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Title: Queer anarchist autonomous zones and publics Author: Sandra Jeppesen Date: September 2, 2010 Language: en Topics: queer theory, autonomist, autonomous zones, queer Source: Retrieved on May 21, 2020 from https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1363460710370652
Global anarchist movements and queer politics are integrating in
mutually informing ways. The characteristics of this synthesis include
liberatory theories and practices of embodied genders and sexualities in
private and public, direct actions to visibilize and extend queer
publics, and queer intersections with capitalism, the environment, race,
disability, public space, private property and citizenship, among
others. This article will critically analyze three cases of
anti-consumerist vomiting, including an erotic performance, a punk zine,
and a Pink Panthers direct action, to investigate the politics of queer
anarchist autonomous publics that extend the anti-homophobic and anti-
heteronormative politics of queer counterpublics toward challenging
homonormativity through intersectional anti-oppression and liberatory
value-practices.
In the 1990s North American queer activism and queer theory shifted from
an anti- homophobic position that resisted the heterosexual imperative,
with an emphasis on AIDS activism, growing gay villages, and same-sex
marriage (particularly in Canada), toward more complex challenges to the
heteronormativity of institutions, laws and cultural practices. The term
homophobia has fallen out of use by activists, as it contains within it
the suggestion that there are legitimate psychological grounds for
individuals to fear or have a phobia of homosexuality. Instead we use
âheterosexismâ which points to the systemic nature of oppression against
queers through cultural, political and economic structures favouring
heterosexual- ity and heterosexuals. Heterosexism is the form of
oppression resulting from the ideology of heteronormativity. In A
Critical Introduction to Queer Theory, Nikki Sullivan argues that
heteronormativity does not exist as a discrete and easily identifiable
body of thought, of rules and regulations, but rather, informs â albeit
ambiguously, in complex ways, and to varying degrees â all kinds of
practices, institutions, conceptual systems, and social structures.
(2003: 132)
Similarly, Lauren Berlant and Michael Warner suggest that
âHeteronormativity is more than ideology, or prejudice, or phobia
against gays and lesbians; it is pro- duced in almost every aspect of
the forms and arrangements of social lifeâ reprodu- cing itself
systemically in ânationality, the state, and the law; commerce;
medicine; and education; as well as in the conventions and affects of
narrativity, romance, and other protected spaces of cultureâ (2000:
318â19). This affects life practices such as parenting, joint bank
accounts, hospital or prison visiting rights, travelling, immigrating,
movie watching and inheritance. Heteronormativity frames hetero-
sexuality as a universal norm making it publicly invisible, whereas
homosexuality is meant to be private and thus becomes visible in public
(Duncan, 1996: 137). Furthermore, heteronormativity requires the
stabilization of bodies into two cis- gendered categories (male,
female), whereas queer bodies may be transgender, transsexual, intersex
or otherwise challenge this stabilization.
Two anti-heteronormative strategies that engage publics have been used
by activists. Groups such as ACT-UP and Queer Nation challenged cultural
norms by making interventions in heteronormative spaces such as shopping
malls and bars. Activists âreterritorialize various public spaces
through an assortment of strat- egies like the policing of
neighbourhoods by Pink Panthers dressed in âBash Backâ T-shirts or Queer
Nights Out and Kiss-Ins where groups of gay couples invade straight bars
or other public spaces and scandalously make outâ (Hennessy, 1994â 95:
51). Interventions announce the presence of queers, interrupting the
heteronor- mative public by challenging the assumption that queer
sexuality belongs in private. As Hennessy argues, âThe queer critique of
heteronormativity is intensely and aggressively concerned with issues of
[queer] visibilityâ (1994â95: 36) in hetero- normative publics. The
second strategy is the creation of queer counterpublics engaged in
spaces like gay bars and villages that facilitate queer activism, dis-
courses, cruising, and socializing. Berlant and Warner have found that
sex-oriented queer commercial spaces such as S/M bars, cafes, porn shops
and bookstores are important sites for queer counterpublics: âthere are
very few places in the world that have assembled much of a queer
population without a base in sex commerceâ (2000: 327). In these spaces,
the public is predominantly queer, as the spaces create
ânonheteronormative worldsâ (2000: 329).
