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Imagining Queer Futures: Postcolonial Utopias of Desires in Trinidadian Writing
Bomans, Bastien
2021Teatime @ AGS | Les Goûters de l'AGS
 

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Abstract :
[en] In 'Cruising Utopia', José Esteban Muñoz writes that “[q]ueerness is not yet here” but that we can nevertheless “feel it as the warm illumination of a horizon imbued with potentiality” (Muñoz 2019, 1). Opposed to the naïve representation that is commonly associated with utopia, Muñoz sheds light on the critical and political potential of the concept of queerness. In the field of queer of colour critique, other theorists, like Roderick A. Ferguson, have highlighted the ways in which the understanding of LGBTQI+ identities that obfuscates their combination with other identity categories, such as gender, race or nationality, departs from the multidimensionality of queerness that initially promised liberation for all (Ferguson 2019). While oppression against LGBTQI+ subjectivities keeps occurring on a global scale, the resurgence of racist and colonial dynamics is also sustained by assimilationist and homonationalist discourses from the ‘western’ world. With a past marked by colonialism, slavery, indentureship and subsequent diasporas, queer Trinidadian literature more often than not presents characters that face oppression in an intersectional, multidimensional way because of their non-hegemonic gender, sexuality and race/nationality. Being part of “a decolonized Caribbean discourse” (Cummings 2011, 323), queer Trinidadian writings offer fictive visions of silenced pasts and presents in order to imagine the potentialities of queer futures. As Rosamond S. King states, literature can “[help] us to see some of the ways sexuality is imagined in the [Caribbean] region and the diaspora, both as it is and was, and how it could be” (King 2014, 13). Focusing on Ingrid Persaud's novel "Love After Love" (2020) and Anton Nimblett's short story "Argument Against Making Heterosexuality Illegal” (2019), this paper explores the imaginings of queer utopian worlds that draw attention to the imbrications of systems of oppression, suggest the possibilities of creating solidarities across difference, and allow us to have hope for a ‘not-yet-here’ queerness. Cummings, Ronald. 2010. “Queer Theory and Caribbean Writing.” In: The Routledge Companion to Anglophone Caribbean Literature. Ed. by Michael Andrew Bucknor, and Alison Donnell. London and New York: Routledge, pp. 323-331. Ferguson, Roderick A. 2019. One-Dimensional Queer. Medford: Polity. King, Rosamond S. 2014. Island Bodies: Transgressive Sexualities in the Caribbean Imagination. Gainesville: University Press of Florida. Muñoz, José Esteban. 2019. Cruising Utopia: The Then and There of Queer Futurity. 10th Anniversary Edition. Foreword by Joshua Chambers-Letson, Tavia Nyong’o, and Ann Pellegrini. New York University Press. Nimblett, Anton. 2019. Now/After. Leeds: Peepal Tree Press. Persaud, Ingrid. 2020. Love After Love. London: Faber.
Research center :
CEREP - Centre d'Enseignement et de Recherche en Études Postcoloniales - ULiège
Disciplines :
Literature
Author, co-author :
Bomans, Bastien  ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département de langues modernes : ling., litt. et trad. > Langue et linguistique anglaises modernes
Language :
English
Title :
Imagining Queer Futures: Postcolonial Utopias of Desires in Trinidadian Writing
Publication date :
29 April 2021
Event name :
Teatime @ AGS | Les Goûters de l'AGS
Event organizer :
Atelier Genre(s) et Sexualité(s) (ULB)
Event place :
Belgium
Event date :
29/04/2021
Available on ORBi :
since 06 May 2021

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