As If!
Publication Date
8-2025
Description
In As If!, Chase Gregory explores the stylistically strategic, often campy, and productively fraught cross-identifications of early queer criticism. Gregory calls this form of aids-era criticism as if!—a mode of writing in which authors struggle to read, write, and identify with and across categories of race, sexuality, and gender. Analyzing the work of Robert Reid-Pharr, Deborah E. McDowell, Barbara Johnson, and Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Gregory shows how their writing productively challenges fixed ideas of identity and knowledge production. Using these four writers as case studies of a larger trend within early queer criticism, Gregory demonstrates that even when critical attempts at relation are met by impasse, as if! criticism breaks down social relation, especially within those fields influenced by queer theory, deconstructionist feminist theory, and Black feminist theory. By advocating a return to as if! criticism as a politically useful blueprint for contemporary cultural inquiry, Gregory draws attention to the obstacles to forging identification across difference and insists on the impossible project of solidarity across such difference.
ISBN
9781478032120
Keywords
Gay Authors, History and Criticism, Queer Theory, Homosexuality and literature, Literature and Race
Disciplines
English Language and Literature | Queer Studies
Publisher
Duke University Press
City
Durham
Department
English
Files
Recommended Citation
Gregory, Chase, "As If!" (2025). Faculty Books. 166.
https://digitalcommons.bucknell.edu/books/166
