Queer Ecology Critique - Georgetown 2014
Queer Ecology Critique - Georgetown 2014
Queer Ecology Critique - Georgetown 2014
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1NC - Frontlines
diasporas as they cross not only geopolitical but also institutional boundaries, often abruptly
and impolitely, Alexander's and Gopinath's projects disrupt and denaturalize given ways of
knowing and being "over here" as well as "over there." To borrow a concept from the
postcolonial historian Dipesh Chakrabarty, they provincialize queer studies, area studies, and
diaspora studies, as well as a host of other interlocking and interconnected fields, including
postcolonial theory, transnational feminism, ethnic studies, and Marxism, to name some
immediate examples. Alexander's Pedagogies of Crossing consists of seven chapters, divided
into three sections. As she explains in the book's opening pages, Pedagogies' central metaphor
is drawn from the enforced Atlantic Crossing of the millions of Africans that serviced from the
fifteenth century through the twentieth the consolidation of British, French, Spanish, and Dutch
empires. At the time I conceived of the book in 2000, the world had not yet witnessed the
seismic imperial shifts that characterize this moment. In one [End Page 195] sense, then,
Pedagogies functions as an archive of empire's twenty-first-century counterpart, of oppositions
to it, of the knowledges and ideologies it summons, and of the ghosts that haunt it. (2)
Alexander's three sections cover a wide historical rangefrom the Spaniard Vasco Nuez de
Balboa's colonial conquest of the New World and his feeding of forty Indian "cross-dressers" to
his dogs in 1513; to the criminalization of lesbian and gay sex by neocolonial administrations in
Trinidad and Tobago in 1986 and 1991 and in the Bahamas in 1991; to our contemporary neoimperial moment of U.S. empire, the Defense of Marriage Act, and the Patriot Act, in which
"hegemonic heterosexual masculinity wishes to assert a Pax Americana through imperial
violence undertaken within its own borders as well as in different parts of the world" (183).
Drawing attention to how imperialism and heterosexuality have been historically welded
together by both state and corporate interests, Alexander also examines the remarkable
contemporary shifts in global capitalism that mark "a systemic, interdependent relationship
between heterosexual capital and gay capital" reminiscent of how "black capitalism has been
called on to do a similar kind of work for white capital" (66). In the first section of Pedagogies,
"Transnational Erotics: State, Capital, and the Decolonization of Desire" (chapters 1-2),
Alexander explores this convergence in the phenomenon of gay tourism in the Bahamas and
other sites in the Caribbean, investigating how capitalism reformulates sexuality and sexual
desire to meet its ever-expanding needs. Gay tourism illustrates the flexibility of global
capitalism. Its particular significance, Alexander notes, "lies in its ability to draw together
powerful processes of sexual commodification and sexual citizenship" (27). Alexander deftly
examines the contemporary production of the rights-based consumer citizen embodied in the
figure of the gay white tourist. She notes that while "citizenship based in political rights can be
forfeited, these rights do not disappear entirely. Instead, they get reconfigured and restored
under the rubric of gay consumer at this moment in late capitalism" (71). As brown bodies from
the global South move north to take up employment as domestic labor, in agricultural sectors,
and in service industries, white bodies in the global North move south in search of leisure and
pleasure. In the process, they expand networks of capital, I might note, from general tourism
into areas of sex tourism and medical tourism as well as related industries such as artificial
reproductive technologies (e.g., "womb renting"), transnational adoption, and organ trading.
Alexander's study of gay tourism thus provides one early and important [End Page 196]
genealogy for the current historical emergence of what I have elsewhere described as queer
liberalism. Queer liberalism marks a coming together of economic and political spheres that now
forms the basis for liberal enfranchisement and inclusion of particular U.S. (as well as other
Western) gay and lesbian citizen-subjects petitioning for rights and recognition before the law.
In this regard, Alexander's study of tourism charts the shifting legacies of colonialism and
colonial travel literature and their transformations under the shadows of global capitalism. It
underscores how "racialization and colonization are being consistently written into modernity's
different projects. . . . [and] occasioned by the uneven class relations and differentiations
produced by neo-liberal capital's dispersions" (194). At the same time that Alexander considers
how the shifting routes of global capitalism work to fold once dissident U.S. gay and lesbian
citizen-subjects into its economic and political mandates, she also analyzes how these
movements invoke homophobic responses by postcolonial and neocolonial administrations.
That is, she illustrates how gay and lesbian tourists from the global North are being conscripted
by neoliberal framings of capital, welfare reform, and sexual normalization (in the form of
marriage, adoption, inheritance, etc.) as exemplary consuming citizen-subjects, even as these
neoliberal mandates travel and are transformed in the diaspora into debates about postcolonial
independence and heteronormative self-determination. In this manner, while gays and lesbians
in the metropolitan North are being unevenly incorporated into the cultural imaginary of "We
the People," citizenship in places such as the Bahamas continues to be "premised in
heterosexual terms. . . . Lesbian and gay bodies are made to bear the brunt of the charge of
undermining national sovereignty, while the neocolonial state masks its own role in forfeiting
sovereignty as it recolonizes and renarrativizes a citizenry for service in imperial tourism" (11).
Alexander presents us with a provocative history of the present in which sovereignty is waged in
the domain of sexuality and sexual regulation and asymmetrically on the backs of racialized
queer immigrant bodies. Hannah Arendt famously noted that citizenship is nothing less than the
"right to have rights."1 However, Alexander concludes, critical attention to the problematic of
citizenship, immigration, and alienage in queer diasporas reveals how the category of formal
citizenship is simply too fragile, too fraught, and "far too subject to state manipulation and cooptation for it to become the primary basis on which radical political mobilization is carried on"
(249). If section 1 of Alexander's book presents the various movements of crossings past and
crossings present that produce authorized and dissident bodies in the global system, section 2
(chapters 2-5) of her study, "Maps of Empire, Old and [End Page 197] New," focuses on the
"pedagogies" part of the book's main title. Here, Alexander focuses on how we might "teach for
justice"how we might effectively and ethically intervene in state power, a project
"fundamentally at odds with the project of militarization, which always already imagines an
enemy and acts accordingly to eliminate it" (92). Contesting the privileged connections among
capitalism, democracy, and freedom, Alexander explores how we might contest the state and
corporate production of citizenship normalized within the prism of heterosexuality, a
normalization whose ideological consolidation, as Louis Althusser notes, is largely the
responsibility of the school in secular societies.2 Alexander wonders, "What is democracy to
mean when its association with the perils of empire has rendered it so thoroughly corrupt that it
seems disingenuous and perilous even to deploy the term. Freedom is a similar hegemonic
term, especially when associated with the imperial freedom to abrogate the self-determination
of a people" (17). Through heightened attention to these particular pedagogical queries,
Alexander shows "how free-market democracy might stand in the way of justice [and] how
legacies of transformational struggles in the academy may not be reflected in the everyday life
of an institution" (92). Alexander presents numerous examples of such pedagogic initiatives,
drawn from real-life examples of political intervention into the production of knowledge and the
contestation of state power: from her musing on the social contract and John Locke ("We can't
get to liberalism and rights without John Locke, but we can watch him as he gazes at Indians in
America." [171]) to the recounting of her own battle for retention at the New School in New
York City ("For almost a year, I had experienced that odd kind of alienation that results from
being positioned as an onlooker in the usurpation of my own identity." [153]). In the process,
she seeks to interrupt inherited boundaries of geography, nation, episteme, and identity that
distort vision so that they can be replaced with frameworks and modes of being that enable an
understanding of the dialectics of history, enough to assist in navigating the terms of
they must appear immediately effective and useful if we are to recognize them as solutions
at all. But what if these are only truncated, shortsighted views? What if a vital resistance to politics of domination comes through freeing
that
ourselves from these closed economies of late modernity and their clearly demarcated, controlled, mastered, and useful ends? What if a vital
resistance to politics of domination requires a temporal register other than that of immediate and clear efficacy? As Bataille tells us
sympathetically, It is not easy to realize ones own ends if one must, in trying to do so, carry out a movement that surpasses them (1988
91, 1:21). His orientation toward general economies asks us to think differently from the habituated patterns of our historical present. In his
language,
this historical present is characterized by the fact that judgments concerning the
general situation proceed from a particular point of view (1988 91, 1:39). This particularity can
be outlined, described, pinned down, and its blind spots excavated: I attempt to do so in this
text. But to think generally from and about the historical present may lead us into different
questions and different orientations: it has led me to query systems of domination through the registers of
temporality and spatiality, while framing them through the identity categories (race, gender, sexuality, class, religion)
that are their most explicit historical tools. For example, how does the temporality of a persistent future orientation ground systems of
racism, sexism, and heterosexism? What
Charged, after all, with the task of assuring that we being dead yet live, the Child, as if by nature
(more precisely, as the promise of a natural transcendence of the limits of nature itself), excludes the very pathos from which
the narrator of The Children of Men recoils when comes upon the nonreproductive pleasures of the mind and
senses. For the pathetic quality he projectively locates in nongenerative sexual enjoyment
enjoyment that he views in the absence of futurity as empty, substitutive, pathological exposes
the fetishistic figurations of the Child that the narrator pits against it as legible in terms of identical to those for which
enjoyment without hope of posterity so peremptorily dismissed legible, that is, as nothing more than pathetic and crumbling
defences shored up against our ruins. How better to characterize the narrative project of Children of Men itself, which ends, as
anyone not born yesterday surely expects form the start, with the renewal of our barren and dying race through the miracle of
birth? After all, as Walter Wangerin Jr., reviewing the book for the New York Times, approvingly noted in a sentence delicately
poised between description and performance of the novels pro-creative ideology: If there is a baby, there is a future, there is
If, however, there is no baby and in consequence, no future, then the blame must fall
on the fatal lure of sterile, narcissistic enjoyments understood as inherently destructive of meaning
and therefore as responsible for the undoing of social organization, collective reality, and,
inevitably, life itself. Given that the author of The Children of Men, like the parents of
mankinds children, succumbs so completely to the narcissism all pervasive, selfcongratulatory, and strategically misrecognized that animates pronatalism, why should we
be the least bit surprised when her narrator, facing the futureless future, laments, with what we must call as
straight face, that sex totally divorced from procreation has to become almost meaninglessly
acrobatic? Which is, of course, to say no more than that sexual practice will continue to
allegorize the vicissitudes of meaning so long as the specifically heterosexual alibi of
reproductive necessity obscures the drive beyond meaning driving the machinery of sexual
meaningfulness: so long, that is, as the biological fact of heterosexual procreation bestows the imprimatur of meaningproduction on heterogenital relations. For the Child, whose mere possibility is enough to spirit away the
naked truth of heterosexual sex impregnating heterosexuality, as it were, with the future of
signification by conferring upon it the cultural burden of signifying futurity figures our
identification with an always about-to-be-realized identity. It thus denies the constant threat to the social
redemption.
order of meaning inherent to the structure of Symbolic desire that commits us to pursuing fulfillment by way of a meaning unable,
as meaning, either to fulfill us or, in turn, to be fulfilled because unable to close the gap in identity, the division incised by the
signifier, that meaning, despite itself, means.
If we are indeed teetering on the edge of a massive change in how we live, in how human society itself
is constructed, and in how we relate to the rest of the world, then we were led to this point by the
stories we have told ourselves above all, by the story of civilisation. This story has many
variants, religious and secular, scientific, economic and mystic. But all tell of humanitys
original transcendence of its animal beginnings, our growing mastery over a nature to which
we no longer belong, and the glorious future of plenty and prosperity which will follow when
this mastery is complete. It is the story of human centrality, of a species destined to be lord of
all it surveys, unconfined by the limits that apply to other, lesser creatures. What makes this
story so dangerous is that, for the most part, we have forgotten that it is a story. It has been told so
many times by those who see themselves as rationalists, even scientists; heirs to the
Enlightenments legacy a legacy which includes the denial of the role of stories in making
the world. Humans have always lived by stories, and those with skill in telling them have been
treated with respect and, often, a certain wariness. Beyond the limits of reason, reality
remains mysterious, as incapable of being approached directly as a hunters quarry. With stories, with art, with
symbols and layers of meaning, we stalk those elusive aspects of reality that go undreamed of
in our philosophy. The storyteller weaves the mysterious into the fabric of life, lacing it with the
comic, the tragic, the obscene, making safe paths through dangerous territory. Yet as the myth of
civilisation deepened its grip on our thinking, borrowing the guise of science and reason, we
began to deny the role of stories, to dismiss their power as something primitive, childish,
outgrown. The old tales by which generations had made sense of lifes subtleties and strangenesses were bowdlerised and
packed off to the nursery. Religion, that bag of myths and mysteries, birthplace of the theatre, was
straightened out into a framework of universal laws and moral account-keeping. The dream
visions of the Middle Ages became the nonsense stories of Victorian childhood. In the age of the
novel, stories were no longer the way to approach the deep truths of the world, so much as a
way to pass time on a train journey. It is hard, today, to imagine that the word of a poet was
once feared by a king. Yet for all this, our world is still shaped by stories. Through television, film,
novels and video games, we may be more thoroughly bombarded with narrative material than any
people that ever lived. What is peculiar, however, is the carelessness with which these stories
are channelled at us as entertainment, a distraction from daily life, something to hold our
attention to the other side of the ad break. There is little sense that these things make up the equipment by which
we navigate reality. On the other hand, there are the serious stories told by economists, politicians,
geneticists and corporate leaders. These are not presented as stories at all, but as direct
accounts of how the world is. Choose between competing versions, then fight with those who
chose differently. The ensuing conflicts play out on early morning radio, in afternoon debates
and late night television pundit wars. And yet, for all the noise, what is striking is how much
the opposing sides agree on: all their stories are only variants of the larger story of human
centrality, of our ever-expanding control over nature, our right to perpetual economic
growth, our ability to transcend all limits. So we find ourselves, our ways of telling
unbalanced, trapped inside a runaway narrative, headed for the worst kind of encounter with
reality. In such a moment, writers, artists, poets and storytellers of all kinds have a critical role to
play. Creativity remains the most uncontrollable of human forces: without it, the project of
civilisation is inconceivable, yet no part of life remains so untamed and undomesticated. Words and images can
change minds, hearts, even the course of history. Their makers shape the stories people carry through their lives,
unearth old ones and breathe them back to life, add new twists, point to unexpected endings. It is time to pick up the
threads and make the stories new, as they must always be made new, starting from where we
are.
Alex Johnson, contributing author to the Orion magazine publication, a magazine devoted to ecology and reuniting
people with the harmony of the Earth. Its aim is to make humans more accountable for the world that they live in.
http://www.orionmagazine.org/index.php/mag/5863/m, Issued in the May-June Issue of 2001
I ONCE THOUGHT I KNEW what nature writing was: the pretty, sublime stuff minus the parking lot. The mountain majesty and the
soaring eagle and the ancient forest without the human footprint, the humans themselves, the mess. Slowly, fortunately, that
definition has fallen flat. Where is the line between what is Nature and what is Human? Do I spend equal times in the parking lot and
the forest? Can I really say the parking lot is separate from the forest? What if I end up staying in the parking lot the whole time?
queer. What I mean is this: A) I am a man attracted to men. B) Popular culture has told me that men who are attracted to men are
unnatural, and so C) if my culture is right, then I am unnatural. But D) I dont feel unnatural at all. In fact, the love I share with
another man is one of the most comfortable, honest, real feelings I have ever felt. And so E) I cant help but believe that Nature, and
the corresponding definition of natural, betray reality. From my end of the rainbow, this thing we call Nature is in need of a good
queering. STEP #1: LET GO OF ECOLOGICAL MANDATES. Not so long ago, I read David Quammens essay The Miracle of the Geese.
In the essay, Quammen says this: wild geese, not angels, are the images of humanitys own highest self. By humanity, I can only
assume that he means all humans, collectively, over all of time. They show us the apogee of our own potential, Quammen says.
They live by the same principles that we, too often, only espouse. They embody liberty, grace, and devotion, combining those three
contradictory virtues with a seamless elegance that leaves us shamed and inspired. Quammen seems to be on to something. Who
could possibly be against liberty, grace, or devotion? But then he starts talking about sex. How geese are monogamous. How a male
goose will in fact do better evolutionarily if he is loyal to his mate. They need one another there, male and female, each its chosen
mate, at all times, he says. The evolutionary struggle, it turns out, is somewhat more complicated than a singles bar. Im a little
concerned about the evolutionary struggle thing, but Im still tracking. Life sure is complicated. And then he says this: I was glad to
find an ecological mandate for permanent partnership among animals so estimable as Branta canadensis. Boom. There it is. Geese
are wild. Geese are pure. They arent all mixed up with the problems of civilization and humanity. What we really need is to behave
more like geese. If you are a male, then you must find a female. You must partner with that female, provide for that female, fertilize
that female, and love that female for the rest of your life. If you are a female, well, youll know what to do. When I first read about
Quammens geese, Id been out as bisexual for a year. It was around the second Bush election, and I was writing very serious letters
to my conservative grandparents about my sexuality and politics. Now I know why his essay, so considerate, so passionate, so
genteel, hit me in the gut. I was not natural. STEP #2: STOP GENERALIZING. My instinct is to give Quammen the benefit of the
doubt; it was the late 80s after all. Regardless of his intentions though, Quammens notion that Canada geese offer humans an
ecological mandate not only reinforces a Nature-as-purity mythos (against which humans act), but at an even more basic level, his
assumptions are simply inaccurate: plenty of geese arent straight. In 1999, Bruce Bagemihl published Biological Exuberance, an
impressive compendium of thousands of observed nonheteronormative sexual behaviors and gender nonconformity among animals.
Besides giraffes and warthogs and hummingbirds, theres a section on geese. Researchers have observed that up to 12 percent of
pairs were homosexual in populations of Branta canadensis. And its not because of a lack of potential mates of the opposite gender.