Exhibit A: âA garden-variety leather barâ that âhosts a sex performance
eventâ
âA boy, twentyish, very skateboard, comes on the low stage at one end of
the bar, wearing lycra shorts and a dog collar. He sits loosely in a
restraining chair. His partner comes out and tilts the bottomâs head up
to the ceiling, stretching out his throat. Behind them is an array of
foods. The top begins pouring milk down the boyâs throat, then food,
then more milk. It spills over, down his chest and onto the floor. A
dynamic is established between them in which they carefully keep at the
threshold of gagging. The bottom struggles to keep taking in more than
he really can. The top is careful to give him just enough to stretch his
capacities. From time to time a baby bottle is offered as a respite, but
soon the rhythm intensifies. The boyâs stomach is beginning to rise and
pulse, almost convulsively... the top inserts two, then three fingers in
the bottomâs throat, insistently offering his own stomach for the
repeated climaxes. (Berlant and Warner, 2000: 328â9)
This example of erotic vomiting engages non-heteronormative erotic play
thereby creating a queer counterpublic of the audience. âCounterpublics
are, by definition, formed by their conflict with the norms and contexts
of their cultural environmentâ (Warner, 2002: 63). A queer counterpublic
then engages queer sexualities and pro- duces opportunities for the
circulation of discourses about them that are in âconflict withâ or
resistant to heteronormativity.
Important to this resistance is the liberation of the body from some of
its private and public constraints. Theories of privates and publics
tend to assign sexualities (homo/hetero), genders (male/female)[1] and
races (white/non-white) to private or public domains in ways that
re-enact binaries and stereotypes. Specific sexual acts, behaviours,
objects, bodies, or spaces, however, are not inherently only either
public or private. Warner suggests that the terms public and private
âseem to be preconceptual, almost instinctual, rooted in the
orientations of the body and common speechâ (2002: 23), whereas it seems
that notions of appropriate public and private behaviour are highly
socially constructed. The example he gives is not about publics but
âprivatesâ: âA childâs earliest education in shame, deportment, and
cleaning is an initiation into the prevailing meaning of public and
private, as when he or she locates his or her ââprivatesâââ (2002: 23).
However, there is nothing intrinsically âprivateâ about oneâs genitals,
rather this is something children learn when they are told to cover up.
Spaces where people may experience the pleasure of privates in public
include nudity clubs, clothing-optional beaches, naked sports teams,
saunas, naked yoga classes, and sex parties. In these spaces the body
does not ânaturallyâ orient itself toward the privacy of sexuality or
sex organs. Human sexual parts are not hidden away like our internal
organs are (livers, kidneys, spleens), rather they are on the surface of
the body. They are the surfaces of our bodies: almost every part of the
bodyâs surface is potentially sexual in some way. Thus what Warner calls
the âorientations of the bodyâ are not toward privacy as he claims, but
rather toward a proliferation of public sensualities and sexualities.
Bodies liberated through unlearning can be both private and public at
once, or neither, as we choose. The liberation of bodies calls into
question not just notions of privates and publics but the entire set of
social norms that this binary frames. Part of this includes the liminal
spaces of bodies, including clothing and affect, as specific instances
in which the public/private distinction is thrown into crisis. Warner
suggests that âClothing is a language of publicity, folding the body in
what is felt as the bodyâs own privacyâ (2002: 23). Humans emphasize the
privacy of our âprivatesâ by covering them up. Similarly, feelings are
meant to be experienced and expressed in private. âSome bodily
sensations â of pleasure and pain, shame and display, appetite and
purgation â come to be felt, in the same way, as privacyâ (2002: 23).
Sensations emanating from the body and gazes fixed upon the body are
thwarted in their attempts to cross the threshold from private to public
by our socialized conceptions of propriety: we must cry, vomit, fall in
love or have sex behind closed doors. However, if the bodyâs own privacy
is intrinsic to it, why do we need clothes to fold the body into
privacy? Is it not more liberating for sensa- tions and emotions to be
shared rather than to be entirely private? Warnerâs claim for what is
naturally public or private with respect to the body risks the
reinscrip- tion of norms emanating from heteronormativity.
Queer citizenship has provided another framework for rethinking
heteronorma- tivity. Robert Corber and Stephen Valocchi argue that
âsexual and gender norms... serve as prerequisites for membership in the
nationâ (2003: 15). The nation, through the legal system and its
heteronormative capitalist discourses, establishes rules for entry,
belonging and success, from which queers are systematically excluded.[2]
Belonging in a queer nation can be achieved by transgressions of sexual
and gender norms. âEven as the nation-state establishes and enforces
these norms of belonging, spaces open up in which individuals can
exercise sexual agency, partly in resistance to these dominant
understandings of sexual citizenshipâ (Corber and Valocchi, 2003: 15).
Warner situates agency for the sexual citizen within the queer
counterpublic. He argues:
A public, or counterpublic, can do more than represent the interests of
gendered or sexualized persons in a public sphere. It can mediate the
most private and intimate meanings of gender and sexuality ... It can
therefore make possible new forms of gendered or sexual citizenship.
