Revolution, tongzhi activism mediated by the explosive politics of Tiananmen upheaval, HIV/AIDS community outreach workers, feminist artists and digital activists, leftist queer theorists, and fictional bio-engineers, layering these vivid depictions to reveal the poetic messiness of queer world-making. Queer Chimerica offers insight into the governmentality of LGBT rights, the rules of legibility and recognition, the geo- and bio-politics of identity, and the class-ridden appropriation of queer history and community. Thus understanding the production of queerness unveils the uneven distributions of capital, knowledge, affect, and opportunity that reproduce queer precarity and agency.
Keywords
transnational queer studies, LGBTQ, transnational feminism, queer of color critique, China, Chimerica, autoethnography, critical fabulation, queer speculation, queer sci fi, queer social reproduction, queer socialism, queer Marxism, Cold War sexual culture, postcolonialism, postsocialism, queer liberalism, Cultural Revolution, racial capitalism, fungibility, HIVAIDS, NGOs, sexual labor, affect, affective labor, global division of labor, homopostsocialism, homonormativity, homonationalism, homocapitalism, history is what hurts, ku'er, tongzhi, lalaDOI
10.3998/mpub.12531948ISBN
9780472077007, 9780472057009, 9780472904648Publisher
University of Michigan PressPublisher website
https://www.press.umich.edu/Publication date and place
2024Series
Global Queer Asias,Classification
History
Asian history