In one case, says Bagemihl, a male harassed a female who was part of a long-lasting lesbian pair and separated her from her
companion, mating with her. However, the next year, she returned to her female partner and their pairbond resumed. Red
squirrels are seasonally bisexual, mounting same-sex partners and other-sex partners with equal fervor. Male boto dolphins
penetrate each others genital slits as well as blow holes. Primates exhibit all sorts of queer behavior between males and males and
females and females. Observing queer
Matthiessens book The Birds of Heaven: Travels with Cranes, Richard White indicts the relentless and blinkered earnestness of
nature writing. White claims that because of its reluctance to deal with paradox, irony, and history, much nature writing reinforces
the worst tendencies of environmentalism. White points out that Matthiessens unflinchingly sincere narrative baldly contradicts
the circumstances: The birds are immortal, timeless, and they transport us back into the deep evolutionary past, writes White.
But then Matthiessen gives us the details. He is sitting in a loud and clattering helicopter during this particular trip to the Eocene. If
you depict cranes as pure and ancient, with no place in this modern world, then you must ignore all those species that have done
about nature means accepting that it will prove you wrong. And
right. And render you generally confused. Nature is mysterious, and our part in the pageant is
shrouded in mystery as well. This means contradiction and paradox and irony. It means that
there will always be an exception. Nature has always humiliated the self-congratulatory
scientist. Lets stop congratulating ourselves. Instead, lets give a round of applause to the
delicious complexity. Let us call this complexity the queer, and let us use it as a verb. Let us
queer our ecology. Cranes can be ancient, but they can also be modern. Might their posterity extend past ours? Weve
inherited a culture that takes its dualisms seriously. Nature, on the one hand, is the ideal, the pure, the holy. On the other hand, it is
evil, dangerous, and dirty. The problem? Theres no reconciliation. We accept both notions as separate but equal truths and then
elegant and faithful until they are shitting all over the lawn and terrorizing young children. Then we poison their eggs. Or shoot
them. What
Im getting at is this: those who traditionally hold more power in societybe they
men over women, whites over any other race, wealthy over poor, straight over queerhave
made their own qualities standard, natural, constructing a vision of the world wherein such
qualities are the norm. And in so doing, theyve made everyone elses qualities perverse,
against Nature, against God. Even Naturedefined impossibly as the nonhumanbecomes unnatural when it does not fit the
desired norm: the gay geese must be affected by hormone pollution! A man who has sex with a man must identify himself by his
perversion, by his difference. If straight is the identity of I am, then gay becomes I am not. Women are not men. Native people are
not white. Nature is not human. Instead of talking about nonconformity, I want to talk about possibility and unnameably complex
reality. What queer can offer is the identity of I am also. I am also human. I am also natural. I am also alive and dynamic and full of
contradiction, paradox, irony. Queer knocks down the house of cards and throws them into the warm wind. STEP #5: DONT FEAR
THE QUEER. If these were still in vogue, I would tell you my thesis is queer ecology. But as Zapatista leader Subcommandante
Marcos told Pierluigi Sullo from the forest of southeast Mexico (and probably from a table in a house in a village in that forest), I
sincerely believe that you are not searching for a solution, but rather for a discussion. Hes right. So what discussion am I looking
for? Well,
first, one that is happening at all. Ive met many kind people (arent we all
sometimes?) who are so afraid of being politically incorrect that they dont speak at allwell,
at least not about race or gender or sex (this on top of the three taboos of religion, politics,
and money). How do I know how I should refer to Indians? Or blacks? Or gays? Or bums, for
that matter? Its just all so complicated now. Queer, then, remains a gesture of hands under
the table. A wink. In the recent past, conversationalists have at least had the weather to fall back on. But the record heat of
late with its strange winds of change have whipped away that golden ticket of banality too. So people stop talking, at least about
difference, or flux, or complication, altogether. And the floor is left to those who are the loudest and quickest, and who never had
any intention of complicating their conversation with anyone or anything that doesnt conform to their tidy but limited worldview.
STEP #6: ENJOY THE PERFORMANCE. The
as the contradictions wrapped up within the writers very self. Such a writer will write about the parking lot
and the invasive knapweed and the unseasonably warm weather and how he or she is undeniably mixed up in the complications.
The poet James Broughton calls it the mystery of the total self. Henry Chandler Cowles called it ecology. It is the relation within the
A queer ecology is a
liberatory ecology. It is the acknowledgment of the numberless relations between all things
alive, once alive, and alive once again. No man can categorize those relations without lying.
Categories offer us a way of organizing our world. They are tools. They are power.
Acknowledge the power. Acknowledge the lie. STEP #7: IM DONE WITH STEPS.
human and the natural and the god and the geese and the past, present, future, body-self-other.
1NC Anti-Blackness
THE BLACK ATLANTIC HAS ALWAYS BEEN THE QUEER ATLANTIC
In the bellies of slave ships, queer relationships were POWERFULLY and
SILENTLY forged out of common experience. Ties developed within segregated
holds allowed slaves to resist the commodification of their bodies by FEELING
AND FEELING for their shipmates. The ocean OBSCURES all origins, connecting
race, nationality, sexuality, and gender. Thinking through crosscurrents
navigates the queer black Atlantic, bringing together ENSLAVED and AFRICAN
and BRUTALITY and DESIRE. Prescribing a notion of social death upon the black
body negates the importance of EXPERIENCE and FLUDITY in constructing
identity.
Tinsley 8 (Dept of English, African American and African Studies @ University of Minnesota
2k8
Omiseeke Natasha-; BLACK ATLANTIC, QUEER ATLANTIC: Queer Imaginings of the Middle
Passage; GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies, Vol 14, Number 2-3, pp. 191-215;
http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/journal_of_lesbian_and_gay_studies/v014/14.2-3.tinsley.pdf) DB
And water,
women use for their female lovers: figuratively mi mati is my girl, but
literally it means mate, as in shipmate she who survived the Middle
Passage with me. Sedimented layers of experience lodge in this small word.
During the Middle Passage, as colonial chronicles, oral tradition, and anthropological studies tell us,
captive African women created erotic bonds with other women in the sexsegregated holds, and captive African men created bonds with other men.
In so doing, they resisted the commodification of their bought and sold
bodies by feeling and feeling for their co-occupants on these ships. I evoke this
history now not to claim the slave ship as the origin of the black queer Atlantic. The ocean obscures all
origins, and neither ship nor Atlantic can be a place of origin. Not of
blackness, though perhaps Africans first became negros and negers during
involuntary sea transport; not of queerness, though perhaps some Africans
were first intimate with same-sex shipmates then. Instead, in relationship
to blackness, queerness, and black queerness, the Atlantic is the site of what
the anthropologist Kale Fajardo calls crosscurrents. Oceans and seas are important sites for
differently situated people. Indigenous Peoples, fisherpeople, seafarers,
sailors, tourists, workers, and athletes. Oceans and seas are sites of inequality
and exploitation resource extraction, pollution, militarization, atomic
testing, and genocide. At the same time, oceans and seas are sites of beauty
The affirmative falsely evokes the Middle Passage and slave experience as the
AUTHENTIC ORIGINAL site of African diaspora identities and discourses. The
ocean WHISPERS the stories of the diasporic populations, telling of their pain
and feelings as they were transformed into enslaved people. The Subaltern can
speak from her SUBMARINE space, but we must listen CLOSELY for her voice.
Tinsley 8 (Dept of English, African American and African Studies @ University of Minnesota
2k8
Omiseeke Natasha-; BLACK ATLANTIC, QUEER ATLANTIC: Queer Imaginings of the Middle
Passage; GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies, Vol 14, Number 2-3, pp. 191-215;
http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/journal_of_lesbian_and_gay_studies/v014/14.2-3.tinsley.pdf) DB
If the black queer Atlantic brings together such long-lowing history, why is black queer studies situated as a dazzlingly new
discovery in academia a hybrid, mermaidlike imagination that has yet to find its land legs? In the last five years, black
queer and queer of color critiques have navigated innovative directions in African diaspora studies as scholars like Ferguson
and E. Patrick Johnson push the discipline to map intersections between racialized and sexualized bodies.
Passage?4 In what follows, I explore such queer black Atlantic oceanographies by comparing
two narrative spaces. One is a site where an imagination of this Atlantic struggles to emerge: in academic theorizing,
specifically in water metaphors of African diaspora and queer theory. The second is
a site where such imaginations emerge through struggle: in Caribbean creative writing, specifically in AnaMaurine Laras tale of queer migration in Erzulies Skirt (2006) and Dionne Brands relections on the Middle Passage in A Map
to the Door of No Return (2001). I turn to these literary texts as a queer, unconventional, and
imaginative archive of the black Atlantic.5 And the literary texts turn to ocean
waters themselves as an archive, an ever-present, ever-reformulating
record of the unimaginable. Lara and Brand plumb the archival ocean materially, as space that
churns with physical remnants, dis(re)membered bodies of the Middle
Passage, and they plumb it metaphorically, as opaque space to convey the drowned,
disremembered, ebbing and lowing histories of violence and healing in the
African diaspora. Water overflows with memory, writes M. Jacqui Alexander, delving into
the Middle Passage in Pedagogies of Crossing. Emotional memory. Bodily memory. Sacred memory.6 Developing a
black feminist epistemology to uncover submerged histories particularly
those stories of Africans forced ocean crossings that traditional
historiography cannot validate Alexander eloquently argues that searchers must explore
outside narrow conceptions of the factual to get there. Such explorations
would involve muddying divisions between documented and intuited,
material and metaphoric, past and present so that who is remembered
and how is continually being transformed through a web of interpretive
systems . . . collapsing, ultimately, the demarcation of the prescriptive past,
present, and future of linear time.7 While Alexander searches out such crossings in Afro-Atlantic
ceremony, Lara and Brand explore similarly fluid embodied-imaginary, historical-contemporary spaces through the literal and
figurative passages of their historical fictions. The subaltern can speak in submarine space, but
it is hard to hear her or his underwater voice, whispering (as Brand writes) a
thousand secrets that at once wash closer and remain opaque, resisting
closure.
2NC Backlines
Aesthetics Anti-Blackness
Ships were the living means by which the points within that Atlantic world were
joined. They were mobile elements that stood for the shifting spaces in
between the fixed places that they connected. . . . For all these reasons, the
ship is the first of the novel chronotypes pre supposed by my attempts to
rethink modernity versus the history of the black Atlantic. Paul Gilroy, The
Black Atlantic
Water is the first thing in my imagination. Over the reaches of the eyes at
Guaya when I was a little girl, I knew that there was still more water. All
beginning in water, all ending in water. Turquoise, aquamarine, deep green,
deep blue, ink blue, navy, blue-black cerulean water. . . . Water is the first thing
in my memory. The sea sounded like a thousand secrets, all whispered at the
same time. In the daytime it was indistinguishable to me from air. . . . The same
substance that carried voices or smells, music or emotion. Dionne Brand, A
Map to the Door of No Return
I, and my lesbian sisters and gay brothers . . . are not a new fashion. . . . We
return to the sea and the shores and once upon a time, which transposes into
this time, which it always was. . . . the past simultaneously forever embedded
in the present, in the pain and inevitable horrors confronted by conscientious
unblinking memory, in the tragedies and occasional triumphs of history always
raveled by so much needless suffering, by the unbearable human misery that
we must not, for our collective sakes and the continued growth of this body we
call humanity, ever be denied. Thomas Glave, Words to Our Now:
Imagination and Dissent
And larger and larger and ever larger than me, O sea: water: waves and foam. .
. . How the sea would take I and wrap I deep in it. How it would drown I, mash I
up, wash I into bits. . . . And so I does say now that I know the sea this same sea
like I does know the back of me hand, says I: these currents, these waves, these
foams. . . . Let this sea not take I, but let it talk to I. Let it sing. The sea, the sea.
Yes, water. Waves. Wetness, poundsurf, that I does love. Thomas Glave,
Words to Our Now
queerness churns silverly in her overlow, in the sea- like capacity to desire
beyond the brutality of history, nationality, enslavement, and immigration
that she models for drowned shipmates and endangered yola- mates.
Neither disembodied metaphor nor oozing wound, her fluid desire becomes
a resistant, creative praxis that, as Brand describes diasporic art, experiments with being
celebratory, even with the horrible, lowing together unexpected erotic
linkages even, especially, in spaces of global violence and inequity. 27 No matter
what devastation she traverses La Mar keeps desiring, and this is the queer feeling that metaphorically and
materially connects her to African diaspora immigrants past and present. La Mar as she appears here is not
only a mirror for black Atlantic queerness; she is a black Atlantic that
mirrors queerly. Her song creates figures of comparison where terms are
not equated but rather diffracted and recomposed, reflected in a broken
mirror whose fractures are part of their meaning-creation. Let me point to two examples
of mis-mirrored terms in this passage: languages (Spanish/English) and couples (yolabound/shipwrecked). In the second
paragraph a centered, italicized Spanish-language poem whose distinct visual arrangement recalls the vvs (figures drawn
on the ground in Voudoun ceremonies) that La Mar sings of interrupts standard English prose; although the next
paragraph offers an indirect, still bilingual translation (Amor, I long for your kisses), this translation remains notably inexact.
Amplifying this chain of repetition with difference, the words of the poem are then revealed to be really spoken in the
spectacular figure of La Mar that joins them appears as the surplus the
overflow, the temporal and cultural gap that cannot be dissolved by their
connection. La Mar whispers this in our ears, too: in queer diasporic
imagining, the gap the material difference always matters and must be
part of any figuration that makes meaningful connection possible. The
maritime metaphors of Gilroy and Bentez-Rojo move toward a kind of closure, the
Atlantic transmuting into a horizon of hybridity and the cunnic Caribbean healing orgasmically
in order to become the vehicles these authors desire for diasporic and regional identities. Yet such
closure is
made possible only by washing over important materialities and
multiplicities in visions of diaspora and region. La Mars unclosable,
untranslatable language of beauty and pain churns differently, crossing
instead in turbulent, excessive currents of diffracting meanings. As Micaela floats
literally suspended in water between Africa, the Caribbean, and North America, La Mars queer mirroring
provides a medium for conceiving what it means for diasporic Africans to
emerge from her waters whole and broken: brutalized and feeling,
connected to the past and separate from it, divided from other diasporic
migrants and linked to them. To think the black queer Atlantic, not only
must its metaphors be mate- rially informed; they must be internally
discontinuous, allowing for differences and inequalities between situated
subjects that are always already part of both diaspora and queerness. They
must creatively figure what Rinaldo Walcott imag- ines as a rethinking of community that
might allow for different ways of coher- ing into some form of recognizable
political entity . . . [where] we must confront singularities without the
willed effort to make them cohere into oneness; we must struggle to make a
community of singularities.28 The black Atlantic is not just any ocean, and
what is queer about its fluid amor is that it is always churning, always
different even from itself.
Queer theory gains its roots from the suffering of enslaved people on their
voyages across the ocean. Any discussion of queer theory is a discussion of
race. The queer movement is even based off of the geography of the black
Caribbean. They are No single islands, but an archipelago of island chains, all
linked together and united, just as the different bodies that encompass the
queer community are all intertwined but separate.
Tinsley 8 (Dept of English, African American and African Studies @ University of Minnesota
2k8
Omiseeke Natasha-; BLACK ATLANTIC, QUEER ATLANTIC: Queer Imaginings of the Middle
Passage; GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies, Vol 14, Number 2-3, pp. 191-215;
http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/journal_of_lesbian_and_gay_studies/v014/14.2-3.tinsley.pdf) DB
And in the last fifteen years queer
purity undergird the gender norms disturbed in her initial consideration of fluidity of identities, she does so belatedly and
between parentheses (as part of a long list of clarifications to her discussion of drag in the 1999 preface to Gender Trouble).31
Sedgwicks list, somewhat differently, momentarily parts the waves of queer theorys uncommented whiteness as race fades in
subtly with the African American associated terms bulldagger and Snap! queen. Not only is this faint
metaphoricity as they congeal through time into concepts, Butler aptly remarks in this
preface. And in a rare autobiographical moment, the short text offers one image of literal liquidity that informs the metaphoric
fluidity (threatening to congeal into a concept) in this foundational text of queer theory. Just after her discussion of
performativity, Butler provides an insight into the literal starting place for Gender Trouble. Explaining how her involvement in
lesbian and gay politics on the East Coast of the United States informed her writing of this academic text, she recounts: At the
same time that I was ensconced in the academy, I was also living a life outside those walls, and though Gender Trouble is an
academic book, it began, for me, with a crossing-over, sitting on Rehoboth Beach, wondering whether I could link the different
sides of my life.34 Meaning place for all, Rehoboth is an Atlantic resort town that boasts beautiful, Caribbean bright white
sand beaches and has become one of the Northeasts premier gay and lesbian summer getaways. As Butler suggests, it is
situated at a crosscurrent: Water, water everywhere. . . . Bounded on the east by the mighty Atlantic Ocean, and on the west
by Rehoboth Bay and Indian River Bay, gushes a promotional Web site.35 This crosscurrent has a black Atlantic history, from
the eighteenth-century docking of slave ships in Delawares harbors to a maritime version of the underground railroad that
passed through the states waters in the nineteenth century. But by the late twentieth century that history had been largely
washed out of sight. Over 98 percent of the citys population is now white and, as Alexs Pates West of Rehoboth depicts,
people of color remain semi-invisible, concentrated in segregated neighborhoods.36 So when Butler sits at the crossing- over
of Rehoboth Beach, the difference that prominently marked its shores would be that of sexuality the beach-combing gay and
lesbian tourists who make the resort what it is, a site of play and mobility for sexual rather than racial others. Now, if this is
where one of queer theorys most influential texts emerged and a site that (Butler suggests) has metaphoric valences, I want to
extend that metaphor by saying: frequently, prominent queer theorists continue to work from Rehoboth Beach. This is an
important place from which to work, certainly, a site steeped in possibilities for meaningful confluences between thinking
sexuality and thinking race. But theorists have a tendency to wait (figuratively) for
queers of color to arrive on Rehoboths shores in the hopes that they will join the
sexuality- centered signifying games already set up . . . in the hopes they
will take up theories of performativity and rework them through race, for
example. And they wait rather than seriously engage how some of queer
theorys fundamental prem- ises including its emphasis on abstract rather
than concrete crossings-over, its references to places like Rehoboth without engagement with their
geographic and cultural specificity need to change in order to make possible deeply
productive meetings between sexuality and race. That is, they welcome the
appearance of queer of color scholarship without rigorously confronting the
exclusionary prac- tices that marginalize queer global southern experiences.