(2002: 57)
Non-oppressive queer social relations can be developed through
counterpublics creating spaces for queer sexual citizenship yielding the
agency to participate in a âprocess of world makingâ (Warner, 2002: 57).
However with increasingly militarized borders, citizenship is a fraught
category. A system of sexual citizens and non-citizens, with inferior
rights accorded to the latter, entails a hierarchization of sexualities
whereby some would have âsexual citizenshipâ and others would not. Who
would adjudicate such citizenship?
How would national citizenship intersect with sexual citizenship? Are
non-citizens of the nation-state able to access sexual citizenship?
Bobby Noble has shown that in Toronto same-sex bath-houses, presumably
sites of âqueer citizenshipâ, the current entrance policy is âshow your
dick at the doorâ, a trans-phobic white-centric polic- ing of bodies
(Noble, 2009). The concept of sexual citizen holds within it a policed
border that refuses some people (i.e. non-white, trans or intersex,
immigrant, people who do not conform to western beauty standards, people
in poverty, people with disabilities and so on) admission into queer
counterpublics. Queer activists thus challenge theorists to consider the
nation, capitalism and other inter- sectional forms of oppression in
their challenges to heteronormativity.
The vomit performance described earlier can be interpreted as capitalist
consump- tion. The âtopâ, or the dominant capitalist ideology,
force-feeds products to the receptive consumer or âbottomâ. As âthe
bottom struggles to keep taking in more than he really canâ, as in
middle-class debt-driven consumerism, and âthe top is careful to give
him just enough to stretch his capacitiesâ, the same way capitalism
stretches our capacities, âa dynamic is established between them in
which they carefully keep at the threshold of gaggingâ against consuming
too much. Berlant and Warner figure this as erotic and the vomiting that
follows as a sexualized âclimaxâ, as the top offers his stomach for the
stream of ejaculate/ vomit.
Susan Bordo considers vomiting emblematic of the contradictions between
capitalist production and consumption:
In advanced consumer capitalism ... an unstable, agonistic construction
of personality is produced by the contradictory structure of economic
life. On the one hand, as âproducer-selvesâ, we must be capable of
sublimating, delaying, repressing desires for immediate gratification;
we must cultivate the work ethic. On the other hand, as
âconsumer-selvesâ we serve the system through a boundless capacity to
capitulate to desire and indulge in impulse; we must become creatures
who hunger for constant and immediate satisfaction. (1990: 96)
Consumerism cultivates the construction of the desire for consumerism
itself, which extends beyond the desire for products to encompass the
desire for a situ- ation of consumption in which there is a secure
assumption that you can have everything you could possibly desire. The
body cannot sustain these contradictions, however, even as every queer
subject cannot participate in a counterpublic that calls for
marginalized quasi-privatized gay-village spaces of consumerism predi-
cated on public displays of perfect (white male) bodies indulging in
capitalist excess. Vomiting is a bodily expression of the
unsustainability of capitalism. This takes on a gendered dynamic as
well, as Bordo has found. Women are supposed to make ourselves so
âslenderâ that we almost disappear, a disappearance that leads to
multiple marginalizations in queer commercial spaces that demand
entrance fees (class), are dominated by cis men (sex), are spaces that
either reject or exoticize racialized groups (race), and demand specific
body images (able-bodiness). Bordo argues that this âembodies the
unstable âdouble-bindâ of consumer capitalismâ (1990: 99), as well as
suggesting the untenability of womenâs bodies within mascu- linist,
heteronormative, racist, ableist, capitalist systems.
Queer commerce thus cannot empower all subjects. âVisibility in
commodity culture is in this sense a limited victory for gays who are
welcome to be visible as consumer subjects but not as social subjectsâ
(Hennessy, 1994â95: 32). It is precisely this social subjectivity that
is at stake in anti-capitalist queer social movements.
Exhibit B: Projectile zine
In the 1990s my friend Leah and I produced a zine called Projectile:
Stories about Puking, containing sections called, âWhere to puke in
Torontoâ, âThe Montreal Pukeâ and âThe Red Pukeâ partner puke reviews,
and âColour-code yer pukeâ, with a cen- terfold depicting one of our
friends bent forward projectiling a stream of puke from his mouth. Other
punk issues covered included band reviews, condom reviews for sluts, the
punk Beer Olympics in New York City, squatting, and police brutality.
(Jeppesen and Visser, 1996)
We were always puking so we made a zine about it. For us puking was the
fullest expression of an authentic excessiveness in a life lived with
the kind of intensity disallowed by polite society. Puking at 7:00am
after drinking all night at punk clubs and after-hours bars in a subway
train full of commuters was the ultimate cathar- sis. Your head heated
up, your face started sweating, your body trembled, you vibrated from
toe to head, and that surge produced something of you, a kind of
self-production, a collectively approved explosion against everything.
