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Queer of color critique

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Queer of color critique is an analytical framework that insists on the role of racialization in establishing normative gender and sexuality as an organizing principle of capitalism.[1] Queer of Color critique is an analytical framework that centers race, gender, sexuality, and class in its critique of politics, history, and mainstream gay rights movements.[2] The term was first articulated in the book, Aberrations in Black: Towards a Queer of Color Critique, by Roderick A. Ferguson. Expanding on women of color feminism, queer of color critique is an analysis of race, gender, sexuality, and class in relation to liberal ideology, the nation-state, and capital. In Ferguson’s words, “Queer of color analysis disidentifies with historical materialism to rethink its categories and how they might conceal the materiality of race, gender, and sexuality.”[3] Through disidentification, queer of color critique voices the silences of marxism that inscribe heteronormativity.[1] In critiquing liberalism, queer of color critique problematizes the single-issue orientation of gay politics and historical narratives of LGBTQ exclusion.[4] Deployed by activists, organizers, intellectuals, artists, care workers and community members alike, queer of color critique builds an analytic for political world building.

Historical context

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The origins of Queer of Color Critique are traced back to a cultural studies reading group of doctoral students Roderick Ferguson, Chandan Reddy, Gayarti Gopinath, Grace Hong, Danny Weidner, Victor Viesca, Victor Bascara, and Ruby Tapia.[5] Ferguson, Gopinath, and Reddy questioned “what would an intersectional, queer critique of political economy look like?” after attending a talk at UC San Diego in 1999 on Martin Manalansan's essay, “In the Shadows of Stonewall: Examining Gay Transnational Politics and the Diasporic Dilemma.”[5] There had yet to be an established methodology that provided a global critique of homonormativity, interjecting queer political analysis into critical theory

Sylvia Rivera in 1970 at S.T.A.R. Rally, standing beside a banner that reads "Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries
Sylvia Rivera in 1970 at S.T.A.R. Rally

The praxis for Queer of Color critique came long before the establishment of a named analytical framework. Queer and trans people of color were foundational in organizing and activating LGBTQ movements in the US.[4] However, efforts to converge racial, class, and gender struggles within the movement for gay liberation were sidelined by those who sought an assimilative approach to gain power and capital for largely upper-middle class white gays and lesbian.[6] Notably, figures who participated in the Stonewall uprising, like Marsha P. Johson, Sylvia Rivera, and Miss Major Griffin-Gracy, saw gay liberation equally invested in racial and socioeconomic justice, involving themselves in housing, abolition, sex work decriminalization, and harm reduction projects.[7][8] Sylvia Rivera and Marsha P. Johnson founded the Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries (S.T.A.R.) and found difficulty of receiving funding and support from organizations like the Gay Activists Alliance and Gay Liberation Front.[9] For the latter half of the twentieth century, queer and trans people of color were already fighting against oppressive conditions and material circumstances resulting from intersecting vectors of oppression. The most prominent gay organizations of the 1970s, 80s, and 90s prioritized liberal rights like military inclusion and marriage equality, and were more concerned with respectability and power than empowering or materially supporting members of the community, such as trans folx, homeless youth, sex workers, and the incarcerated.[6]

Queer of Color critique was also responding to the dominant homonationalist narrative that positioned Stonewall as the catalyst event for gay rights in the Western world. As discussed in Manalansan’s foundational essay, the meaning of Stonewall is problematically applied transnationally, assuming universal stakes and value of Stonewall’s symbolic and political ramifications.[10] Malansan features interviews from gay Filipino men, one of which was present at the uprising, who do not view Stonewall, the subsequent pride parades, and movement to “come out of the closet” as integral to the formation of their gay American identity and life.[10] He writes, “For my immigrant informants who self-identify as gay, narratives of the ‘closet’ and ‘coming out’ fragment and are subordinated in relation to the more highly fraught arena of the law and citizenship.”[11] Queer of color critique contradicts the emphasis on Stonewall in American gay politics misrepresents large swaths of gay immigrants whose identities are not solely defined by sexuality, or whose views on gay identity conflict with American representations.[10]