To become an expan- sively decolonizing practice, queer theory must adjust
its vision to see what has been submerged in the process of unmarking
whiteness and global northernness: the black Atlantic, New England Bay, and Indian River
of queer crossings-over, the intersecting beach topoi of slavery and
liberation, coerced work and unconventional play, unmarked whiteness and
invisible blackness, flesh exposed for vacation and for auction. Rehoboths layered
present and past exemplifies the need to engage specific, situated histories and the difference they make. Water is
only literally transparent, and the imagination of fluidity inspired by the Rehoboth
or the San Francisco bays may not be the same as that inspired by the
southern Atlantic or the eastern Caribbean. Nor may its metaphorics be as playful as
waves of punk bands, snap! queens, butch bottoms. . . . Just as travel does
not offer the same image of freedom to the gay undocumented immigrant
that it does to the queer cosmopolitan, conceptualizations of the fluid
change when we approach islands where the sea simultaneously carries the
violent history of the Middle Passage, a present of yolas and tourist cruises,
and a possible future of interisland connections.
La Mar embraces all. The ocean speaks many languages. Black queer theory is
not an exclusive argument. We must continue finding intersections between
black suffering and queer theory with other forms of oppression to continue
growing like an ocean.
Tinsley 8 (Dept of English, African American and African Studies @ University of Minnesota
2k8
Omiseeke Natasha-; BLACK ATLANTIC, QUEER ATLANTIC: Queer Imaginings of the Middle
Passage; GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies, Vol 14, Number 2-3, pp. 191-215;
http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/journal_of_lesbian_and_gay_studies/v014/14.2-3.tinsley.pdf) DB
The ocean does speak many languages, and I am only a novice linguist.
So I have tried to present academic writing that is fluid, that in some way explores
what it would mean to perform the oceanness that it thematizes. I have tried to
broach more whispered secrets than I could draw out and raise more questions than
can be answered, to pick apart metaphors, put them together without closure. At
this point, then, I do not want to conclude or pretend to. Instead, I want to end with
thoughts on some of the challenges that the Atlantic offers the border waters of
African diaspora, queer, and queer African diaspora studies. The longnavigated Atlantic tells us that, like Brands resurrection of the
marooned, queer Africana studies must explore what it means
to conceive our field historically and materially. Like Lara and Brand,
crossings-over, and indeed Brand once generously thanked me for reading that book that way.39 Instead of
foregrounding fluxes of gender or sexuality this work rushes into larger bodies, larger openings. The text is a tactile,
Map through the sea in between is fluidly genred writing that moves between childhood memories and family stories, ships
logs and colonial maritime chronicles, and contemporary echoes of the slave trade in the conflux of immigrants from the
Caribbean, North America, Europe, and Africa that form their own human sea in Toronto.41 Its creative project is one Brand
identifies as always underway in diaspora: to record disruptions that continue on the other side of the door
and reclaim the black body from that domesticated, captive, open space it
has become.42 This project is fundamentally queer, in a black Atlantic,
crosscurrents way. Rather than eroticize individual bodies, it offers what Chela
Sandoval calls a social erotics: a compass that traces historical linkages that
were never sup- posed to be visible, remembers connections that counteract
imperial desires for global southern disaggregation, and puts together the
fragmented experiences of those whose lives, as Butler writes, were never
supposed to qualify as the human and the livable. 43 Like the texts of Butler and
Sedgwick, Brands work also generates lists that crash onto her pages like waves but join unexpected terms in
concatenations that recall the chains of slave ships more than those of sexual play. Toward the end of her Map, Brand imagines
the continued haunting of the black Atlan- tic by those literally and figuratively drowned in the Middle Passage, those she calls
the marooned of the diaspora. For these marooned she writes a ruttier: which is, she explains, a long poem
ruttier for the marooned, Brand includes another kind of ruttier titled Arriving at Desire. But just as Brands ruttier for the
marooned never goes in expected directions, the desire she charts here never becomes sexual or even interpersonal. After a
description of childhood reading experiences that introduced her to desires both political and erotic, the narrator recounts
how she came to write her novel At the Full and Change of the Moon. Like Butler on Rehoboth Beach, Brand conceived her text
at a crossing-over between land and water, between experience of the real and vision of the (im)possible. Her inspi- ration
came while contemplating maritime artifacts in a Port of Spain museum overlooking the sea, and her converging descriptions
of the museums inside and outside become the Maps most erotic description: As you crest the hill, there is the
ocean, the Atlantic, and there a fresh wide breeze relieving the deep lush of heat. From atop this hill you can see
over the whole town. Huge black cannons overlook the ocean, the har- bour, and the towns perimeter. If you look right, if your
eyes could round the point, you would see the Atlantic and the Caribbean in a wet blue embrace. If
you come here at night you will surprise lovers, naked or cloth- ing askew, groping hurriedly or dangerously languorous,
draped against the black gleaming cannons of George III.47 Before we ever come to these lovers, Brand at once gestures
toward and leaves opaque two queer desires: the Atlantics desire for the Caribbean it meets in
a wet blue embrace, and the narrators desire for the ocean she describes so erotically. This desire is
queerly gendered, since ocean, sea, and Brand rolling and writing in opposition to the black
cannons would all normatively be feminized. It is also queer in a black Atlantic
way, since it ascribes feeling to bodies of water and of African females
that, in colonizers and slave traders maps of the world, were never
supposed to feel. The queerness of this sensuality is the drive Brand describes two paragraphs
earlier: the diasporic search to put the senses back together again, a sensual re-membering that George IIIs cannons, the
policing of sea and of diasporic bodies, cannot stop.48
What puts together Atlantic and Caribbean, viewers and lovers in this passage is another list, a string of conditionals: If you
look . . . if your eyes could round . . . you would see. . . . If you come . . . you will surprise. Like the ruttiers litany of negatives,
this conjunction of if . . . would, if . . . will traces some complexities of the black queer time the Map moves through. The
MORTIMER-SANDILANDS
2k5
Catriona (Cate)- Her work lies at the intersections of queer and feminist theory, environmental philosophy and political theory,
and cultural studies. She is the author of The Good-Natured Feminist: Ecofeminism and the Quest for Democracy (Minnesota, 1999), the coeditor (with Rebecca Raglon and Melody Hessing) of This Elusive Land: Women and the Canadian Environment (UBC, 2004), and is
working on a manuscript called Pastoral Traditions, Sexual Subversions: Lesbian Histories of Nature Writing; Unatural Passions?:
Notes Toward a Queer Ecology; INVISIBLE CULTURE, An electronic journal for visual culture, Issue 9;
https://www.rochester.edu/in_visible_culture/Issue_9/sandilands.html
Returning rather abruptly to main point of this essay, ecofeminism and environmental justice
open our eyes to the fact that nature organizes and is organized by complex
power relations. What queer ecology adds is the fact that these power
relations include sexuality. But what does an analysis of environmental issues grounded in a queer
perspective reveal? What does it mean to think about nature as a site in which the social relations of sexuality are played out,
and vice versa? I will approach these questions in three, related ways. First, I will explore some of the historical
Hill 4
Robert J, University of Georgia at Athens, Activism as Practice: Some Queer Considerations from New Directions for
Adult and Considering Education, 85-94, http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ace.141/pdf
Life at the contact zone of theory and activism manifests itself in numerous expressions. Some
2k5
Catriona (Cate)- Her work lies at the intersections of queer and feminist theory, environmental philosophy and political theory,
and cultural studies. She is the author of The Good-Natured Feminist: Ecofeminism and the Quest for Democracy (Minnesota, 1999), the coeditor (with Rebecca Raglon and Melody Hessing) of This Elusive Land: Women and the Canadian Environment (UBC, 2004), and is
working on a manuscript called Pastoral Traditions, Sexual Subversions: Lesbian Histories of Nature Writing; Unatural Passions?:
Notes Toward a Queer Ecology; INVISIBLE CULTURE, An electronic journal for visual culture, Issue 9;
https://www.rochester.edu/in_visible_culture/Issue_9/sandilands.html
Queering ecological politics
The final section of this paper turns our attention away from the ways in which sexuality and ecology have been linked as
power relations having a negative (if still productive) influence on both queers and nature, and toward the ways in which a
Gay
culture, in the mainstream which, in all of these shows, means affluent urban white men is
extraordinarily tied to lifestyle consumerism. As Andil Gosine writes, gay men, the story goes,
the Straight Guy, I would hardly nominate queers as the worlds best nature stewards. Quite the opposite, in fact:
shop. Urban gay men live in chic condominium apartments, buy a lot of hair and body care products, [and] have great taste in
cars, clothes, and interior design. 21 Although one might be tempted to celebrate in these shows the general
Not only is this band of North American acceptance of queer culture thus
very narrow, but the continuing mainstream political process by which
queers strive to be accepted in consumer society limits the full scope of
political possibility potential in queer communities. For example, although I would be lying if
I didnt say that I was moved by Canadas legalization of same-sex marriage, our pursuit, as queers, for a family form just like
heterosexual marriage" seems, to me, to blunt the critical potential inherent in the fact that queers have developed alternative
forms of family that do not necessarily replicate all of the problems of legal, nuclear heterosexuality. To quote Tony Kushner,
its entirely conceivable that we will one day live miserably in a thoroughly ravaged world in which lesbians and gay men can
marry and serve openly in the army and thats it. 22 My argument is thus that we should reorient our
urban green spaces as sites for both individual sexual contact and
what is significant about public sex in parks is that it is public, meaning that it overtly challenges heteronormative
understandings of what is appropriate behavior for public, natural spaces. Here, we must remember that public parks
are disciplinary spaces, in which a very narrow band of activities is sanctioned, practiced, and experienced; only certain kinds
of nature experience are officially allowed. In this context, one can consider public gay sex as a sort ofdemocratization of
natural space, in which different communities can experience the park in their own ways, and in which a wider range of
natural experiences thus comes to be possible. As one frequenter of public parks in Toronto related of a sexual encounter in
Queens Park (no pun intended):
I stayed there because I loved storms, love to see nature in its violence. We enjoyed ourselves so much, and of course the rain
had swept in and we were all wet, and all those soggy clothes to put on. But it was joyous. I love wild, spontaneous moments
like that where it just goes crazy and its wild. 25
Clearly, wild sex in a public park in a thunderstorm is a far cry from the prim courtship rituals embodied in Olmsteds formal
promenades. Whileit is important to point out that park sex is controversial in itself, it seems that gay mens re-appropriation
of these natural spaces in fact fosters an alternative and critical awareness of urban nature. Such awareness has
Turning to the lesbian community, one can see different but related patterns
of resistance to the pairing of heterosexuality and nature. Like their gay
male counterparts but with very different gender politics involved, lesbian
authors have also used pastoral literary traditions to develop a reverse
discourse that argues for the naturalness of womens same-sex love
relationships. These "lesbian pastoral literatures have a history that extends well back into the nineteenth century,
for example into the writings of such authors as Sarah Orne Jewett and Willa Cather. In the early twentieth century, Radclyffe
Hall made overt use of pastoral conventions in The Well of Loneliness to paint a picture of her gender-invert protagonist,
Stephen Gordon, in which Stephens identity was very natural, and morally very positive. The problem for Stephen was not her
nature; it was the artificial heterosexism and social intolerance that surrounded her as she made her way into adulthood.
More recent lesbian authors have, in fact, consciously taken on the idea that
women in lesbian relationships might experience nature differently, and
possibly more positively, than is generally the case within the confines of
compulsory heterosexuality. Most obviously, lesbian feminists have
consciously connected a radical feminist politics with a radical ecological
politics. In the 1970s and 1980s, for example, utopian and science fiction writers such as
Sally Miller Gearhart overtly tied the destruction of nature to patriarchal,
heterosexist social institutions. In her 1979 novel The Wanderground, she envisioned a world in which
women, freed from oppressive male influence, were able to live together in polygynous sexual relationships in a rural world
that was actively and intentionally separate from destructive, male-dominated cities. In that woman-centred world, women
were better able to find both rich erotic and social relations to one another, and rich social and erotic relations to their natural
environments, all of which were actively prevented in heterosexual, patriarchal societies. Thus, such novels actively
on the idea of rural nature as a privileged set of spaces in which women could find, "in the healing beauty of nature, a safe
space to live, to work, to help create the womens culture [they] dreamed of. 27 These wimmins lands had complex
ecological goals, ranging from opening rural landscapes to women by transforming heterosexual relations of property
ownership; to withdrawing the land from patriarchal-capitalist agricultural production and reproduction; to symbolically
reinscribing the land with lesbian erotic presence. While many of these communities have
disappeared, others are still there as living examples of what it looks like to
live ones life intentionally as a lesbian ecologist. To quote one long-term resident: Womens
land, lesbian land [is] land that women have purchased and are living on [as lesbians]. It is intended to serve lesbians, not
only the ones who live here, and it is intended to be lesbian land evermore. And moving to the country stretches who a
lesbian is. 28
ecology is both about seeing beauty in the wounds of the world and taking
responsibility to care for the world as it is. I leave her the last words: We assume
responsibility for a place when we are able to look both backward at the
burden of its history and forward at our responsibility for those parts of its
future that lie under human control. 31
no longer tolerable (if it ever was) to put ones sexual identity on hold
in order to work on environmental issues, and it will be no great achievement if queers gain full civil rights on a planet with few liveable areas due
to climate change (where would we go for the honeymoon?). In Queer
Ecologies, thirteen radical environmental scholars make clear the material and conceptual
connections that conirm eco-queers wont have to choose between ecology and sexuality, and
neither will anyone else: these essays deal decisive blows to ecophobia and erotophobia alike.1
Mortimer-Sandilands past decade of scholarship developing the in- tersections of queer ecopolitics and ecocriticism has laid the theoretical groundwork for this volume, and many of the
contributors acknowledge her work in their chapters. She and co-editor Erickson created the
deeply feminist and democratic opportunity for the contributors to meet in To- ronto to discuss
the irst drafts of their chapters, opening the editing proc- ess to a multi-directional plurality of
dialogues that ensures there is less repetition and more cross-referencing, more collective
theory-building among the chapters than readers expect from more hierarchically-edited
volumes. Each chapter develops the books central aim of queering ecol- ogy and greening
queer politics by demonstrating the powerful ways in which understandings of nature inform
discourses of sexuality*and+ understandings of sex inform discourses of nature (23)
The introduction offers an excellent overview of the conceptual ques- tions raised by eco-queer
perspectives, and I can easily imagine assigning this 47-page chapter in a class on gender
studies, ecocriticism, environ- mental politics, or queer theory. It establishes the need for this
inquiry by providing a historical narrative of the ways that notions of sexuality have shaped
social constructions of nature in the familiar concepts and crea- tion of wilderness, national and
urban parks, and car camping. Moreover, ts enticing: who ever heard of the performance group
Fuck For Forests, or eco-activists like the Lesbian Rangers, and their khaki-clad force of Eager
Beavers? Of course we want to know more! Drawing on a range of queer and ecological
theories rather a single orthodox perspective, the volumes introduction and essays develop
the argument for queering environmentalisms and greening queer theory in three steps:
challenging the heteronormativity of investigations into the sexuality of nature, exploring
the intersections between queer and ecological inlections of bio/politics (including spatial
politics), and ultimately queering environ- mental affect, ethics, and desire (3031).
Heterocentrism charges queer sexualities with being against nature, so the irst step in a queer
ecology requires reviewing the literature on non- human same-sex acts, and scrutinizing the
deinition of species boundaries. In this irst section on queer sex, queer animality, the
frequency with which Bruce Bagemihl (1999), Noreen Giffney and Myra Hird (2008; Hird 2004a,
2004b), Donna Haraway (2004), and Joan Roughgarden (2004) are cited proves the eco-queer
canon is already being formed. We begin with well-known feminist science studies scholar Stacy
Alaimo reviewing the wealth of documented queer animal behaviors, making sexual diver- sity
part of a larger biodiversity (55). Here, we learn that Norway has already hosted the irst-ever
Exhibition on Animal Homosexuality, aptly titled Against Nature? (2007) and displaying
multiple sexual behaviors that challenge the heterosexist interpretation of same-sex activity
between animals as anything but sex. Alaimo deftly points out the limitations of cultural
criticism that casts animal sex into the separate sphere of na- ture, at the same time that
scientiic accounts of queer animal sex have rendered them too cultural, so as to render them
not sexual (62). Like human animals, other animal species are both biological and cultural beings: if not, how shall we explain simultaneously sexual and cultural facts that many primates
not only use, but manufacture, objects to aid with masturbation (61)? Alaimos survey of
animal sex and gender provides data that will complicate the foundations of feminist theory.