The com- muters, staring in disgust, reproduced your disgust at society,
as you passed the affect of disaffectation back to them.
These moments created and accelerated our passion and self-rebuilding.
We were not caught up in surfaces of life, the body, cleanliness, linear
time. Instead we lived in urban grit, by crumbling graffitied walls
under train bridges, displaying the broken glass edges of our skin,
enjoying the feeling of the piercing needle going in welling up our
eyes, the tattoo gun drilling down through our skin. Scarification,
cutting, branding, vomiting and fucking intensified our lives. Puking
was the cul- mination of a night of fully engaged participation in the
most intense gruelling enjoyable expressive living. Fucking was the
culmination of an intense connection to another person, a letting go of
bodily control, a full-on head-on encounter with another being. Both
explosive and expulsive, they gave a sense of finality to the
proceedings: Now Iâm done. I have lived tonight to the fullest extent of
my capac- ity, exceeding norms on so many fronts. âWhere to puke in
Torontoâ lists the grittiest corners of the city, back alleys with the
stench of French fry vats and dead pigeons, âbehind Sneaky Deeâs just
outside the kitchen (or just inside)â, dark graffitied streets,
abandoned houses, gravelly urban parks like the âjunkie park at Dundas
and Bathurstâ or âKensington park in the sex bushesâ (Jeppesen and
Visser, 1996). These were places we loved, we marked our territory with
sex and vomit. Puking and fucking in public spaces and naming those
spaces our own created a liberatory underground culture. This piece
de´tournes the tourist guide âWhere to dine out in Torontoâ turning
consumption/dining in public by the privileged classes into
production/vomiting in public by the underclasses. Puking was explicitly
anti- capitalist, anti-consumerist and anti-spectacle. The two partner
puke reviews tell relationship stories through vomit rated by âcolourâ,
âtextureâ, âsoundâ, and âloca- tionâ. What did it reveal about the
relationship? âI always think of [them] fondly and somewhat pathetically
when Iâm hungoverâ (Jeppesen and Visser, 1996), con- cludes one review.
Puking and fucking drew us closer, creating zones of unmediated shared
intensities. Vomiting is a sex-like manifestation of the non-normative,
the ejaculate/projectile stream is a âfuck youâ on the pedestrian
sidewalk of society. It expresses only its own intensities. It is the
Deleuze and Guattarian body without organs (1983), literally ejecting
its own organs, intensely embracing other bodies without organs. Love
and intimacy are created in these moments which would be shameful in
consumer culture where intimacy is produced in circumscribed places
through consumerism â fancy restaurants, expensive gifts and so on. The
excesses of affect and intimacy produced by vomiting and sex in public
challenge hetero- normativity and its direct ties to capitalism.
Moreover, the boundary between public and private is thrown into crisis,
per- haps even evacuated by the eroticized vomit performance and
Projectileâs âstories about pukingâ, whereby both create non-shaming
spaces as the bodyâs innards are put on display. Not just the
sexualization of the act of vomiting, but the collapse of bourgeois
decorum in the act of âpukingâ are transgressions of boundaries linked
to the public/private divide, including non-normative sexuality, public
performance of bodily functions, the reinscription of positive affect
onto normatively negative acts, an overshare of expressive personal
proclivities, an outward display of punk pov- erty through the lack of
private space in which to vomit and so on. Furthermore, the zine, as a
form of autonomous media, creates its own fluid anti-capitalist
autonomous public. Queer radicals have thus become anti-capitalist,
recognizing âthat heteronormative forms, so central to the accumulation
and reproduction of capital, also depend on heavy interventions in the
regulation of capitalâ (Berlant and Warner, 2000: 327). But gay
capitalism has been quick to establish norms of homosexuality consistent
with consumerism.
As we have seen, an important part of queer politics is the reclaiming
of hetero- normative public space for queer public sex and safety.
Berlant and Warnerâs account of queer counterpublics takes recourse to a
spatial taxonomy related to cap- italist private property rights and
commercial development. âIn late 20^(th)-centuryââpost-industrialââ
societies like the United States, the (in)visibility of class divisions
continues to be spatially regulated by urban planningâ (Hennessy,
1994â95: 67). Ownership and control of space is at stake in queer
liberation. âBy letting the language of real-estate development serve
queer public intimacy, Berlant and Warner provide a powerful and
necessary critique of heteronormative privacy and put forth a compelling
defense of the social networks and queer culture created through public
sexâ (Castiglia, 2000: 156). Spaces mapped out for queer pleasure via
communal intimacies are crucial to queer counterpublics. For Warner, âA
counterpublic, against the background of the public sphere, enables a
horizon of opinion and exchange; its exchanges remain distinct from
authority and can have a critical relation to powerâ (Warner, 2002:
56â7). Anti-capitalist queer organizing assumes a critical relation to
the new power hierarchies that have been established within queer
culture, to unlink queer culture from consumerism, offering critiques of
gay villages steeped in commerce, the âpink dollarâ, the gay niche
market, and corporate sponsorship of Pride marches.
