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What Can Queer Theory Do for Intersex?
Type de ressource
Auteur/contributeur
- Morland, Iain (Auteur)
Titre
What Can Queer Theory Do for Intersex?
Résumé
In this essay I explore how queer theory might account for postsurgical intersex bodies of diminished genital tactility. In other words, I evaluate whether a critique of surgery’s effects is possible from a queer theoretical perspective on the body. I contend that for this purpose queer theory must do more than focus on bodily sensations such as pleasure, shame, and touching. The essay makes four key claims: first, that the desensitized postsurgical body cannot be accounted for by a queer discourse in which sexual pleasure is a form of hedonistic activism; second, that a queer discourse of shame enables a degree of critical engagement with the surgical creation of atypically sensate bodies; third, that pleasure and shame are both queer sensations, and queer theory’s assumption of a sensorial basis to cultural critique, which is exemplified by the queer touch, flounders when confronted with the desensitized intersex body; fourth, that if queer theory is figured as a kind of reaching—but not necessarily touching—then it can be of greater use in accounting for the problematic yet ambivalent effects of intersex surgery.
Publication
GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies
Volume
15
Numéro
2
Pages
285-312
Date
2009
Langue
Anglais
Catalogue de bibl.
WorldCat Discovery Service
Référence
Morland, Iain. (2009). What Can Queer Theory Do for Intersex? GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies, 15(2), 285‑312. https://uqam-bib.on.worldcat.org/oclc/5183745479
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