*and+ also denaturalize familiar categories and assumptions in queer theory and gay cultures
(65). Noel Sturgeons essay on Penguin Family Values, the only reprinted essay in the volume,
takes up the issue of reproductive justice by bring- ing an ecocritical lens to examining the
nature documentary The March of the Penguins (2005) and the childrens film Happy Feet
(2006): both present penguins as popular symbols that conlate heterosexist family ideals with
the need to resist environmental threats (118). Asking what kind of environmental politics can
encompass the threat to both Emperor penguins and Alaskan Natives from global climate
change?, Sturgeon criticizes Al Gores An Inconvenient Truth for the convenient omission of
Arctic indigenous peoples and the foregrounding of polar bears (along with the ilms antipopulation rhetoric backgrounding the problem of resource consumptiona topic taken up by
other authors in this book, notably Andil Gosine). To combat this heterocentric and ethnocentric
dis- course, Sturgeon brings forward the childrens book And Tango Makes Three (2005) about
the gay penguins in Central Park Zoo, as well as the plight of Arctic native peoples in an era of
intense oil extraction and cli- mate change. Environmentalists should not depict
environmentalism as a heteronormative family romance, for such rhetoric obscures the
need to put pressure on corporations to change their labor practicesinclud- ing health care,
childcare, pay equity, and global labor practices. *issues that are+ important to real family
values...as part of an environmentalist agenda (12627). At the conceptual level, the rhetoric
of penguin fam- ily values limits ideas of what is natural and obscures natures more
agentive practices (128). Sturgeon invokes Donna Haraways (2004) concept of
naturecultures to describe the mutually-constituted relation- ships among nature and
culture, nature and human, human and animal, and human and machine (128). Scrutinizing the
heteronormative deinition of species as interbreed- ing natural populations that are
reproductively isolated from other such groups, Ladelle McWhorter documents the ways that
the concept of species has often brought great harm to both racial and sexual minori- ties over
the past two hundred years and has been used to underwrite discourses that historically have
condemned sexual variation such as slavery and eugenics (75). Acknowledging claims that
sexual diversity persists because it contributes to our species health, strength, and pros- pects
for survival, McWhorter nonethless cautions against resting pro- queer arguments on the
concept of species (91). Doing so gives too much authority to science for deciding social,
political, and moral questions, when science is *at best+ an important tool and component in
the proc- ess...not a inal arbiter (96). If sexual and gender diversity are valuable in human
society, she concludes, they are so regardless of their value for species preservation or
evolution (96). Here, McWhorters perceptive argument offers a critical foundation stone for
queer ecologys relevance to science studies and cultural studies alike. Like Sturgeon, David
Bells Queernaturecultures employs and aug- ments Haraways term, using the examples of
sex-positive performance activism in defense of forests (yes, Fuck For Forests), nudist cultures,
and the whole project of reclaiming queer animals as necessary but not suf- icient strategies for
ideological transformation, since they do not chal- lenge but rather rest on the nature/culture
divide (142). The project of reclaiming queer animals, Bell explains, is driven by a political
impera- tive to naturalize the rights of sexual minoritiesbut this project sits at odds...with
the powerful anti-essentialism of queer theory and politics (139). Strategic essentialism has
been used to defend queer civil rights against discrimination, to challenge the logic of the
religious-based ex- gay movement, and to argue against gay contagion using the born gay
claim. Rather than promote the division between theory and politics in the contexts of
queer/environmentalism, Bell argues for reconnecting to sex in ways that renaturaliz*e+
humanity...by reminding us of our own embodied naturalness (137) and acknowledging the
impossibility of delinking nature from culture. His questions about public sexwhat would it
mean for our understandings of public sex to think about na- ture-as-public? What does it mean
to talk of the publicness of nature? Andwhat does that mean for the politics of nature and the
politics of sex? (144)certainly leave readers thinking. The essays in section two address
queering environmental politics by examining the environmental and spatial dimension of
sexual politics, and the implicit sexualization of environments. Queer ecology involves a
necessary critique of the heteronormativity and whiteness of environ- mental politics, the
editors explain, as well as a critique of the metro- normative stereotype of gay life as inherently
consumerist (34). Leading off the discussions, Andil Gosines essay explores how both
reproductive sex between non-white people, and sex between men have been seen as toxic
to nature (149); both threaten colonial-imperialist and national- ist ambitions of white
heteropatriarchy (150). Examining reports of ar- rests for gay male cruising in parks at Merced,
California; the Minnesota National Wildlife Refuge near Minneapolis; the Kokomo Reservoir
Park in Indiana, and Vancouvers Stanley Park, Gosine exposes a rhetoric of gay sex as
pollution: the cruising areas are described as trash-strewn pulloffs, with condoms by the
hundreds, and other unsavory litter creating health hazards and endangering children.
Citing the Vancouver Park Board Commissions sensible strategy of installing extra garbage
can receptacles in the area, Gosine directly challenges the belief that public, homosexual sex
is bad for the environment and shows the heteronorma- tive solutions (i.e., cutting down
bushes, building fences, paving path- ways) tend to be more environmentally destructive than
gay sex. The theme of queer environments is carried forward in Nancy Un- gers chapter, which
chronicles the construction of lesbian space in the United States, from the black lesbians in
Harlem to the white lesbian retreat at Cherry Grove, the back-to-the-land movement in Oregon,
the Pagoda womynspace in Florida (later reconstituted at Alapine Village in Alabama), and the
lesbian community established through regional and national womens music festivals.
Curiously, though Unger notes the les- bian feminist political analysis that placed vegetarian
organic foods (182) and healthy food (189) as an integral part of lesbian space, she fails to
mention persistent connections between vegan/vegetarianism and lesbian feminism which
were foundational components of the Michigan Womyns Music Festival, The Bloodroot
Collective, and many other les- bian-only collectives and communal living spaces (Gaard 2000).
These lesbians dietary choices were inspired by a widespread belief that sex- ism, heterosexism,
racism, classism, and speciesism were part of the same heteropatriarchal system that lesbian
feminists wanted to leave behind. In this volume, Unger is not alone in omitting critique of the
dominant heteromasculinity/speciesism connection, indicating this connection as an area for
further development in queer ecologies generally. The use of animal-based research in
disparaging queer sexualities is a case in point, where potential coalitions among
queer/environmental/ animal advocates could be stronger with more theoretical
development as foundation. Giovanna Di Chiros chapter confronts the misplaced concern
over abnormal sex differences (documented through ield stud- ies of nonhuman animals) as
producing a heterosexist and transphobic hysteria that shifts attention away from serious
health problems caused by toxics, such as breast, ovarian, and testicular cancers; immune
system breakdown; diabetes, and heart disease. Even progressive environmental scientists and
policy advocates have mobilized socially sanctioned het- erosexism and queer-fear in order to
generate public interest and a sense of urgency to act, Di Chiro laments (210)supporting her
claim with ex- amples from environmental author Janisse Rays association between en- docrine
disruptors and transgender identity, and from atrazine-researcher Tyrone Hayes, who opens his
lecture by establishing both his outsider sta- tus (via race and class) and his normality (via
photos of his heterosexual parents and present family). As a model alternative, Di Chiro points
to the community-based organization Asian Communities for Reproductive Justice, which has
created an intersectional analysis of reproductive and environmental justice through projects
examining, for example, the cos- metic industrys use of phthalates, thereby connecting the
environmental health, safety, and livelihood concerns of both consumers and workers and
creating a movement of young API *Asian Paciic Islander+ women who now identify themselves
as environmentalists (223). Katie Hogans chapter continues the exploration of toxics and
coali- tion-building through cultural texts such as Heather MacDonalds 1995 Ballot Measure 9, a
documentary about the Oregon Citizens Alliance attempt to amend the Oregon state
constitution to discriminate against queers, and Joseph Hansens 1984 detective novel
Nightwork, a gay mys- tery about toxic dumping as an aspect of toxic heterosexuality (237).
Together, Hogan argues, these texts show us what a queer ecocritique and queer
environmental justice looks like (250). Completing the explo- ration of queers and space/place,
Gordon Brent Ingram pairs queer urban history with landscape ecology, examining the diverse
histories of gays and lesbians in Vancouvers West End. Far from being a true ghetto, the West
End offered a large network of public spaces, secluded forest parklands, and the cleanest air and
beaches of the city. Ingrams narra- tive illustrates how the forces of racism, classism, sexism,
and homopho- bia worked to construct the West End as a white middle-class gay male enclave,
eliminating Stanley Parks one remaining Native village, briely nurturing white womens suffrage
activists and (proto-lesbian) women athletes, and shifting to a population of predominantly gay
white men by the end of the 1960s. Taken together, the essays in this section explore the
sexualization of nature, challenging the myth that queer communi- ties are essentially urban
communities by exposing the repeated efforts to enforce and police the unnaturally
overdetermined heterosexualizion of both urban and rural environments. The books inal
section, desiring nature, functions as a sort of solu- tion to the problems of seeing sexuality
and nature as separate, and offers various visions for the future. Rachel Stein builds on theories
advanced in her well-known volume, New Perspectives on Environmental Justice: Gender,
Sexuality, and Activism (2004), to examine how the premises and effects of crime-againstnature ideology...dislocate lesbians from so- cial and natural environments and how lesbian
poets Adrienne Rich and Minnie Bruce Pratt use their writing to strategically resituate
homoerotic desire within the natural landscape (288). In other words, The Place, Promised,
That Has Not Yet Been is in fact a revolutionary environment of sexual freedom, where
crime-against-nature ideology is subverted, and the struggles for environmental justice and
sexual justice are brought to- gether. Bruce Erickson invokes Canadas articulation of national
identity with eco-sex (making love in a canoe is the most Canadian act that two people can do,
309), revealing that, analogous to the function of the cow- boy in the American West, the canoe
was originally an indigenous cul- tural artifact made into a tool of colonization, to extract the
nation from the landscape (312). The national identity and economy are blended and
naturalized in the appearance of the canoe on Canadas currency. In capitalism, the construction
of identity is inherently productive, fueling patterns of consumption; alternatively, Erikson
suggests ways to recon- ceptualize the pleasures of canoeing outside of the desire for identity,
out- side of the demands of nation (312). Two essays on lovemourning, and celebration-complete the vol- ume. In Melancholy Natures, Queer Ecologies, Mortimer-Sandilands
examines the differences between grief and melancholy in the works of Jan Zita Grovers North
Enough: AIDS and Other Clearcuts (1997), and Derek Jarmans Modern Nature (1991). Both
authors come to love and understand devastated landscapes, Mortimer-Sandilands argues,
with Grovers melancholic refusal to get over the loss of so many friends to AIDS as well as
the multiple presences of loss and death in the natu- ral landscape around her (348), and
Jarmans queer memorialization that both politicizes AIDS...and also establishes that memory
in a sensu- ous, sensual world of plants, shingle, wind, salt (351). By allowing the natural world
to be a ield of intimately mourned lives and possibilites, Grover and Jarman draw strong
parallels between non-heterosexual lives in the midst of homophobia, and the more-thanhuman world in the midst of environmental devastation (355). Ending on a more celebratory
note, Dianne Chisholm offers an eco queer reading of heterosexual nature writer Ellen Meloys
four books, ar- guing that Meloy rewrites E.O. Wilsons biophilia concept by recognizing an
erotic-ethical afiliation between human and nonhuman life and de- scribing a vitalism in which
nonreproductive sex is a primary force of na- ture (360). Meloys biophilia includes imagining
leaping into bed with desert lora to satiate a craving to know their seduction of color (364)
and thus is pronouncedly queer; Chisholm argues that Meloy envisions a future where
creatures deemed unproductive by utilitarian standards are valued for their own nature, as well
as for their part in determining a healthy local ecology (375). If this is Meloys stance, how does
she rec- oncile consuming the nature that she professes to love? Chisholm gives us the
paradoxical aroused biophilia of Meloys participation in a bighorn sheep relocation project,
where Meloy simultaneously consumes the ani- mals she is allegedly saving: the taste of the
meat lingers on my tongue. Rain and river. Bedrock to soil to plant to milk to bone, muscle, and
sinew. I am eating my canyon. Eating stone (Meloy, cited in Chisholm, 372). Chisholms rather
lippant questionDoes *Meloys+ ethics of becom- ing-bighorn not challenge the most radical
platform of queer activism, no less than the save-the-whale (and other select-species versus
compan- ion-species) campaigns of animal rights? (376)is neither developed nor supported,
again conirming that this intersection of speciesism and het- erosexism has yet to be explored in
queer ecologies. That exploration needs to come quickly, for queer ecology is catch- ing on.
Already in Spring 2011, the leading magazine of nature writing, Orion, has published a very
readable essay explaining the core concepts of queer ecology (Johnson 2011), at the same time
as a leading ecocritic in Britain has denounced their plausability in the scholarly journal of the
Society for Literature and Science, Conigurations (Garrard 2011). There, Greg Garrard claims
that the queer commitment to transgression seems to outweigh concerns about conservation,
since conservation relies on the Endangered Species Act, and thus, species do matter; but
McWhorters essay did not argue for the end of species, only for a healthy suspicion of the
concepts ontological position, and for extricating arguments for sex- ual and gender diversity
from arguments for the value of species preser- vation/evolution. Or, on the topic of toxic
discourse Garrard insists it seems unlikely that ecologists are merely dupes of
heteronormativity for drawing attention to feminization as a consequence of pollution, when in
fact Di Chiros essay acknowledges the urgency of responding to hormone disruptorswithout
having to access divisive rhetoric around heteronor- mativity. The more substantive challenges
Garrard raisesthe need for a green bailout for queer theory, for example, or for considering
the full range of ecopolitical consequences of the critique of species(95)merit more serious
responses. For example, does the ecology of ecoqueers include the self-determi- nation of other
species, or do we merely celebrate their polymorphous perversities and then eat them? Donna
Haraways natureculturesand Bells queering thereofseem to offer liberation for human
animals but not other animals. Where are the vegan lesbians who have been defending the
intersections of sexuality and animality since the 1970s? Where is the greening of queer theory,
which has roots not just in the Lesbian Rang- ers but also in queer critiques of gay rodeos, in the
formation of PETAs Gay and Lesbian Animal Rights Caucus, and in the Gays and Friends for
Animals Rights presence in the San Francisco Pride Parade of the 1990s (Mills 1994)? It seems
odd in a book celebrating lesbian seagulls and other nonreproductive sexual behaviors among
animal species that theres a si- lence about queer ecocritics eating queer birds and their eggs,
or drinking the breastmilk of other species. Now, thats perversebut not deliciously so. As
Annie Potts and Jovian Parry (2010) have recently argued, for some environmental and sexpositive activists, vegan sexuality challenges het- eronormative masculinity, so perhaps theres a
connection between what you eat and what you do in bed(1993-94). Would todays
vegansexualswho, within their own sexual orienta- tions, prefer vegan sexual partnersalso
be considered queer? Perhaps so, if heterosexual nature writer Ellen Meloy is offered the inal
word in Queer Ecologies for her descriptions of interspecies eroticisms. Though an ardent fan of
inclusivity, I am nonetheless concerned about how such extensions of the term queer may
make its meaning too ambiguous for use as a critical tool, eliding important differences between
the real mate- rial, cultural, and lifestyle experiences of gay men and lesbians (class and
economics among them). Is queer an identity, a set of behaviors, a perspective available to
people of all sexualities, or all of these simultane- ously? Are there sets of experiences or
concepts that a queer ecological per- spective would not illuminate? For example, Ingrams
chapter describing the different material experiences of lesbians vs. gay men in Vancouvers
West End, or Ungers history of lesbian feminist space as motivated largely by politics, suggest
there are signiicant reasons for studying sexual-cul- tural groups separately as well as
collectively. Is queer ecology always feminist? Given the historical foundations of lesbian
feminism, ecofemi- nism, or material feminisms for many of the contributors, it is curious that
there is no speciic articulation of the feminism-queer ecology connection. Unavoidably, despite
the volumes richness and range of discussion, a few questions remain. Among them, perhaps
one of the most important questions is how ecoqueer theory will develop once it moves beyond
this initial collective articulation from primarily Anglo-American scholars. As Andil Gosines essay
pointedly asks, is the production of queer ecology a decidedly Eu- roamerican project? and
is the privileging of Euroamerican stories of en- vironmentalismeven for the purpose of
critical examinationcomplicit with the agendas of empire, and American imperialism in
particular? (166). Instead of separating the queer subject from the racialized-as-non- white
subject and effectively disappearing the non-white queer, as well as the diasporic subject,
Gosine suggests a special focus on the consti- tution of the non-white queer subject...[as] a
more insightful project of queer ecology (167). As the first book-length volume to establish the
intersections of queer theory and environmentalisms at such depth, the publication of Queer
Ecologies has decisively created a rich ield for fur- ther research. May the Lesbian Rangers be
our guides!
ECOLOGICAL CRITICISM AND QUEER THEORY SEEM INCOMPATIBLE, but if they met, there
would be a fantastic explosion. How shall we accomplish this perverse, Frankensteinian meme
splice? Ill propose some hypothetical methods and frameworks for a field that doesnt quite existqueer ecology. The
pathbreaking work of Catriona Sandilands, Greta Gaard, and the journal Undercurrents must be acknowledged here.) This
exercise in hubris is bound to rattle nerves and raise hackles, but please bear with me on this test light. Start
with the basics. Lets not create this field by comparing literary-critical apples and oranges. Lets do it the hard way, up from
foundations (or unfoundations). Lets do it in the name of ecology itself, which demands intimacies with other beings that queer
theory also demands, in another key. Lets do it because our
metaphysical, closed systemNature. This is impossible to construe without violence. Using Mary
Douglass Purity and Danger and Julia Kristevas Powers of Horror, Butler demonstrates that the inside-outside manifold
sustains gender identification and rituals of exclusion that can never be totally successfulthe
body just isnt an impermeable, closed form (Gender Trouble 13334). Butler also holds that nature as such be
thoroughly revised through ecological notions of interrelatedness (Bodies 4). As Ive argued elsewhere, ideologies of Nature are
founded on inside-outside structures that resemble the boundaries heterosexism polices (Ecology 19, 25, 40, 5254, 6364, 67, 78;
Eco- logocentrism). All life-forms, along with the environments they compose and inhabit, defy boundaries between inside and
outside at every level. When we examine the environment, it shimmers, and figures emerge in a strange distortion.3 When
the
environment becomes intimateas in our age of ecological panic and scientifically
measurable risk (Beck)it is decisively no longer an environment, since it no longer just happens
around us: thats the difference between weather and climate. Human society used to define
itself by excluding dirt and pollution. We cannot now endorse this exclusion, nor can we
believe in the world it produces. This is literally about realizing where your waste goes.