Exhibit C: The Pink Panthers, Montreal, 14 February 2004
Operation âPepto-Bismol Please!â, designed by the Pink Panthers
collective to denounce the commercialization of Valentines Day, took
place as planned late this afternoon in Montrealâs Gay Village. After
puking on the doorsteps of the Villageâs most prosperous shops and bars
catering to gay businessmen, members of this radical queer group flooded
the neighborhood with counterfeit coupons, symbolizing the reign of the
pink dollar and the capitalist compliance of todayâs average gays and
lesbians (Les Pantheâ res Roses, 2004).
According to Berlant and Elizabeth Freeman: âThe Pink Panthers,
initially con- ceived of at a Queer Nation meeting (they are now a
separate organization), pro- vided a searing response to the increased
violence that has accompanied the general increase of gay visibility in
Americaâ (1992: 161). Les Pantheâres Roses, The Pink Panthers, was âa
group of radical queers based in Montreal, who use[d] direct and
creative action to confront the established orderâ. Formed in 2002, Les
Pantheâres Roses held their first anti-capitalist action at Montreal Gay
Pride in 2003, â[d]istribut[ing] hundreds of Anti-Ad Kits on
Rene-Le´vesque Streetâ (Les Pantheâ res Roses, 2004). In 2004 they
organized an anti-homonormative Valentineâs Day vomiting direct action:
A member of the Pink Panthers, before vomiting on the steps of the store
Megavideo, revealed that the most infuriating thing for him was the
capitalist appropriation of emotions like love and liberty, which have
always belonged to everybody and should never have become dependant
[sic] on consumption. He feels that multinationals and others who profit
off of Valentineâs Day are doing something that by its very nature
(competition, salary reduction, waste of natural resources) has nothing
to do with the love of another person. (Les Pantheâ res Roses, 2004) The
Pink Panthers used their vomit action to denounce capitalist
exploitation of gay consumer dollars and ânatural resourcesâ or the
environment, linking these two issues. They also noted that,
âbusinessmen make themselves out to be the most enthusiastic proponents
of gay liberation, while at the same time using their phallocentric
power to exclude everyone who is not a white manâ (Les Pantheâ res
Roses, 2004). They add masculinity and race to the environment and
capitalism as axes of oppression that intersect with and in queer
subjectivities and liberation. The Pink Panthersâ anti-homonormative
action includes a greater diversity of queers who might live in poverty,
and/or be women, and/or be bisexual, and/ or be trans, and/or be people
of colour, and/or be sex workers, and/or be dis- abled, and/or not
conform to the dominant beauty image, and/or otherwise devi- ate from
gay stereotypes. They challenge barriers to participation for doubly or
multiply marginalized queers in counterpublic spaces inside urban clubs
or shops, where some modes of oppression might be reinforced (e.g. by
racism, the âdick at the doorâ policy, beauty standards, social class
belonging, ageism, ableism and so on). Furthermore, the Panthersâ
message was created in the streets, accessible to all passers-by,
claiming public spaces and moments as queer autonomous zones free of
oppression.
Direct action vomiting critiques the homonormativity of the queer
counter- public that includes gay villages, corporatized Pride marches
and the like. The Pink Panthersâ vomit actions make Berlant and Warnerâs
erotic vomit story seem somewhat limited, as does the academic public
created by representation in an article such as this one. Sitting in a
bar vicariously experiencing some- oneâs intense eroticism positively
revalues and simultaneously degrades it, as the performance risks
becoming commodified. The Pink Panthersâ statement critiques queer
counterpublics for commodifying affect through âthe capitalist
appropriation of emotions like love and libertyâ. While the erotic
vomiting scene Berlant and Warner witnessed is hardly a Valentineâs Day
card, it does partic- ipate in the queer consumerism of gay bars that
reifies homo-norms, for exam- ple that queers all go to leather bars, or
that being queer is a hip young urban lifestyle choice. These
stereotypes become homo-norms in urban queer counterpublics.
