Hiram Perez 
Taste for Brown Bodies 
Gay Modernity and Cosmopolitan Desire

Support
Winner, LGBT Studies Lammy Award presented by Lambda Literary Neither queer theory nor queer activism has fully reckoned with the role of race in the emergence of the modern gay subject. In A Taste for Brown Bodies, Hiram Perez traces the development of gay modernity and its continued romanticization of the brown body. Focusing in particular on three figures with elusive queer histories the sailor, the soldier, and the cowboy Perez unpacks how each has been memorialized and desired for their heroic masculinity while at the same time functioning as agents for the expansion of the US borders and neocolonial zones of influence. Describing an enduring homonationalism dating to the birth of the homosexual in the late 19th century, Perez considers not only how US imperialist expansion was realized, but also how it was visualized for and through gay men. By means of an analysis of literature, film, and photographs from the 19th to the 21st centuries including Herman Melville s Billy Budd, Anne Proulx s Brokeback Mountain, and photos of abuse at the Abu Ghraib prison Perez proposes that modern gay male identity, often traced to late Victorian constructions of invert and homosexual, occupies not the periphery of the nation but rather a cosmopolitan position, instrumental to projects of war, colonialism, and neoliberalism. A Taste for Brown Bodies argues that practices and subjectivities that we understand historically as forms of homosexuality have been regulated and normalized as an extension of the US nation-state, laying bare the tacit, if complex, participation of gay modernity within US imperialism.
€30.39
payment methods
Buy this ebook and get 1 more FREE!
Language English ● Format PDF ● ISBN 9781479846757 ● Publisher NYU Press ● Published 2015 ● Downloadable 3 times ● Currency EUR ● ID 4849067 ● Copy protection Adobe DRM
Requires a DRM capable ebook reader

More ebooks from the same author(s) / Editor

121,399 Ebooks in this category