Excluding pollution is part of performing Nature as pristine, wild, immediate, and pure. To
have subjects and objects, one must have abjects to vomit or excrete (Kristeva). By repressing the abject,
environmentalismsI am not de- noting particular movements but suggesting affinities with, say, heterosexism or racism claiming
to subvert or reconcile the subject- object manifold only produce a new and improved brand of Nature.
apocalypse signied an event threatening everyone and everything with (in Jacques Derridas suitably menacing phrase)
economy of power, it is ever useful. That is, through the perpetual threat of destruction
through the constant reproduction of the gure of apocalypseagencies of power ensure
their authority to act on and through the bodies of a particular population. No one turns this point
more persuasively than Michel Foucault, who in the nal chapter of his rst volume of The History of Sexuality addresses
himself to the problem of a power that is less repressive than productive, less life threatening than, in his words, "life-
the ancient right to kill; it is because power is situated and exercised at the level of life, the species, the race, and the large-scale
For a state that would arm itself not with the power to kill its
population, but with a more comprehensive power over the patterns and functioning of its
collective life, the threat of an apocalyptic demise, nuclear or otherwise, seems a civic
initiative that can scarcely be done without. A number of questions present themselves: how, in a postnuclear
phenomena of population."
world, is power dispersed and seized and operated? Can we discover, in this age of disarmament, presences not so much new as
newly articulated that form equivalent threats to, say "bodies and the race," to the existence of everyone," threats through
which a postnuclear regime might reconstitute itself with all the more efciency? If
to show how intimately bonded the nuclear and the sexual actually were, before the advent of AIDS gave to such bonding a
ghastly quality of inevitability. In the second half, I take up the matter of the new queer visibility" by considering the
extractions from, and inictions upon, gay life and gay possibility that the various narrative mechanisms of popular gay
enfranchisement seem to demand. Part of my concern is thus to trace a few of the salient transformations in national polity
out exactly how this double movement works seems to me a matter of some analytic importance, especially since this
unprecedented national interest in homosexuality manifests itself not least consequentially in the emergence of the very
discipline under whose auspices this collection of essays has been gather together: queer studies. One might say that the
undertaking of this chapter is thus a kind of genealogy: not so much a genealogy of queer studies per se as of the conditions of
American public life in which it became possible for such a critical discourse to emerge, in institutions (like the university)
otherwise not wholly amenable to gay life. The overarching point I want to make here, though, is simply that in the shift
citizens carefully regulated quantities of life. As a result of this readjustment, a pivotal figure in the
legitimation of power over life is snow, more than every before, the gay man.
Bernard Law, the former cardinal of Boston, mistaking (or maybe understanding too well) the degree of authority
bestowed on him by the signifier of his patronymic, denounced in 1996 proposed legislation giving health
care benefits to same-sex partners of municipal employees. He did so by proclaiming, in a
noteworthy instance of piety in the sky, that bestowing such access to health care would profoundly
diminish the marital bond. Society, he opined, has a special interest in the protection,
care and upbringing of children. Because marriage remains the principal, and the best,
framework for the nurture, education and socialization of children, the state has a special
interest in marriage. With this fatal embrace of a futurism so blindly committed to the figure of the Child that it will
justify refusing health care benefits to the adults that some children become, Law lent his voice to the mortifying
mantra of a communal jouissance that depends on the fetishization of the Child at the
expense of whatever such fetishization must inescapably queer. Some seven years later, after Law had
resigned for his failure to protect Catholic children from sexual assault by pedophile priests, Pope John Paul II returned to this
theme, condemning state-recognized same-sex unions as parodic versions of authentic families, based on individual egoism
rather than genuine love. Justifying that condemnation, he
are no queers in
that future as there can be no future for queer, chosen as they are to bear the bad tidings
that there can be no future at all: that the future, as Annies hymn to the hope of Tomorrow understands, is
always / A day / Away. Like the lover son Keats Grecian urn, forever near the goal of a union theyll never in fact achieve,
were held in thrall by a future continually deferred by time itself, constrained to pursue
the dream of a day when today are one. That future is nothing but kid stuff, reborn each
day to screen out the grave that gapes from within the lifeless letter, luring us into,
ensnaring us in, reality's gossamer web. Those queered by the social order that projects its
death drive onto them are no doubt positioned to recognize the structuring fantasy that so
defines them. But they're positioned as well to recognize the irreducibility of that fantasy and the cost of construing it as
contingent to the logic of social organization as such. Acceding to this figural identification with the undoing of
identity, which is also to say with the disarticulation of social and Symbolic form, might well be described, in John Brenkman's
words, as "politically
self-destructive. But politics (as the social elaboration of reality) and the self (as mere
what queerness, again as figure, necessarily
destroys necessarily insofar as this " s e l f " is the agent of reproductive futurism and
prosthesis maintaining the future for the figural Child), are
this "politics" the means of its promulgation as the order of social reality. But perhaps, as Lacan's
engagement with Antigone in Seminar 7 suggests, political self-destruction inheres in the only act that
counts as one: the act of resisting enslavement to the future in the name of having a life. If
the fate of the queer is to figure the fate that cuts the thread of futurity, if the jouissance, the corrosive enjoyment,
intrinsic to queer (non)identity annihilates the fetishistic jouissance that works to
consolidate identity by allowing reality to coagulate around its ritual reproduction, then
the only oppositional status to which our queerness could ever lead would depend on our
taking seriously the place of the death drive we're called on to figure and insisting, against
the cult of the Child and the political order it enforces, that we, as Guy Hocquenghem
made clear, are "not the signifier of what might become a new form of 'social
organisation,' " that we do not intend a new politics, a better society, a brighter tomorrow, since all
of these fantasies reproduce the past, through displacement, in the form of the future. We
choose, instead, not to choose the Child, as disciplinary image of the Imaginary past or as
site of a projective identification with an always impossible future. The queerness we propose, in
Hocquenghem's words, "is unaware of the passing of generations as stages on the road to better living. It knows nothing
about 'sacrifice now for the sake of future generations' . . . [it] knows that civilisation alone is mortal."
Even more: it delights in that mortality as the negation of everything that would define itself, moralistically, as pro-life. It is
we who must bury the subject in the tomb-like hollow of the signifier, pronouncing at last
the words for which we're condemned should we speak them or not: that are the
advocates of abortion; that the Child as futurity's emblem must die; that the future is mere
repetition and just as lethal as the past. Our queerness has nothing to offer a Symbolic that
lives by denying that nothingness except an insistence on the haunting excess that this
nothingness entails, an insistence on the negativity that pierces the fantasy screen of
futurity, shattering narrative temporality with irony's always explosive force. And so what
is queerest about us, queerest within us, and queerest despite us is this willingness to insist
intransitivelyto insist that the future stop here.
Binary Extension
Sexuality is an undefined in Nature- society and civilization have placed these
categories for the purpose of procreation.
Mortimer-Sandilands 5
Catriona Mortimer-Sandilands, is Canada Research Chair in Sustainability and Culture at York University. Her work lies
at the intersections of queer and feminist theory, environmental philosophy and political theory, and cultural studies.
She is the author of The Good-Natured Feminist: Ecofeminism and the Quest for Democracy (Minnesota, 1999), the
co-editor (with Rebecca Raglon and Melody Hessing) of This Elusive Land: Women and the Canadian Environment
(UBC, 2004), and is working on a manuscript called Pastoral Traditions, Sexual Subversions: Lesbian Histories of
Nature Writing. http://www.invisibleculture.rochester.edu/in_visible_culture/Issue_9/issue9_sandilands.pdf,
Originally delivered as a speech on 2/19/04. Excerpt from pages 7 to 9
Histories of sexuality and ecology: un/ naturalizing the queer: Perhaps
rise of evolutionary thought defined a biological narrative that had a large influence on
medical research on sexuality; particularly important were ideas of sexual selection and
reproductive fitness, in which the species survival was understood to be dependent on the
strongest and best reproducers getting together. In this narrative, heterosexuality came to be
understood, for the first time in history, as a distinct category of sexual practice, the
naturalness of which was solidified by its opposition to so-called deviant sexual identities that
did not fit into an evolutionary narrative. For Darwin, only heterosexual courtship and mating
could be natural because it was reproduction that allowed the species to continue; despite
overwhelming evidence to suggest that homoeroticism is everywhere in nature, evolutionary
thought thus came to define it as aberrant.
Uncivilized Writing
Our advocacy brings topical discussions closer to nature in order to re-align
ourselves with our ecological, sexual, and gendered origins. This debate will be
uncivilized, and the blurred lines of the civil will be washed away in oceans of
change.
Kingsnorth and Hine 9
Paul Kingsworth is an English writer who lives in Cumbria, England. He is a former deputy-editor of The Ecologist and a
co-founder of the Dark Mountain Project. Dougald Hine is a British author, editor and social entrepreneur. He cofounded School of Everything and is Director at large of the Dark Mountain Project. He is a well-known radical in
Britain, UNCIVILISATION: THE DARK MOUNTAIN MANIFESTO, http://dark-mountain.net/about/manifesto/ > ~cVs
We live in a time of social, economic and ecological unravelling. All around us are signs that
our whole way of living is already passing into history. We will face this reality honestly and learn how to live
with it. We reject the faith which holds that the converging crises of our times can be reduced to
a set of problems in need of technological or political solutions. We believe that the roots of these
crises lie in the stories we have been telling ourselves. We intend to challenge the stories which underpin our
civilisation: the myth of progress, the myth of human centrality, and the myth of our
separation from nature. These myths are more dangerous for the fact that we have
forgotten they are myths. We will reassert the role of storytelling as more than mere
entertainment. It is through stories that we weave reality. Humans are not the point and
purpose of the planet. Our art will begin with the attempt to step outside the human bubble.
By careful attention, we will reengage with the non-human world. We will celebrate writing and art
which is grounded in a sense of place and of time. Our literature has been dominated for too
long by those who inhabit the cosmopolitan citadels. We will not lose ourselves in the
elaboration of theories or ideologies. Our words will be elemental. We write with dirt under
our fingernails. The end of the world as we know it is not the end of the world full stop. Together, we will find the
hope beyond hope , the paths which lead to the unknown world ahead of us.
scarce up to now, it is perhaps both because the depth of collective denial is so great, and
because the challenge is so very daunting. We are daunted by it, ourselves. But we believe it needs to
be risen to. We believe that art must look over the edge, face the world that is coming with a
steady eye, and rise to the challenge of ecocide with a challenge of its own: an artistic
response to the crumbling of the empires of the mind. This response we call Uncivilised art,
and we are interested in one branch of it in particular: Uncivilised writing. Uncivilised writing
is writing which attempts to stand outside the human bubble and see us as we are: highly
evolved apes with an array of talents and abilities which we are unleashing without sufficient
thought, control, compassion or intelligence. Apes who have constructed a sophisticated myth
of their own importance with which to sustain their civilising project. Apes whose project has
been to tame, to control, to subdue or to destroy to civilise the forests, the deserts, the wild lands and the seas, to
impose bonds on the minds of their own in order that they might feel nothing when they
exploit or destroy their fellow creatures. Against the civilising project, which has become the
progenitor of ecocide, Uncivilised writing offers not a non-human perspectivewe remain human
and, even now, are not quite ashamed but a perspective which sees us as one strand of a web rather
than as the first palanquin in a glorious procession. It offers an unblinking look at the forces
among which we find ourselves.
ID PTX Good
Identity politics are key to solve oppression--critics ignore the reality
Von Blum '13
Paul Von Blum is a senior lecturer in African American studies and communication studies at UCLA, "In Defense of
Identity Politics," 2001, http://www.tikkun.org/nextgen/in-defense-of-identity-politics
Conservative and liberal critics
have taken strong issue with identity politics, especially in the past few
decades. Many of these critics downplay the ongoing violence of racism, sexism, homophobia,
transphobia, and ableism that continue to provoke identity-based organizing in the present day. I would
like to offer some reflections on why identity politics movements strengthen rather than weaken the Left
and why we all need to support identity-based organizing if we are to address the ongoing, dismal
realities of racial exclusion and overt and institutional discrimination against historically oppressed
populations.
of identity politics give no sign that they have actually read, let alone absorbed, the
work of queer theorists like Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Jeffrey Weeks, Michael Warner, Wayne Koestenbaum or Judith Butler-to name only a few of the more prominent. A large body of work now exists that, taken together, presents a
startling set of postulates about such matters of universal importance as the historicity and fluidity of
sexual desire, the performative nature of gender, and the complex multiplicity of attractions, fantasies, impulses
and narratives that lie within us all.
journeys, made out of footprints, traces of feet that tread and in treading create a line on the
ground. When people stop treading, the path may disappear. When we see the line of the ground
before us, we tend to walk on it, as a path clears the way. So we walk on the path as it is before us, but
it is only before us as an effect of being walked upon. A paradox of the footprint emerges. Lines are
both created by being followed and are followed by being created. The lines that direct us, as
lines of thought as well as lines of motion, are in this way performative: they depend on the
repetition of norms and conventions, of routes and paths taken, but they are also created as
an effect of this repetition. To say that lines are performative is to say that we find our way, we
know which direction we face, only as an effect of work, which is often hidden from view. So in
following the directions, I arrive, as if by magic. Directions are then about the magic of arrival. In a way,
the work of arrival is forgotten in the very feeling that the arrival is magic. The work involves following
directions; we arrive when we have followed them properly: bad readings just will not get us there.
Following lines also involves forms of social investment. Such investments promise return (if we follow
this line, then this or that will follow), which might sustain the very will to keep going. Through such
investments in the promise of return, subjects reproduce the lines that they follow. Considering the
politics of the straight line helps us rethink the relationship between inheritance (the lines that
are given as our point of arrival into familial and social space) and reproduction (the demand that we
return the gift of the line by extending that line). It is not automatic that we reproduce what we inherit
or that we always convert our inheritance into possessions. We must pay attention to the pressure to
make such conversions. We can recall here the different meanings of the word pressure: the
social pressure to follow a certain course, to live a certain kind of life, and even to reproduce
that life, can feel like a physical press on the surface of the body, which creates its own
impressions for sure. We are pressed into lines, just as lines are the accumulation of such moments of
pressure, or what we can call stress points.
modes of analysis and for new ways of thinking about matter and processes of
materialization" (2). The question that both of these volumes leave us withor ought to leave is
withis, Why? Why now? In other words, what are the material conditions that make the turn to the
"new materialisms" not only possible, but also felt as urgent, indeed, necessary? Marx, mma: "all that
is solid melts into air," and it makes us, understandably, anxious. Longing for a return to what matters
as even the geography closest inthe body loses its solidity, experienced as a system of parts (kidneys,
wombs for hire, limbs that don't belong), an assemblage of cells, an ecology of microbes, parasites and
viruses, a fleshy knot of capacities and debilities, as our intimate and physical lives become increasingly
saturated "by digital, wireless, and virtual technologies" (5).2 Sorceries of capitalism: "all that is holy is
profaned." Both New Materialisms and Queer Ecologies are, in the truest sense, timely volumes; both
collections illuminate and reflect contemporary compulsions in critical theory while making important
contributions to transdisciplinary feminist and queer posthumanist inquiry, a minor arc of theory that
nevertheless has an extensive history in feminist studies of science, technology, and epistemology, as
Sara Ahmed (2008) has argued elsewhere.3 There is, Diana Coole and Samantha Frost suggest, "an
emerge: language, consciousness, subjectivity, agency, mind, soul; also imagination, emotion,
values, meaning, and so on" (1-2). Yet, after Butler's theorizations of the radical inseparability of
embodiment, psychic life, and discourse (1990, 1993, 1997), and in the face of autonomist theorizations
of the information economy (e.g., Marazzi 1994; Hardt and Negri 2004; Clough 2007; Berardi 2009),
what can it possibly mean to render language, affect, subjectivity, imagination, mind, and, indeed
"soul" as "immaterial things"? Having opened thus, it seems important to clarify that the "new
materialisms" are not to be confused with historical materialism, though both volumes do
situate their inquiries as emerging from scientific and philosophical cleavages not unlike the
ones that opened the ground for the emergence of evolutionary and sexological thought in
Darwin and Krafft-Ebing [End Page 340] (Sandilands and Erickson, Queer Ecologies, 7), as well as "the
great materialist philosophies of the nineteenth century, notably those of Marx, Nietzsche, and Freud"
(Coole and Frost, New Materialisms, 5). Queer Ecologies and New Materialisms delve, in distinct ways,
into the complex economies and ecologies of matter, materiality, concepts, and objects to foster
methodologies of inquiry that can begin to do justice to the complex interdependencies between the
human (and) the animal, nature (and) culture, agency (and) information, sex (and) desire, politics (and)
ethics, embodiment (and) technology. Drawing on "queer" as both a noun and a verb, Queer Ecologies
brings together essays that explore the genealogical and phenomenological entanglements of sex
and nature to develop "a sexual politics that more clearly includes considerations of the
natural world and its biosocial constitution, and an environmental politics that demonstrates
an understanding of the ways in which sexual relations organize and influence both the
material world of nature and our perceptions, experiences, and constitutions of that world "
(5). Deploying "queer ecology" as a strategy of critique and deconstruction, this volume as a
whole creates spaces for erotic poetics and politics of naturecultures to press up against what
various included authors identify as imperatives of heteronormative reprocentricity
(Sandilands and Erickson), econormativity (Chiro), speciest logics (McWhorter), biophilia (Chisholm),
and melancholia (Sandilands). Sandilands and Erickson's excellent introduction crafts a genealogy of
queer ecology that simultaneously gestures toward its phenomenology by way of a surprisingly
provocative reading of Brokeback Mountain, as well as a reading of texts that have opened up space for
a queer ecology, including Greta Gaard's 1997 article, "Toward a Queer Ecofeminism"; Scott Herring's
recent work on rural queer sexualities; and, of course, Eli Clare's moving memoir, Exile and Pride (1999),
which poetically opens up a world in which corporeal, class, sexual, and environmental politics are
deeply enmeshed in the very act of writing. Following this strong introduction, the collection unfolds in
three parts. In the first, Against Nature? Queer Sex, Queer Animality, four essays resituate queer desire
in and through the more-than-human world. Stacy Alaimo offers an "epistemology of the zoological
closet" (56) in her reading of "queer" animals; Ladelle McWhorter explores the dangers that inhere
devotion to biophilia that works against Lee Edelman's ironically reprocentric No Future (2004).