While queer visibility in heteronormative culture is important, Mall
Zaps and Kiss-Ins also tend to reinforce queer stereotypes through
mainstream practices such as shopping and public kissing. Richard Dyer
has found that âGay people, whether activists or not, have resented and
attacked the images of homosexual- ity ... The principle line of attack
has been on stereotypingâ (Dyer, 2006: 353). Gay stereotypes tend to
emphasize white middle-class cisgender gay male consumerism.
âParticularly damaging is the fact that many gay people believe
[stereotypes], lead- ing on the one hand to the self-oppression so
characteristic of gay peopleâs lives, and on the other to behaviour in
conformity with the stereotypes which of course only serves to confirm
their truthâ (2006: 353). Kiss-Ins and Mall Zaps perform the âtruthâ of
certain stereotypes revealing both internal (within queer groups) and
internalized (within the self) oppressions.
Ironically, this tends to both deconstruct and simultaneously reinforce
both heteronormativity and homonormativity. âOne of the modes of
[maintaining het- erosexual hegemony] for gays is casting gay
relationships and characters in terms of heterosexual rolesâ (Dyer,
2006: 356), including kissing in malls or public squares posing as a
heteronormative couple. Kevin Michael DeLuca describes a famous gay
kiss-in poster by Gran Fury thus: âOne sailor has his arms around his
partnerâs waist. The other sailorâs arms are around his partnerâs neck.
In other words, it is a classic kissâ (1999: 18). This image inserts
queer subjectivities into the public sphere, demanding access to power.
At the same time, it risks becoming a homonormative image, as the men
are both beautiful, white, thin, and middle class with matching short
haircuts and outfits. Certainly there is also a level of irony in the
perfor- mance. Nonetheless acts and images like âthese simply bolster
heterosexual hege- mony, [whereas] the task is to develop our own
alternative and challenging definitions of ourselvesâ (Dyer, 2006: 357).
Self-definitions must move past white privilege and other dominant
homo-norms. A Kiss-In emphasizes public kissing, not a norm in all
ethno-cultural groups. Shopping imagines all queers as middle- class
consumers who escalate environmental devastation. âThese stereotypes of
wealthy free-spending gay consumers play well with advertisers and are
useful to corporations because they make the gay market seem potentially
lucrativeâ (Hennessy, 1994â95: 66). Queer activism, in earnest attempts
to challenge hetero- normativity, has inadvertently reinscribed a
homonormative subject complicit with capitalism, racism, environmental
destruction, ableism, patriarchy, beauty myths and so on. Radical queer
activists attempt to move beyond this deadlock without abandoning the
notion of queer culture altogether.
The Pink Panthersâ action of vomiting in public takes it out of a
commodified space. The vomit, however, was made of oatmeal not actual
vomit, producing a simulated vomiting against the hyper-simulations of
capitalism. The action goes into a space it rejects, and replicates that
which it rejects. This simulation and rejection is analogous to the
disgust shared with commuters, a kind of hyper- affect produced by
vomiting in streets or back-alleys or commuter trains. Only these
non-regulated, open-ended public spaces can be liberatory; as the body
itself becomes the message, the vomit becomes a kind of street-corner
text acces- sible to all. According to DeLuca, the body itself has
become an event-image, a text that can shift the discursive mainstream
framing of queer politics, as some âactivist groups practice an
alternative image politics, performing image events designed for mass
media dissemination. Often, image events revolve around images of bodies
â vulnerable bodies, dangerous bodies, taboo bodies, ludicrous bodies,
transfigured bodiesâ (DeLuca, 1999: 10). The vomiting body is a
âdangerous bodyâ bringing forth new ideas. âTheir bodies, then, become
not merely flags to attract attention for the argument but the site and
substance of the argument itselfâ (1999: 10). Using their bodies, the
Pink Panthersâ puking action articulated a message against con- sumerism
and other exclusions, the substance of which was the vomit itself. Their
âbodies simultaneously are constructed in discourses and exceed those
discoursesâ (1999: 20) â or in this case, the discourse/vomit exceeded
the body â moving beyond âa class-specific âbourgeois (homosexual/queer)
imaginaryâ [that] structures our knowledge of sexual identity, pleasure,
and emancipationâ (Hennessy, 1994â95: 70). Certainly not bourgeois,
vomiting on the steps of queer consumerism makes the point that pleasure
and emancipation should be available to all subjects, those who go to
gay bars, as well as those who are excluded. The public created is a
free and fluid autonomous public.
This kind of direct action demonstrates that âmovements around gender
and sexuality do not always conform to the bourgeois model of
ârational-critical debateâ (Warner, 2002: 51), nor do they remain legal.
