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Cover of 2009 publication of "Is the Rectum a Grave?" and Other Essays

"Is the Rectum a Grave?" is a 1987 essay by scholar Leo Bersani. It is an early text in queer theory (although Bersani never considered himself a queer theorist), and provides a non-utopian view of sexuality. The essay was republished in 2009 alongside others by Bersani.

Background[edit]

Bersani published "Is the Rectum a Grave?" during the 1987 height of the AIDS epidemic.[1] The title was inspired by two declarations of Simon Watney, an AIDS activist: That AIDS has produced "a new machinery of repression, [by] making the rectum a grave"; and that the public health response to AIDS has refigured gay men's rectums as impenetrable and "Off Limits".[2] The first sentence of Bersani's essay remains famous: "There is a big secret about sex: most people don't like it."[3]

The essay is not utopian; it refutes the desire to view pre-AIDS gay social life as idyllic, saying they were economies of desire with ingrained social orders that excluded many.[4]

Legacy[edit]

"Is the Rectum a Grave?" and Bersani's 1995 book, Homos, are seen by cultural critic Robyn Wiegman as part of the "inaugural" foundations of an explicitly anti-social perspective in queer theory.[5] This has been put into question by queer theorist Tim Dean, who says Guy Hocquenghem originated this strand of thought in his Deleuze and Guattari-inspired book Homosexual Desire (1972).[6] Bersani never believed himself to be a part of queer theory, but the essay is nonetheless widely viewed as an early text in the field.[7]

Bersani republished the essay in Is the Rectum a Grave? and Other Essays (2009), a collection of his essays.[8] "Is the Rectum a Grave?" is older than the other essays featured by about a decade, a move seen by queer theorist Brian Glavey as an attempt to refine his theories about sex.[9]

The title has been borrowed by other scholars, such as in "Is the Rectum Straight?" (1991) by Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick and "Are the Lips a Grave?" (2011) by Lynne Huffer.[10]

References[edit]

Citations[edit]

  1. ^ Herring 2016, p. 5.
  2. ^ Escoffier 2011, p. 132; Sedgwick 1994, p. 239.
  3. ^ Berlant & Edelman 2015, p. 625; Wiegman 2017, p. 219.
  4. ^ Muñoz 2009, p. 34.
  5. ^ Wiegman 2017, p. 220.
  6. ^ Moore, Brintnall & Marchal 2018, pp. 31–32.
  7. ^ Wiegman 2017, p. 237.
  8. ^ Glavey 2010, p. 318.
  9. ^ Glavey 2010, p. 319.
  10. ^ Huffer 2011, p. 517; Sedgwick 1994, p. 102.

Bibliography[edit]

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