Gathering a strong list of contributors, Diana Coole and Samantha Frost open New Materialisms:
Ontology, Agency, and Politics with an extensive introduction that argues that particle physics,
biotechnology, theoretical physics, and chaos complexity theory have had profound effects on the ways
in which we understand ontology, such that our "sense of the patterns or characteristics of matter's
movements" have been transformed (13). At the same time, these epistemologies have undermined
"the idea of stable and predictable material substance, hastening a realization that our natural
environment is far more complex, unstable, fragile, and interactive" than many ontoepistemologies
have allowed (13). The essays collected here, in three parts, offer nuanced responses to this shifting
ground for thinking matter and for producing theory that matters.
speciesism were part of the same heteropatriarchal system that lesbian feminists wanted
to leave behind. In this volume, Unger is not alone in omitting critique of the dominant
heteromasculinity/speciesism connection, indicating this connection as an area for further
development in queer ecologies generally.
AT: Framework
THE ROLE OF THE BALLOT IS TO UNDERMINE VIOLENT EPISTEMIC
FRAMEWORKS. ONLY QUEERING THE OCEAN ALLOWS US TO INVESTIGATE THE
WAY THAT IMPERIAL ONTOLOGIES VIOLENTLY CONSTITUTE SPACE IN THE
NAME OF FREEDOM AND DEMOCRACY.
ENG '11 (DAVID, David L. Eng is professor of English, comparative literature, and Asian
American studies at the University of Pennsylvania. He is author of The Feeling of Kinship: Queer
Liberalism and the Racialization of Intimacy (2010) and Racial Castration: Managing Masculinity
in Asian America (2001). In addition, he is coeditor with David Kazanjian of Loss: The Politics of
Mourning (2003), with Alice Y. Hom of Q & A: Queer in Asian America (1998), and with Judith
Halberstam and Jos Esteban Muoz of a special issue of the journal Social Text, "What's Queer
about Queer Studies Now?" (2005). "Queering the Black Atlantic, Queering the Brown Atlantic"
David L. Eng (bio) GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies > Volume 17, Number 1, 2011
http://muse.jhu.edu.proxy.lib.uiowa.edu/journals/journal_of_lesbian_and_gay_studies/v017/1
7.1.eng.html)
Ultimately, teaching for justice would seek to undermine epistemic frameworks and practices
that are simply unable to explain those itineraries of violence that gain their political force
through "names such as democracy and civilization" (3). [End Page 198] In section 3 of
Pedagogies, "Dangerous Memory: Secular Acts, Sacred Possession" (chapters 6-7), Alexander
continues this pedagogic initiative by showing us how the personal is political and how the
spiritual is political as well. She illustrates how one might go about constructing oppositional
knowledges and practices by reconsidering the conventional relations between the secular and
the sacred that would decidedly split the latter from the former in modernity's self-narration of
development. Here, she refuses to yield the space of the spiritual to religious fundamentalists,
whose vision of sinners in the hands of an angry God sets the conceptual limits to the functions
of the spiritual in social debate today. At the same time, she resists the notion that "no selfrespecting postmodernist would want to align herself (at least in public) with a category such as
the spiritual, which appears so fixed, so unchanging, so redolent of tradition" (15). Working
against these traditions of sanctioned knowledge and practice, Alexander observes that while
"humans made the Crossing, traveling only in one direction through Ocean given the name
Atlantic[,] Grief traveled as well" (289). Alexander draws on this history of griefexemplifying
the recent affective turn in queer studiesthrough her experiences with Santeria and Vodou.
Such experiences lead her to commune with a slave woman named Kitsimba, who made her
own Atlantic Crossing in the eighteenth-century, as well as with other sisters of color, ancestrally
recalled in This Bridge Called My Back.3 "In the realm of the secular," Alexander remarks, "the
material is conceived of as tangible while the spiritual is either nonexistent or invisible. In the
realm of the Sacred, however, the invisible constitutes its presence by a provocation of sorts, by
provoking our attention" (307). We may choose to ignore the Sacred. However, attuned to its
effects, and to its affective valences, the spiritual promises to lead us elsewhere, yielding forms
of knowledge and practice that evade the instrumental radar of empiricism and scientific
rationality, the cornerstones of Enlightenment thinking. Understanding that ghosts and spirits
do not depend on our collective acknowledgment to validate their existences provides a new
way to approach Bruno Latour's insistence that "we have never been modern"or, at least,
quite as modern as we would like to believe. Even more, it allows those left out of modernity's
instrumental reason to make better sense of a social world that outsources them as collateral
damage. Alexander summarizes, I wish to examine how spiritual practitioners employ
metaphysical systems to provide the moorings for their meanings and understanding of selfin
short, how they constitute or remember experience as Sacred and how that experience shapes
their subjectivity. Experience is a category of great [End Page 199] epistemic import to
feminism. But we have understood it primarily as secularized, as if it were absent Spirit and thus
antithetical, albeit indirectly, to the Sacred. (295)
good and right to do, and even how we know the good and the right. They are about the nature
of the good, specifically, defining the qualities of good so that we know good when we see it
and do it. Ethical arguments are about how to do good in a particular situation. More
common are meta-arguments over representations or frames- about how we out to
understand a particular situation. Sometimes actors agree on how they see a situation. More
often there are different possible interpretations. Thomas Homer-Dixon and Roger karapin
suggest, Argument and debate occur when people try to gain acceptance for their
interpretation of the world. For example, is the war defensive or aggressive?. Defining
and controlling representations and images, or the frame, affects whether one thinks
there is an issue at stake and whether a particular argument applies to the case. An
actor fighting a defensive war is within international law; an aggressor may legitimately be
subject to sanctions. Framing and reframing involve mimesis or putting forward representations
of what is going on. In mimetic meta-arguments, actors who are struggling to characterize or
frame the situation accomplish their ends by drawing vivid pictures of the reality
through exaggeration, analogy, or differentiation. Representations of a situation do
not re-produce accurately so much as they creatively re-present situations in a
way that makes sense. mimesis is a metaphoric or iconic argumentation of the real.
Imitating not the effectivity of events but their logical structure and meaning. Certain
features are emphasized and others de-emphasized or completely ignored as their
situation is recharacterized or reframed. Representation thus becomes a constraint
on reasoning in that it limits understanding to a specific organization of
conceptual knowledge. The dominant representation delimits which arguments will
be considered legitimate, framing how actors see possibities. As Roxanne Doty argues, the
possibility of practices presupposes the ability of an agent to imagine certain courses of
action. Certain background meanings, kinds of social actors and relationships, must already be
in place. If, as Donald Sylvan and Stuart Thorson argue, politics involves the selective
privileging of representations, it may not matter whether one representation or
another is true or not. Emphasizing whether frames articulate accurate or
inaccurate perceptions misses the rhetorical import of representation- how
frames affect what is seen or not seen, and subsequent choices. Meta-arguments over
representation are thus crucial elements of political argument because an
actors arguments about what to do will be more persuasive if their characterization or
framing of the situation holds sway. But, as Rodger Payne suggests, No frame is an
omnipotent persuasive tool that can be decisively wielded by norm entrepreneurs without
serious political wrangling. Hence framing is a meta-argument.
Link Wall
are significant not just for what they say but also for what they
do not say; the silences in a discourse can be as important, or even more important at times, than what isstated.
This is because silence can function ideologically in any number of ways. For example, silence can be a deliberate means of
distraction or misdirection from uncomfortable subjects or contrasting viewpoints, the
suppression or de- legitimisation of alternative forms of knowledge or values, the tacit
endorsement of particular kinds of practices, setting the boundaries of legitimate knowledge,
or as a kind of disciplining process directed against certain actors among others. In other words, the
silences within a text often function as an exercise in power; revealing and interrogating those
silences therefore, is an important part of first and second order critique.
category of persons is a unique product of Victorian society; prior to the nineteenth century, there was a wide range of forms
of sexual activity, but these sexual acts were among men, at least understood as potentially occurring anywhere, and
between anyone. 12 Thus, for example, the British Navy had a rule by which buggery was perfectly legitimate provided the
sailors had been at sea for at least six months; sodomy, here, was not something that happened because a sailor was gay, but
was simply a particular if still not quite respectable sexual activity.
The fact that we now commonly understand sexuality as question of natural identity has a great deal to do with the confluence
of bio-medical thinking and social regulation that developed during the latter half of the nineteenth century. At the same time
as biological science was creating an understanding of categories of species based on their possession of certain traits, medical
science was developing a categorization of sexual traits with the agenda of explaining sexual behavior as part of the biological
life of the human species. The rise of evolutionary thought defined a biological narrative that had a large influence on medical
research on sexuality; particularly important were ideas of sexual selection and reproductive fitness, in which the species
survival was understood to be dependent on the strongest and best reproducers getting together. In this narrative,
heterosexuality came to be understood, for the first time in history, as a distinct
act. As Foucault notes, modern medicine moved us from the regulation of sexual acts to the organization and treatment of
sexual identities; where once there may have been women who had sex with women (although the Victorians did not ever
really acknowledge it), now there were formal bearers of sexual categories gender
inverts, tribades, and lesbians whose sexual activities with other women
could be linked to some basic biological fault. In short, in the late nineteenth century,
sexuality became naturalized; an individuals sexual desires were recoded
as expressions of an inherent sexual condition, and that condition was
understood in strongly biological terms. But there is an interesting paradox
here: Homosexuality was simultaneously naturalized andconsidered
unnatural, something deviant from a primary, normative heterosexuality.
There are many important things to say about this process. In the first
place, it is not just that ideas of nature were instrumental in the social
regulation of sexuality, but that heterosexuality came to be the defining
sexual paradigm for ideas of evolution and ecology. Heterosexual reproduction was the only
form of sexual activity leading directly to the continuation of a species from one generation to the next; thus, logically, other
sexual activities must be either aberrant or, at best, indirectly part of the heterosexual reproductive process. Preening rituals
between male cock-of-the-rocks were read only as competition for female attention, and not as homoerotic activity between
two males. Even now, some evolutionary psychologists tie themselves into knots trying to explain the eventual reproductive
significance of the prolific same-gender sexual activity that regularly occurs among female bonobos. 13
Human EXPLORATION with the ocean represent an erotic venture into the
unknown, supporting an androcentric and gendered perspective of nature
Milstein and Dickerson 12
(Tema, professor of communications at University of New Mexico, and Elizabeth, gulf-based journalist. Gynocentric Greenwashing:
The Discursive Gendering of Nature in Communication, Culture, and Critique vol 4 iss 5 pp. 510-532, December,
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1753-9137.2012.01144.x/full , retrieved 2014/07/08, ~cVs / GFD)
We offer two ethnographic case studies to provide related, but varied, contexts to explore gendered productions of nature.
Milstein has spent several summers as a participant observer studying communication in the
world's highest concentration of whale watch tourism, located in transnational Canadian and American Pacific
waters. Endangered orcas are the main focus, but other whales,2 including humpbacks and grays,
encounter tourism as well. Milstein observes a variety of communicators, including tourists
and whale insiders (such as tour operators, tour naturalists, marine monitors, scientists, whale
advocates, volunteers, and island locals), both on the water in tour or monitor boats and on
land at public shores. Milstein also records extensive written texts, including tourism
marketing materials and educational signage and exhibits. Dickinson has spent five months as a participant
observer studying communication in North Carolina's Educational State Forest (NCESF) systemsix forest sites designed to teach
forestry management practices, conservation, and environmental topics to K-12 schoolchildren. The communicators Dickinson
observes include students, teachers, parents, and chaperones bussed into the forests for fieldtrips. Dickinson also works alongside
and interviews forest service personnel and documents texts, such as forest service literature, teaching materials, and curricula.
Dickinson also documents the materiality of the forests, including trees, trails, outdoor classrooms, exhibits, and talking-tree and
talking-rock trails, where visitors press a button near a tree or rock and hear a human voice recording speak as the tree or rock.
Within each site, communication
utilitarian purpose for humans, but instead more intrinsically valued as a way to know nature.
In contrast, the extensively managed timber state forests are known manufactured entities on solid ground. Through forest
conservation management monoculture practices, human control is extreme, and visitors are taught to value trees largely as human
resources. Despite
Marine Bio-reserves
The Affirmatives positing itself as master over nature with its establishment of
cordoned off space within the ocean is a manifestation of the Human over
nature binary that Johnson outlines in the 1NC. This means that the affirmative
continues the oppressive structures of heteronormative oppression and
actually increases these systems. This is not a link of omission. This is a link of
direct action.
many stories I could tell, what I would like to talk about, briefly, is the fact I mentioned in my discussion of national parks at
the beginning of the paper. To reiterate: In its early incarnation, North American environmentalism emerged as a response to
the rise of industrial cities. As I have argued, wilderness and rural spaces came to be valued as
assumption that homosexuality is a product of the urban, and that rural and
wilderness spaces are thus somehow free from the taint of homoerotic
activity. Nothing, in fact, could be further from the truth. At the end of the nineteenth
century and well into the twentieth, the western wilderness was a space heavily dominated by communities of men. These
men prospectors, cowboys, ranchers, foresters -- like British sailors at sea for more than six months, frequently engaged in
homosexual activity. Indeed, if sexologist Alfred Kinseys research was correct, there was in the nineteenth century
actually more same-sex activity in the remote wilderness than there was in the cities.
As I suggested earlier, such men were not understood as homosexuals. To quote Kinsey, these are men who have faced the
rigors of nature in the wild. Such a background breeds the attitude that sex is sex, irrespective of the nature of the partner
with whom the relation is had. 16 It was not until homosexuality became coded as an inherent and biologicallybased identity that it came to be understood as an illness and located in the artificiality of cities. Certainly, cities made it
easier for interested men to find anonymous homoerotic contacts. Also, port cities such as New York and San Francisco
eventually became very important places for homosexual men to carve out spaces for their fledgling sexual communities. But it
was the growing visibility of these communities, and the increasing association of homosexuality with artificiality, that tied the
homosexual to the urban, not some actually greater homoerotic presence. Simply put, it was not until the
As a result of the association of degenerate queers with cities, and rural and
wilderness landscapes with wholesome, heterosexual family life, there
developed in the nineteenth century the idea that nature is a primary place in which to
develop moral and physical fitness. With the hetero-masculine deployment
of wilderness at the turn of the century which, incidentally, also saw the rise of organizations like the Boy Scouts
we can see the antecedents of how nature was deployed during the Great Depression and
into World War II as a site for the cultivation of a rigidly disciplinary hetero-male
ideal.In the United States, for example, organizations such as the Civilian Conservation Corps provided unemployed young
men with physically and morally healthy work in the wilderness. At apparent risk of degeneracy in cities, such men were
located in camps far from urban centers and, between 1933 and 1942, strenuously installed 89,000 miles of telephone line,
built 126,000 miles of roads and trails, constructed millions of erosion control dams, planted 1.3 billion trees, erected 3,470
water towers, and spent over 6 million hours fighting forest fires. 19 All of these developments are markers of a national
desire for a particular kind of man as much as they are about the infrastructural needs of particular landscapes.
Science/Ecotourism
Non-Queer Perspectives on nature entrench hetro/androcentrism
Milstein and Dickerson 12
(Tema, professor of communications at University of New Mexico, and Elizabeth, gulf-based journalist. Gynocentric Greenwashing:
The Discursive Gendering of Nature in Communication, Culture, and Critique vol 4 iss 5 pp. 510-532, December,
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1753-9137.2012.01144.x/full , retrieved 2014/07/08, ~cVs )
In the androcentricgynocentric dialectic, culturally
Social Progress
The acceptance of progress locks political movements into passivity, preventing
meaningful change. A Queer methodology is key to inject disruption into these
movements to build coalitions strong enough to fight anti-queerness in all its
forms
Copenhaver 14 (Robert Copenhaver identified as a Queer person of faith, graduate
of Idaho State University, whose interests include queer theory, politics, and theology.
He will be starting a masters in theological studies at The Lutheran School of Theology
at Chicago next fall; Queer Rage; published 2/19/14;
http://coperoge.wordpress.com/2014/02/19/queer-rage/) GFD
I hate straight people who cant listen to queer anger without saying hey, all straight
people arent like that. Im straight too, you know, as if their egos dont get enough
stroking or protection in this arrogant, heterosexist world. Why must we take care of
them, in the midst of our just anger brought on by their fed up society?! Why add the
reassurance of Of course, I dont mean you. You dont act that way. Let them figure out
for themselves whether they deserve to be included in our anger. But of course that
would mean listening to our anger, which they almost never do. They deflect it, by
saying Im not like that or now look whos generalizing or Youll catch more flies
with honey or If you focus on the negative you just give out more power or youre
not the only one in the world whos suffering. They say Dont yell at me, Im on your
side or I think youre overreacting or Boy, youre bitter. - The Queer Nation
Manifesto Last weeks post involved a quote from The Queer Nation referring to the
way in which straight people have taught us that good queers dont get angry. A good
queer is one that accepts the progress that others have made for us. According to
straight people, and some queers who have accepted the straight position, we should be
thankful for things like same-sex marriage and the repeal of DADT. However, the
acceptance of progress is a form of passivity that forgets the importance of queers
of the past who fought for our recognition while maintaining the uniqueness of
queer identities. We forget about the politics of groups like ACT UP and the
protests of Stonewall. These histories are ignored in favor of assimilationist
strategies that we are taught are good because of straightness. Rather, we need
to use our anger at straightness as the starting point for our politics. We need to
stop accepting liberal progress narratives that keep us passive and have forced us
to conform to what a good citizen should look like. Benjamin Shepard writes,
Thus, play intermingled with a full range of emotionsfrom despair to pathos, from
pleasure to terror. Charles King, a veteran of ACT UP New Yorks Housing Committee,
which evolved into Housing Works, of which he is now president, explained that these
combined feelings of joy and anger fueled the groups work: I actually think its a
combination of the two. . . . The AIDS movement in the 1980s was fueled by this
amazing combination of taking grief and anger and turning it into this powerful
energy for action. But in the course of that, developing this comradely love. Yes, the
anger was the fuel. Its what brought us together and taking that anger and not just
sitting with it. . . not just letting grief turn into despair. Bringing it into some sort of
action was very cathartic, but also what was cathartic in the process was all the
loving that was taking place. Anger can be transformative. Anger is a strategy
Pacific Ocean
European imperialism in the Pacific brought the suppression of native
queerness of all types - the aff is no different, multiple historical examples
prove.