Groups such as âEarth First!, ACT UP and Queer Nation have challenged
and changed the meanings of the world not through good reasons but
through vulnerable bodies, not through rational argu- ments but through
bodies at riskâ (DeLuca, 1999: 11). Engaging in direct action in open
public spaces the Pink Panthers risk criminalization. After the action
in Montreal, The Mirror ran the headline, âPuking Queers Make Splash!â
and featured an interview with a âself-described anarchistâ, who used
the name ââOlivierââ, â a pseudonym, as he acknowledges his acts are
illegalâ. The use of pseudonyms is almost ironic as vomiting is not a
transgression of the law, but rather signifies a transgression against
the digestive system. The context of the action, however â in public,
against corporations â renders it âillegalâ and the pseudonym necessary.
Often regular behaviour (vomiting, having sex) is criminalized when
engaged by queers. Furthermore, there is a link between shame (i.e. the
private) and criminal- ization (i.e. privatization of ownership, space
and so on). Warner observes that âcritically relevant styles of
publicness in gay maleâ and, I would add, other queer âsexual culture[s]
are seldom recognized as such but are typically denounced as sleaze and
as crimeâ (2002: 52). Puking punks and queers are sleazy, shameful
criminals who are bad for business.
And yet sleaze, perversion, deviance, eccentricity, weirdness,
kinkiness, BDSM and smut, although perhaps not openly homo-norms among
the new assimilation- ists advocating same-sex marriage, are central to
sex-positive queer anarchist lives. âQueer and other insurgents have
long striven, often dangerously or scandalously, to cultivate what good
folks used to call criminal intimaciesâ (Berlant and Warner, 2000: 322),
figured as exciting sites of resistance. âNonstandard intimacies would
seem less criminal and less fleeting if, as used to be the case, normal
intimacies included everything from consorts to courtiers, friends,
amours, associates, and co- conspiratorsâ (2000: 323). Here we come up
against another binary, however: normal vs. nonstandard. According to
Jamie Heckert, âLGBT politics maintains these categories: it intends to
invert their meaning, redefining sexual deviance as sexual identity of
which one should be proud and sexual normality as boring/ oppressiveâ
(2004: 106). The desire for certain behaviours to be recategorized as
ânormalâ is denounced in a queer anarchist world-making project that
considers all consensual, non-coerced intimacies and sexualities
legitimate, challenging homo- normativity via anti-oppression politics.
alternative value-practices
Abandoning hierarchized binary categories is one strategy of
intersectional anti- oppression politics. As Heckert argues, âSexuality
is constructed into hierarchies and is interconnected with other forms
of social divisions including gender, sexual orientation, class and
ethnicityâ (2004: 102). The Pink Panthers reveal and critique these
hierarchies in their media interviews. The Gazette, on 23 February 2004,
ran the wordy headline, âPink Panthers use fake vomit, phony money to
preach in the gay village: non-violent but often bizarre actions aim to
encourage activism in gay communityâ. âNathalieâ suggests âThe gay
(political) strategy is very narrow- minded. They never consider other
causes, like womenâs rights, the environment, globalizationâ. Similarly,
in The Hour of 29 July 2004, âJubejube Molotovâ asks âWhat about drag
queens, trannies, gays of colour?... What about everyone who doesnât
want to be married and have kids?â Also on 29 July 2004, The Mirrorâs
article, âRadical pink: Queer anarchists take on what they perceive to
be the racism, sexism and materialism of the gay establishmentâ, takes
up the Panthersâ critique of the âgay-geoisieâ. The article suggests
that âsome Montreal homosexuals feel at odds with the mainstreaming of
gay and are rebelling against the pigeon-holing of their identity based
solely on their sexuality and their supposed disposable incomeâ.
Revealing the intersectionality of exclusions has the power to expand
queer politics and publics. This media coverage further expands the
queer autonomous public to include mainstream (The Gazette) and left
weekly (The Hour, The Mirror) audiences.
An intersectional analysis is considered crucial within queer anarchist
culture. Intersectionality, as Leslie McCall argues, is based on the
realization that â[s]ocial life is considered too irreducibly complex â
overflowing with multiple and fluid deter- minations of both subjects
and structures â to make fixed categories anything but simplifying
social fictions that produce inequalities in the process of producing
dif- ferencesâ (2005: 1773). Nikki Sullivan has found that if
oppressions are divided into categories and addressed one at a time,
enacting other oppressions becomes a risk:
One of the problems with disassociating race, gender, and sexuality and
focusing primarily on one of the terms is that such an approach can lead
to the production of accounts of race that are (at least implicitly)
sexist and/or homophobic, theories of gender that are (at least
implicitly) racist and/or homophobic, and analyses of sexu- ality that
are (at least implicitly) racist and/or sexist. (2003: 66)
Accordingly, Hennessy opens out her queer anti-capitalist analysis: âthe
racialized and gendered division of labor suggests that there are more
lesbians than gay men living in poverty and proportionately more of them
are people of colorâ (1994â95: 69). An anti-categorical intersectional
analysis considers oppression on intersecting axes rather than the âsilo
modelâ of unrelated categories. Furthermore, the range of differences
within categories of oppression renders categories themselves nearly
meaningless (McCall, 2005) whereby a general failure to acknowledge this
has entrenched systemic oppressions. âAny systemâ, as Heckert observes,
addressing internal oppression, âthat limits or stigmatises our
imaginings of the possible (be it anarchism or same-sex desires)... is
oppressive to us allâ (Heckert, 2004: 113). An anti-categorical approach
moves beyond labels to value individual experiences, and opens up the
possible imaginings Heckert advocates.