Foundational Influences

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Gloria Anzaldua

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Gloria Anzaldua, a Chicana lesbian author and activist, contributed to the queer of color critique by documenting and theorizing how queerness and sexuality interact with culture and language. In her book Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza,[12] Anzaldua challenges readers to understand "borders," not merely as physical barriers that divide nation-states, but as an articulation of identity- invisible boundaries that exist inside the body.[12] Anzaldua provides a narrative that explains "dual consciousness" of having to understand both dominant and non-dominant cultures to live in two worlds, both rejecting certain aspects of identity.[13] Gloria Anzaldua draws on this narrative in an anthology titled This Bridge Called My Back: Writings by Radical Women of Color, which she coedited with Cherrie Moraga.[14]

Trans of Color Critique

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Coloniality of Gender

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One concept used by trans of color critique is the concept of gender being a colonial construct. That is, the dominant way of viewing gender as a binary between men and women has been formed because of the forces of European colonialism and racism. Scholar PJ DiPietro says "The coloniality of gender framework makes sense of a paradigmatic shift, the rendering of Native, Indigenous, and Black flesh into modified versions of 'gender'..."[15]

References

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  1. ^ a b Ferguson, Roderick A. (2004). "Introduction: Queer of Color Critique, Historical Materialism, and Canonical Sociology". Aberrations in Black: Toward a Queer of Color Critique (1st ed.). University of Minnesota Press. pp. 1–30. ISBN 9781452935461.
  2. ^ Manalansan, Martin F. (2018). "Messing up sex: The promises and possibilities of queer of color critique". Sexualities. 21 (8): 1287–1290. doi:10.1177/1363460718794646. ISSN 1363-4607.
  3. ^ Ferguson, Roderick A. (2004). "Introduction: Queer of Color Critique, Historical Materialism, and Canonical Sociology". Aberrations in Black: Toward a Queer of Color Critique. University of Minnesota Press. p. 5.
  4. ^ a b Ferguson, Roderick A. (2019). One-Dimensional Queer. Polity Press. ISBN 978-1-5095-2355-9.
  5. ^ a b Ferguson, Roderick A.; Gopinath, Gayatri; Keeling, Kara; Manalansan, Martin F.; Reddy, Chandan (2024-06-01). "Queer of Color Critique in a Moment of Danger". GLQ. 30 (3): 319–336. doi:10.1215/10642684-11177974. ISSN 1064-2684.
  6. ^ a b Ferguson, Roderick A. (2019). "Gay emancipation goes to market". One-Dimensional Queer. Polity Press. pp. 46–80. ISBN 978-1-5095-2355-9.
  7. ^ Ferguson, Roderick A. (2019). "The multidimensional beginnings of gay liberation". One-Dimensional Queer. Polity Press. pp. 18–45. ISBN 978-1-5095-2355-9.
  8. ^ Meronek, Toshio (2023). Miss Major Speaks: Conversations with a Black Trans Revolutionary. Verso. ISBN 9781839763342.
  9. ^ Branson, Lindsay. "Gay Liberation in New York City, 1969-1973: Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries". OUTHistory.org. Retrieved 2025-04-10.
  10. ^ a b c Manalansan, Martin F. (1997). "In the Shadows of Stonewall: Examining Gay Transnational Politics and the Diasporic Dilemma". In Lowe, Lisa; Lloyd, David; Fish, Stanley; Jameson, Frederic (eds.). The Power of Culture. New York, USA: Duke University Press. pp. 485–505. doi:10.1515/9780822382317-019.
  11. ^ Manalansan, Martin F. (1997). "In the Shadows of Stonewall: Examining Gay Transnational Politics and the Diasporic Dilemma". In Lowe, Lisa; Lloyd, David; Fish, Stanley; Jameson, Frederic (eds.). The Power of Culture. New York, USA: Duke University Press. p 501 doi:10.1515/9780822382317-019.
  12. ^ a b Anzaldúa, Gloria (2007). Borderlands: The New Mestiza. Aunt Lute Books. ISBN 978-1-879960-74-9.[page needed][non-primary source needed]
  13. ^ Collins, Patricia Hill (2000). Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, and the Politics of Empowerment. Psychology Press. ISBN 978-0-415-92484-9.[page needed]
  14. ^ Moraga, Cherríe; Anzaldúa, Gloria (2015). This Bridge Called My Back, Fourth Edition: Writings by Radical Women of Color. SUNY Press. ISBN 978-1-4384-5438-2.[page needed]
  15. ^ "Coloniality of Gender". kohljournal.press. 2024-12-30. Retrieved 2025-02-11.

Further reading

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