Elleray 6
(Michelle, assistant professor of English at the University of Guleph, quotes Jeremy Bentham, English Philosopher, internally cites
Lee Wallace, author, in Sexual Encounters (2003), Queer Pacific in GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies vol 12.1, pp. 147149, http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/journal_of_lesbian_and_gay_studies/v012/12.1elleray.html , retrieved 2014/07/08, ~cVs)
Jeremy Bentham noted that "in the newly discovered islands of the Pacific Ocean, the
prevalence of the improlific appetite, after having been concealed by the prudent delicacy of
polished historians, has been revealed by the untutored and querulous zeal of pious
missionaries."1 Bentham locates for us the historical linkage of homosexual acts with the
South Pacific, a connection since subsumed by tourist investments in the Pacific as the site of
heterosexual fantasy but now excavated anew in Lee Wallace's cogent work, Sexual
Encounters. Returning us to the Pacific's role in European negotiations of male same-sex
desire, Wallace argues that encounters with Pacific formations of male sexuality opened up an
awareness of new sexual possibilities for metropolitan masculinity. Sexual Encounters is predicated on
the assumption that change in the imperial context is not unidirectionalsomething that the metropole does to far-flung, palmstudded islandsbut that metropolitan culture was itself modified by contact and exchange with the societies encountered on the
voyages of discovery. Thus Wallace's
scientific
impetus of his voyages privileged the rationalizing and categorizing of Polynesian sexuality as
part of the ethnographic project, shifting the terms of sexual discourse from the denunciation
of moral vice to a cultural relativism engaged with the social dynamics of gender variance.
Following the lauded explorers, the scandalous beachcomber emerges in Russian accounts of the Marquesas and Melville's Typee.
Newly minted on Pacific shores, the beachcomber embodies European integration into Pacific Island communities and "reflect[s]
back to a mortified European gaze a newly defined capacity for bodily perversion" (86), a perversion read symptomatically through
an intense investment in his tattooed flesh. I greatly appreciated Wallace's twist on the standard settler narrative in her Yate
chapter, in which she locates the settler nation's foundations not in Mum, Dad, and the colonial family but in the expulsion of the
sexual sinner as a means of consolidating "the Christian collectivity in the new land," an act that "made of its members protoNew
Zealanders" (104). Continuing
she argues that "Polynesian gender dissonance . . . manifests sexual possibilities barred
European representation" (115). The "reciprocal evolution of European and Pacific sexual
practices engaged in the colonial context" that was tracked in earlier chapters resurfaces in
Wallace's final chapter, a critique of Caroline Harker's 1995 television documentary, Queens of Samoa (108). Harker's
film narrates the story of fa'afafine, that is, Samoans who are bodily male but raised to
conform to female gender expectations. While disavowing the colonizing dynamics inherent in
imposing European labels such as "homosexual," "transvestite," and "transsexual" on
Polynesian forms of sexuality and gender performance, Wallace foregrounds the implications
of assuming the incommensurability of the European and Polynesian terms, pointing out that
they contribute to the failure of some members of the Pacific Island community to see
themselves as implicated in concerns of the queer community, for example, the movement of
HIV/AIDS within the Pacific. Here the prescience of Wallace's work vis--vis developments subsequent to the book's
publication emerges. The careful analysis and historicization of the intersecting dynamics of
sexuality and colonialism that Wallace advocates are necessary for situating and negotiating
recent denunciations of homosexuality by public individuals such as Archbishop Whakahuihui
Vercoe of the New Zealand Anglican Church and Pastor Brian Tamaki of Destiny Church, which
appear to separate the interests of the Maori (among others) from those of homosexuals. The
assumption that the identity categories "Maori" and "gay" are mutually exclusive has already
been countered in the fiction of the author and academic Witi Ihimaera, while the fact that
Vercoe and Tamaki speak from within their churches would strike a chord with another author
and academic, Ngahuia Te Awekotuku. In a move that resonates with the opening chapters
of Sexual Encounters, Te Awekotuku argues that what the Europeans, and more specifically
the missionaries, brought to the Pacific's shores was not homosexuality (same-sex desire as a
putatively Western practice) but homophobia.
are significant not just for what they say but also for what they
do not say; the silences in a discourse can be as important, or even more important at times, than what isstated.
This is because silence can function ideologically in any number of ways. For example, silence can be a deliberate means of
distraction or misdirection from uncomfortable subjects or contrasting viewpoints, the
suppression or de- legitimisation of alternative forms of knowledge or values, the tacit
endorsement of particular kinds of practices, setting the boundaries of legitimate knowledge,
or as a kind of disciplining process directed against certain actors among others. In other words, the
silences within a text often function as an exercise in power; revealing and interrogating those
silences therefore, is an important part of first and second order critique.
Impacts
Heteronormativity (Violence)
Heteronormativity is violent
Yep 13 (Gust, The Violence of Heteronormativity in Communication Studies', Journal of Homosexuality, 45: 2, 11 59)
In this passage, Simmons vividly
Normalization is the process of constructing, establishing, producing, and reproducing a takenfor-granted and all-encompassing standard used to measure goodness, desirability, morality,
rationality, superiority, and a host of other dominant cultural values. As such, normalization becomes one
of the primary instruments of power in modern society (Foucault, 1978/1990). Normalization is a symbolically, discursively,
psychically, psychologically, and materially violent form of social regulation and control, or as Warner (1993) more simply puts it,
normalization is the site of violence (p. xxvi). Perhaps one of the most powerful forms of normalization in Western social systems
is heteronormativity. Through
Institutional violence is widespread for LGBTQ individuals and communities. Undergirding all
social institutions is heteronormative ideology (Berlant & Warner, 1998; Richardson, 1996). Hegemonic
heterosexuality permeates the family (VanEvery, 1996a, b), domestic and intimate life (Croghan, 1993;
Holland, Ramazanoglu, & Thomson, 1996; VanEvery, 1996b), education (Kumashiro, 2002; Pinar, 1998; Talburt & Steinberg,
2000), social policy (Carabine, 1996; Eskridge, 2002; Kaplan, 1997), the mass media and popular culture (Fejes & Petrich, 1993;
Gross, 2001; Gross & Woods, 1999; Ingraham, 1999), among others. In short, heteronormative
thinking is deeply
ingrained, and strategically invisible, in our social institutions. The process of normalization of
heterosexuality in our social system actively and methodically subordinates, disempowers,
denies, and rejects individuals who do not conform to the heterosexual mandate by
criminalizing them, denying them protection against discrimination, refusing them basic rights
and recognition, or all of the above (Kaplan, 1997; Rubin, 1984/1993). More simply stated, the regulatory power of
heteronormativity denies LGBTQ individuals and couples their citizenship. There are numerous
positive rights (Stein, 1999, p. 286) that heterosexual individuals take for granted but LGBTQ persons are categorically denied.
They include being able to marry a person of the same sex, gain custody of their children,
become foster and adoptive parents, visit ones same-sex partner in the hospital, being able to obtain bereavement
leave when ones partner passes away, being able to file joint income tax returns with ones partner, among many others. Although
the issue of same-sex marriage is highly contested on ideological grounds within LGBTQ communities in the U.S. (Yep, Lovaas, & Elia,
2003), LGBTQ couples are deprived of the numerous rights and privileges accorded to heterosexually married dyads (Kaplan, 1997;
Stein, 1999). In sum, heteronormativity
high schools, for example, verbal harassment is a pervasive problem: One-third of eleventh grade students who
responded to a 1999 CBS poll said that they knew of incidents of harassment of gay and lesbian students. Twenty-eight percent
admitted to making antigay remarks themselves. The
Heteronormativity is so powerful that its regulation and enforcement are carried out by the
individuals themselves through socially endorsed and culturally accepted forms of soul murder.
Soul murder is a term that I borrow from the child abuse and neglect literature to highlight the torment of heteronormativity (Yep,
2002). Shengold (1999) defines soul murder as the apparently willful abuse and neglect of children by adults that are of sufficient
intensity and frequency to be traumatic . . . *so that+ the childrens subsequent emotional development has been profoundly and
predominantly negatively affected (p. 1). Further explaining this concept, Shengold (1989) writes, soul murder
is neither a
diagnosis nor a condition. It is a dramatic term for circumstances that eventuate in crimethe
deliberate attempt to eradicate or compromise the separate identity of another person (p. 2, my
emphasis). Isnt the incessant policing and enforcement, either deliberately or unconsciously, by
self and others, of the heteronormative mandate a widespread form of soul murder?
***AFF***
2AC
Perm do Both
1. Perm do both. The USFG can advocate for a queer approach to
_________. The alternative is not mutually exclusive with the aff.
2. The Status quo solves for queer suffering. The government is already
improving the situation of queers all around the country. The
permutation speeds up this process faster than the negative, meaning
we access their solvency better.
Lederman 14 (Josh Lederman is a White House reporter for Associated Press (AP), where he
covers electoral politics, Vice President Joe Biden, and domestic and foreign policy issues. This
article was published on 6/20/2014 and accessed on 7/7/14. Obama Expands Government
Benefits For Gay Couples. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/06/20/gay-couplesbenefits_n_5516561.html. AE)
WASHINGTON (AP) A year after the Supreme Court struck down a law barring federal
recognition of gay marriages, the Obama administration granted an array of new benefits
Friday to same-sex couples , including those who live in states where gay marriage is against
the law. The new measures range from Social Security and veterans benefits to work leave for
caring for sick spouses. They are part of President Barack Obama's efforts to expand whatever
protections he can offer to gays and lesbians even though more than half of the states don't
recognize gay marriage. That effort has been confounded by laws that say some benefits should
be conferred only to couples whose marriages are recognized by the states where they live,
rather than the states where they were married. Aiming to circumvent that issue, the Veterans
Affairs Department will start letting gay people who tell the government they are married to a
veteran to be buried alongside them in a national cemetery, drawing on the VA's authority to
waive the usual marriage requirement. In a similar move, the Social Security Administration
will start processing some survivor and death benefits for those in same-sex relationships who
live in states that don't recognize gay marriage. Nineteen states plus the District of Columbia
currently recognize gay marriage, although court challenges to gay marriage bans are pending in
many states. For Tim Fagen of Fort Collins, Colorado, the implications could be profound. A
retired electrical engineer, Fagen receives higher Social Security payments than his 79-year
partner, Ken Hoole. The two will celebrate their 47th anniversary in August but until now would
have been prevented from accessing each other's benefits. "If I was to die, it would be really
significant for Ken," Fagen said in an interview. "Not only is it financially beneficial, but
psychologically it's beneficial. It's nice to know that your relationship is recognized."
Meanwhile, the Labor Department said it would start drafting rules making clear that the
Family and Medical Leave Act applies to same-sex couples, ensuring that gay and lesbian
workers can take unpaid leave to care for a sick spouse. Attorney General Eric Holder, in a
memo to Obama, said the Justice Department has completed its government-wide push to
carry out the high court's 2013 ruling in United States v. Windsor that struck down part of the
Defense of Marriage Act, enabling the federal government to start granting benefits to
married same-sex couples. Holder said the impact of that court decision "cannot be
overstated." At the same time, Holder urged Congress to adopt legislation that Democratic
lawmakers have proposed that let the VA and Social Security extend benefits to married
couples living in non-gay marriage states. Obama was lending his support to those efforts in
Congress, the White House said. "The fact that they're endorsing our legislation will give it a
boost," said Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., who wrote the bill altering the state-of-residence
requirement for VA benefits. But opponents of gay marriage argued that the Obama
administration is misinterpreting the court's decision by using state of residence as the standard
for determining which marriages Washington will recognize. "This clearly goes beyond the
executive branch's authority," said Peter Sprigg of Family Research Council. "The federal
government should not put the thumb on the scale in terms of how states define marriage."
The administrative steps mark the latest attempt by Obama to promote social acceptance for
gays and lesbians and to ensure they and their relationships enjoy equal treatment under the
law. In addition to successfully pushing to repeal the ban on gays serving openly in the
military, the Obama administration stopped defending the Defense of Marriage Act years
before the Supreme Court took it up. And last week, Obama took another step demanded by
gay rights advocates when he announced he will sign an executive order banning federal
contractors from discriminating against employees based on sexual orientation or gender
identity.
Alt Bad
Queer Bad
By labeling their movement as queer, they have sought to codify that which
should remain fluid this is so un-queer of you, links and turns solvency
Browne 6
(Katherine, faculty member of the University of Brighton, researches LGBTQ+ issues. Challenging Queer Geographies in
Antipode vol. 38 iss. 5 pp. 885-893, November 2006, http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.14678330.2006.00483.x/full , retrieved 2014/07/08, ~cVs)
In seeking queer geographies that offer radical contestations and transgressions of normality, I do not want to fix these
contestations and transgressions to only searching for spaces between and beyond dualisms. Instead , I
see queer
contestations and transgressions as always potentially fleeting, recuperated and fluid
because of the unbounded chaos and uncertainty of queer (Elder 1999:88). This fluidity
produces tensions in naming, categorising and politicising. One of the challenges in
writing about queer is that in naming activism, actions or writings as such, there is a risk
of solidifying, homogenising and de-queering them through the act of naming (and even
this is simplistic in considering the subtleties of categorising, naming and defining where
belonging to queer implies criteria and policing of such belongings or where singular
acts of becoming are not necessarily linked to normative discursive frameworks). Queer in
this sense may now be attributed to actions, writings and activism that deconstruct dichotomies between homosexuality and
heterosexuality or man and women. However, these
The use of the term queer represents a homogenizing of identity which risks
the reestablishment of a masculine identity and the erasure of its political
usefulness
Annamarie Jagose, 1996, PhD in English from the Victoria University of Wellington, Queer Theory: The Appeal Of Queer
Theory Has Outstripped Anyones Sense Of What Exactly It Means, Pgs. 1-3
Once the term 'queer' was, at best, slang for homosexual, at worst, a term of homophobic
abuse. In recent years 'queer' has come to be used differently, sometimes as an umbrella term for a
coalition of culturally marginal sexual self-identifications and at other times to describe a
nascent theoretical model which has developed out of more traditional lesbian and gay
studies. The rapid development and consolidation of lesbian and gay studies in universities in the 1990s is paralleled by an
increasing deployment of the term 'queer'. As queer is unaligned with any specific identity category, it has
the potential to be annexed profitably to any number of discussions. In the history of disciplinary
formations, lesbian and gay studies is itself a relatively recent construction, and queer theory can be seen as its latest institutional
transformation. Broadly speaking, queer
Conflating queer as a part of identity allows infinite pluralism within the term
it is this pluralism that cannot resolve the inevitable contradictions and
violence within identity politics
Annamarie Jagose, 1996, PhD in English from the Victoria University of Wellington, Queer Theory: The Appeal Of Queer
Theory Has Outstripped Anyones Sense Of What Exactly It Means, Pgs. 3-5
In the sense that Butler outlines the queer project--that is, to the extent that she argues there
queer has been produced largely outside the registers of recognition, truthfulness and selfidentity. Queer, then, is an identity category that has no interest in consolidating or even stabilising itself. It maintains its critique
of identity-focused movements by understanding that even the formation of its own coalitional and negotiated constituencies may
well result in exclusionary and reifying effects far in excess of those intended. Acknowledging
This is game over for the negative. By using queer as a facet of their identity,
they destroy any possibility of solvency. They make the dichotomy of hetero vs.
queer even more binaristic by lumping together all non-heteros into one group.
They create their own monsters and are fighting themselves. Vote affirmative
for the only team that advocates any real social change and progress. Also,
dont let them say that because their authors identify as that it makes it okay.
The fact of the matter is that they have created binaries within this very round.
Vote them down for oppressing themselves.
Anti-Science/Biophobia Turn
The Negs scholarship is BiophobicQueer Ecology is logically fallacious.
Normative, scientific epistemology solves the impacts of the K
Garrard 10 (Greg Garrard is the FCCS Sustainability Professor at the University of British
Columbia, a National Teaching Fellow of the British Higher Education Academy, and a
founding member and former Chair of the Association for the Study of Literature and the
Environment (UK & Ireland). He is the author of Ecocriticism (Routledge 2004, 2011 2nd
edn) as well as numerous essays on eco-pedagogy, animal studies and environmental
criticism. His interests include environmental criticism and theory; critical animal studies;
environmental education; literature and science (especially biology); and contemporary
British literature; Published by The Johns Hopkins University Press; Configurations, Volume
18, Numbers 1-2, Winter 2010; How Queer is Green?; pgs. 73-76) GFD
Ecofeminism has sought to unravel the interarticulation of gender op- pression with the
domination of nature, while queer theory has pursued a cultural project of subversion of
sexual heteronormativity. Queer ecology brings together and extends both discourses, at
once drawing upon contemporary biology and subjecting its taxonomies to skepti- cal
critique. This essay argues that queer theory needs ecocriticism to rescue it from its
biophobic assumptions, but it is not yet clear what ecocriticism stands to gain from queer
theory. Moreover, it is argued that queer ecology risks the appearance of partial,
opportunistic, and conspicuously biased engagement with biology. Four Exhibits in the
Growing Museum of Queer Ecology Exhibit A: The Bluegill Sunfish The reproductive
habits of this very widespread North American freshwater fish are such, claims biologist
Joan Roughgarden, as to challenge the foundations of gender and sexuality.1 Contrary to
popular assumptions that other animals conform to the dimorphism of the human species,
the sunfish has two sexes (morphs possessing two distinct gamete sizes), but four
spawning genders: large males with the orange breast that gave the species its common
name; me- dium males slightly smaller than but visually similar to females;small, lightcolored males with no markings; and females, marked with vertical bars. Large males spawn
by aggressively defending ter- ritories, or leks, while large numbers of small males hover
at the boundaries awaiting an opportunity to zoom in and fertilize eggs laid in a lek (male
strategists memorably called sneaky fuckers by John Maynard Smith, a name
Roughgarden rather archly contests). The medium males, on the other hand, court the large
males, and, if accepted, fertilize the females together with them. The mere exis- tence of
these varied types of sunfish might be considered subversive enough, but Roughgarden
knows that the dominant explanations in biology involve deceit of the large males by the
medium ones, and counters with the argument that they are, in fact, cooperating to gain
joint access to reproductive opportunity. Exhibit B: Rocky Mountain Sheep Another
example from Roughgarden: the charismatic, curly horned rams of the species, images of
which adorn the bonnets of big macho cars and the logos of American football teams, form
gay groups that practice homosexual courting and copulation.2 The most dominant,
masculine rams are the most enthusiastic par- ticipants, while rams that refuse anal sex and
prefer to live with the ewes are called effeminate. Some domestic rams tested for homo-
sexuality not only preferred to mount other males, but would not mount females at all. Of
course, it is not asserted that what is good enough for rams should be good enough to
confront homophobia in humansa signal instance of the naturalistic fallacybut only
that reactionary attempts to invoke the order of nature against homo- sexuality (as in,
notoriously, the popes claim that anti-essentialist gender theory was a bigger threat to
nature that climate change)3 are wholly without biological warrant. Exhibit C: Human
Endogenous Retrovirus 3 (or HERV-R) Making up around 1 percent of our genome,
endogenous ret- roviruses are thought to be fossil viruses whose genetic ma- terial has
become embedded in the germ line. While some are suspected of causing autoimmune
diseases and cancer, the fact that they have been present in our ancestral genome for at
least three million years suggests that they may have beneficial effects as well. As Timothy
Morton notes in Queer Ecology, the alien DNA of ERV-3 may assist in reducing the
mothers immune reac- tions to the embryo, and he concludes that life is catastrophic,
monstrous, non-holistic, dislocated, not organic, coherent and authoritative.4 Richard
Dawkins, who would probably gag at the thought of cooptation into what he would
understand as postmod- ern theory, seems to agree that the notion of a bounded,
coherent identity prescribed by our own DNA is belied by microbiology, say- ing that there
is no important distinction between our own genes and parasitic or symbiotic insertion
sequences. Whether they con- flict or cooperate will depend not on their historical origins
but on the circumstances from which they stand to gain now.5 We are, it seems,
strangers to ourselves even at the genetic level. Exhibit D: Lesbian Park Rangers Reflecting,
and in some respects representing, these discover- ies of the queerness of nature, Lorri
Millan and Shawna Dempsey formed the Canadian Lesbian National Parks and Services
(LNPS) in 1997.6 Dressed in authentic-looking outfits with embroidered badges, handing
out leaflets in Banff near the national park, and guiding tours that combine queer
natural history with counter- hegemonic sexual and gender commentary, these
performance art- ists could be considered part of the artistic wing of queer ecology. The
LNPS makes a striking appearance near the conclusion of Ca- triona Sandilandss discussion
of the sexist and heteronormative structuring of historical narratives of Canadas national
parks, which provides detailed evidence of the ways in which Canadian national identity
came to be invested in spaces that were constructed, ahis- torically, as the wild home
ranges of solitary male wardens. Con- testing that ideology is a case of both retrieving the
more complex history of the parks, and paying tribute to the ways in which the LNPS queers
the parks and their wardens: They raise the possibil- ity of a homosexual presence in
official national-park culture; they make same-sex desire . . . a reality in the iconic space of
the mas- culine wilderness-nation; and they call into question the assump- tion of womens
heterosexuality and, along with it, their hetero- sexualizing role as bearers of the domestic
nation.7 Queer ecology disrupts heteronormative natures and proposes an alliance
between biological science and the cultural theory that, throughout the sci- ence wars
and beyond, had been assumed to be antithetical to it.
Environment (UK & Ireland). He is the author of Ecocriticism (Routledge 2004, 2011 2nd
edn) as well as numerous essays on eco-pedagogy, animal studies and environmental
criticism. His interests include environmental criticism and theory; critical animal studies;
environmental education; literature and science (especially biology); and contemporary
British literature; Published by The Johns Hopkins University Press; Configurations, Volume
18, Numbers 1-2, Winter 2010; How Queer is Green?; pgs. 76-79) GFD
Jorge Luis Borgess brilliant conflation of represented and real, ref- erential and reflexive,
animate, inanimate, and ananimate animals inspired Michel Foucault to interrogate the
discursive construction of the order of things, and it stands conveniently as the ur-text of
the taxonomic anti-realism that runs through queer ecology. At the most general level,
queer itself represents and encapsulates a kind of intellectual Maoism, a perpetual
revolution of categories and types. As Noreen Giffney and Myra Hird assert in Queering the
Non/Human: The unremitting emphasis in queer theoretical work on fluidity, berinclusivity, indeterminacy, indefinability, unknowability, the preposterous, impossibility,
unthinkability, unintelligibility, mean- inglessness and that which is unrepresentable is an
attempt to undo normative entanglements and fashion alternative imaginaries.
Rhetorically, queer theory unceasingly (and rather tediously) negates stable categories
and enthuses over subversive or amorphous ex- ceptions toor, as they are always seen,
transgressions ofallegedly fixed distinctions. It is perhaps unsurprising that a pioneer of
queer ecocriticism, Catriona Mortimer-Sandilands, declares an almost phobic dislike of
taxonomy,10 which she applies to attempts to categorize her as an ecofeminist, but
which seem to be shared much more generally within this insurgency-within-an-insurgency.
It is not as if ecocrit- ics at any stage of the enterprise have been unaware that nature is a
problematic social construct (in some way, in some sense, to some degree), nor have they
been blind to the inter-articulation of this construct with gender, racial, and (to a lesser
degree) sexual dis- criminations. Queer theory, though, introduces a radical new level of
skepticism toward nature and its presumed taxonomies. Greta Gaards Toward a
Queer Ecofeminism is an early contri- bution to what is now orthodox ecocritical theory,
that liberating women requires liberating nature, the erotic, and queers.11 Unlike the
new wave of queer ecology with its scientific reference-points, Gaard draws mainly upon
historical evidence to buttress what is re- ally a structuralist argument linking oppressively
hierarchical dual- isms such as male/female, culture/nature, reason/emotion, hetero/
homosexual, and others, which she hopes to confront by embrac- ing the erotic in all its
diversity and building coalitions for creating a democratic ecological culture based on our
shared liberation.12 It is a laudable ambition, certainly, but not necessarily well founded
the- oretically or empirically. For one thing, while the ecofeminist analy- sis of the
persistent (and usually demeaning) association of women and nature is, with some biased
selection of sources, defensible,13 it is clear that queers have consistently been
condemned as against nature in Western homophobic culture. Gaard admits as much,
but then suggests that nature is devalued just as queers are devalued,14 which is not the
case: queers allegedly violate the natural order according to which, often in other
contexts, humans are meant to dominate nature, this time in the everyday sense of the
nonhuman environment and its denizens. Gaards argument depends, then, on an
equivocation between two of Kate Sopers three meanings of na- ture: sexual oppression
relies upon a vicious theological and ideo- logical inflection of the realist sense of the
word, while the nature that is subjected to modernizing and colonial conquest is the lay or
surface sense.15 Empirically, it seems unlikely that one would find any correlation
between metrics of sexual liberation in a soci- ety (taking, say, levels of homophobic
persecution or, conversely, gay marriage and civil rights) and those of environmental
impact, like carbon emissions (think Canada and Australia). So although the conceptual
isomorphism discussed by Gaard and others is popu- lar, intriguing, and perhaps politically
motivating, queer ecologists need more evidence that an ideology in which the erotic,
queer sexualities, women, persons of color, and nature are all conceptu- ally linked16
translates into real socio-ecological relationships. Ecofeminists like Gaard have long been
skeptical of nature in that ideological sense of natural order; the innovation of queer
ecology is to draw upon scientific evidence to queer nature in the ordinary, lay sense. It is
a complex movement: subverting the ideological fic- tion of a heteronormative natural
order, queer ecologists deploy ex- amples from the (queer) natural world, which are then
read back into a transformed natural order reread as always already queer. The initiative
enjoys an atmosphere of bracing radicalism: whereas eco- critics always sought to
highlight the ambivalence of nature, as well as its historicity, Mortons Ecology without
Nature damns ecocriticism tout court as too enmeshed with the ideology that churns out
ste- reotypical ideas of nature to be of any use.17 The leftist alternative is ecocritique,
which, like queer theory, thoroughly examines how nature is set up as a transcendental,
unified, independent category. Ecocritique does not think that it is paradoxical to say, in the
name of ecology itself: down with nature!18 However, while it is clear that queer needs
green, to avoid the ethical dead-end of repetitive aporetic gestures, its reflex of reflexivity, it
is not obvious that green needsor indeed stands to benefit fromqueer. Furthermore,
while the queer critique of organicism is salutary on properly ecological grounds, and the
dismantling of spurious sexual hierarchy desirable on moral grounds, queer ecologys
opportunistic appropriation of biology frequently misrepresents both science and the
philosophi- cal assumptions that guide it.
Trans* Erasure
You dont go far enough. Despite its entrenchment in the academy and in
society, queer theory has not realized its potential to restructure
understandings of gender or to achieve progress for the trans community
Stryker 4
(Susan, trans activist and trans woman, Transgender Studies: Queer Theorys Evil Twin in GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay
Studies 10.2 pp. 212-215 http://ejournals.ebsco.com/Direct.asp?AccessToken=6VMVKL98MGOO1WAW7330AWINZKO89FK9X&Show=Object&msid=604025715 ~cVs)
If queer theory was born of the union of sexuality studies and feminism, transgender studies
can be considered queer theory's evil twin: it has the same parentage but willfully disrupts the
privileged family narratives that favor sexual identity labels (like gay, lesbian, bisexual, and
heterosexual) over the gender categories (like man and woman) that enable desire to take
shape and find its aim. In the first volume of GLQ I published my first academic article, "My Words to Victor Frankenstein
above the Village of Chamounix: Performing Transgender Rage," an autobiographically inflected performance piece drawn from my
experiences of coming out as a transsexual.1 The article addressed four distinct theoretical moments. The first was Judith Butler's
then recent, now paradigmatic linkage of gender with the notion of trouble. Gender's
Finally, I perceived a tremendous utility, both political and theoretical, in the new concept of
an antiessentialist, postidentitarian, strategically fluid "queerness." It was through
participation in Queer Nationparticularly its San Francisco-based spin-off, Transgender
Nationthat I sharpened my theoretical teeth on the practice of transsexuality. When I came
out as transsexual in 1992, I was acutely conscious, both experientially and intellectually, that
transsexuals were considered abject creatures in most feminist and gay or lesbian contexts,
yet I considered myself both feminist and lesbian. I saw GLQ as the leading vehicle for advancing the new queer
theory, and I saw in queer theory a potential for attacking the antitranssexual moralism so unthinkingly embedded in most
progressive analyses of gender and sexuality without resorting to a reactionary, homophobic, and misogynistic counteroffensive. I
sought instead to dissolve and recast the ground that identity genders in the process of staking its tent. By
denaturalizing
and thus deprivileging nontransgender practices of embodiment and identification, and by
simultaneously enacting a new narrative of the wedding of self and flesh, I intended to create
new territories, both analytic and material, for a critically refigured transsexual practice.
Embracing and identifying with the figure of Frankenstein's monster, claiming the transformative power of a return from abjection,
felt like the right way to go.
That vision still takes my breath away. A decade later, with another Bush in the White House and another war
in the Persian Gulf, it is painfully apparent that the queer revolution of the early 1990s yielded, at
best, only fragile and tenuous forms of liberal progress in certain sectors and did not radically
transform societyand as in the broader world, so too in the academy. Queer theory has
become an entrenched, though generally] progressive, presence in higher education, but it has not
realized the (admittedly utopian) potential I (perhaps naively) sensed there for a radical restructuring of
our understanding of gender, particularly of minoritized and marginalized manifestations of
gender, such as transsexuality. While queer studies remains the most hospitable place to undertake transgender work,
all too often queer remains a code word for "gay" or "lesbian," and all too often transgender
phenomena are misapprehended through a lens that privileges sexual orientation and sexual
identity as the primary means of differing from heteronormativity.
question the notion of the self as distinct from discursive cultural fields. That is, like
gender, there is no independent or pure self or agent that stands outside socially and
culturally mediated discursive systems. Any move toward identification, then, is, in her
view, to be hoodwinked into believing that identities are discourse free and capable of
existing outside the systems those identity formations seek to critique. Even when identity
is contextualized and qualified, Butler still insists that theories of identity invariably close
with an embarrassed etc. (Gender 143). Butlers emphasis on gender and sex as
performa- tive would seem to undergird a progressive, forward-facing theory of sexuality.
In fact, some theorists have made the theoretical leap from the gender performative to the
racial performative, thereby demonstrating the potential of her theory for understanding
the ontology of race.5 But to riff off of the now popular phrase gender trouble, there is
some race trouble here with queer theory. More particularly, in its race for theory
(Christian), queer theory has often failed to address the material realities of gays and
lesbians of color. As black British activist Helen (Charles) asks, What happens to the
definition of queer when youre washing up or having a wank? When youre aware of
misplace- ment or displacement in your colour, gender, identity? Do they get subsumed [. .
.] into a homogeneous category, where class and other things that make up a cultural
identity are ignored? (101102). What, for example, are the ethical and material
implications of queer theory if its project is to dismantle all notions of identity and
agency? The deconstructive turn in queer theory highlights the ways in which ideology
functions to oppress and to proscribe ways of knowing, but what is the utility of queer
theory on the front lines, in the trenches, on the street, or anyplace where the racialized
and sexualized body is beaten, starved, fired, cursedindeed, where the body is the site of
trauma?6 Beyond queer theorys failure to focus on materiality, it also has failed to
acknowledge consistently and critically the intellectual, aesthetic, and political
contributions of nonwhite and non-middle-class gays, bisexuals, lesbians, and
transgendered people in the struggle against homophobia and oppression. More- over,
even when white queer theorists acknowledge these contributions, rarely do they selfconsciously and overtly reflect on the ways in which their whiteness informs their critical
queer position, and this is occurring at a time when naming ones positionality has
become almost standard protocol in other areas of scholar- ship. Although there are
exceptions, most often white queer theorists fail to acknowledge and address racial
privilege.7
The White Epistemology intrinsic to much of Queer Theory makes the AFF
methodology inaccessible to some Queer PoC and props up White Supremacy
through the deconstruction of community and fervent rejection of opposition
Johnson 10 (E. Patrick Johnson is the Carlos Montezuma Professor of Performance Studies
and African American Studies at Northwestern University. A scholar, artist, and activist,
Johnson has performed nationally and internationally and has published widely in the area
of race, gender, sexuality and performance; Quare studies, or (almost) everything I know
about queer studies I learned from my grandmother; Text and Performance Quarterly;
Volume 21, Issue 1; Publisher: Routledge; Published online: 05 Nov 2010; pages 5-6) GFD
Because transgendered people, lesbians, gays, and bisexuals of color often ground their
theorizing in a politics of identity, they frequently fall prey to accusations of
essentialism or anti-intellectualism. Galvanizing around identity, however, is not
always an unintentional essentialist move. Many times, it is an intentional strategic
choice.8 Cathy Cohen, for example, suggests that queer theorizing which calls for the
elimination of fixed categories seems to ignore the ways in which some traditional social
identities and communal ties can, in fact, be important to ones survival (Punks 450).
The communal ties to which Cohen refers are those which exist in communities of color
across boundaries of sexuality. For example, my grandmother, who is homophobic,
nonetheless must be included in the struggle against oppression in spite of her bigotry.
While her homophobia must be critiqued, her feminist and race struggles over the course of
her life have enabled me and others in my family to enact strategies of resistance against a
number of oppressions, including homophobia. Some queer activists groups, however,
have argued fer- vently for the disavowal of any alliance with heterosexuals, a disavowal
that those of us who belong to communities of color cannot necessarily afford to make.9
There- fore, while offering a progressive and sometimes transgressive politics of sexuality,
the seams of queer theory become exposed when that theory is applied to identities around
which sexuality may pivot, such as race and class. As a counter to this myopia and in an
attempt to close the gap between theory and practice, self and Other, Audre Lorde
proclaims: Without community there is no liberation, only the most vulnerable and
temporary armistice between an individual and her oppression. But community must not
mean a shedding of our differences, nor the pathetic pretense that these differences do
not exist. [. . .] I urge each one of us here to reach down into that deep place of knowledge
inside herself and touch the terror and loathing of any difference that lives there. See
whose face it wears. Then the personal as the political can begin to illuminate all our
choices. (11213, emphasis in original) For Lorde, a theory that dissolves the communal
identityin all of its difference around which the marginalized can politically organize is
not a progressive one. Nor is it one that gays, bisexuals, transgendered people, and
lesbians of color can afford to adopt, for to do so would be to foreclose possibilities of
change.