In fact, both Heckert (2004) and Dyer (2006) argue for the development
of a set of alternative values self-defined among our communities. These
values are not oppositional to mainstream values, rather they come from
a liberatory set of com- mitments driven by a very different conception
of lifeâs possibilities and priorities. This points to the problem with
the concept of counterpublics. Once the hegemonic discourse has been
established, a counter-discourse may challenge it but any chal- lenges
on this terrain, regardless of how indefinite their extent or diffuse
their networks, will have difficulty disrupting the power relations that
mapped the ter- rain in the first place. By Warnerâs own admission, a
counterpublic âmaintains at some level, conscious or not, an awareness
of its subordinate statusâ (2002: 56), making lived equal relations
among heterosexual publics and queer counterpublics impossible. As
Heckert articulates, âOppositional politics is based upon the same terms
as that which it opposes. Thus, it serves to maintain the definition of
the situation imposed by its oppositionâ (2004: 105). A strategy of
counterpublics runs the risk of reinforcing exactly the hegemony it is
attempting to crack. âA successful radical politics... must not rely
upon transgression and opposition if its goal is to reconstruct society
around a different set of norms (e.g. co-operative, non-hierarch- ical,
comfortable with sexuality, consensual and so on)â (2004: 108). With
alterna- tive values, instead we create and build our own autonomous
zones and become our own publics making spaces for participatory
engagement. âThe political value of queer and public sex cultures is not
in their transgressive nature, but in their development of alternative
sexual values that attempt to move beyond sexual shameâ (Heckert, 2004:
113). Activists are therefore moving beyond shame and are simultaneously
developing a politics of shame (see also Moore, 2004).
Douglas Crimp takes up this deconstructive project, arguing that shame
âis equally and simultaneously identity-defining and identity-erasingâ
(2002: 64â5). Shame erases queer identities by disallowing them, and
simultaneously defines queer identities through emotional relations as
it âappears to construct the singu- larity and isolation of oneâs
identity through an affective connection to the shaming of anotherâ
(2002: 65). Shame produces a moment of intense emotion that creates a
bond between two people as their identities are negotiated. âJust as
shame is both productive and corrosive of queer identity... so too is it
simultaneously productive and corrosive of queer revaluations of dignity
and worthâ (2002: 65). Shame can be transformed into dignity in
transcendent moments of emotional experience, a transformation that is
critical to sex-positive, radically ethical queer sexual prac- tices
such as sex play, public nudity, public sex and polyamory.
As Heckert argues, âsexual ethics are also of central importance.
[Warner] crit- icises sexual identity politics for focusing on identity
to the exclusion of sex. For him, sexual shame is the key issue to be
addressed in a politics of sexualityâ (2004: 113). In raw moments of
sexual pleasure, intimacy and disclosure we can make our most intense
connections to others, but only if shame is productively transformed
into dignity, joy and pleasure. Crimp advocates âa new slogan of queer
politics: For Shame!â (2002: 68), for the shame produced in moments of
irresistibly sexy mutual vulnerability. Crimpâs conception of shame has
the potential to transcend not just shame but also heteronormativity and
homonormativity. Moments of sexual and other forms of bodily
vulnerability draw us to people, facilitating intimacy through a more
honest set of negotiated practices and consensual desires based on and
productive of trust, dignity, laughter, and respect for varieties of
non-normative practices including vomiting and/or sex in public.
Non-authoritarian social rela- tions and value-practices are required
for these moments, critical to transcending the painful experiences of
normative anti-queer social shaming.
Bobby Noble points to âthe simultaneity of the relations between
gendered embodi- ment, sex play, and racialization inside homonormative
communities, neighbour- hoods and venues for cultural productionâ
(Noble, 2009). Similar critiques of the queer community have been taken
up by Gay Shame anarchist activists organizing in the late 1990s. In
Thatâs Revolting! Matt/Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore docu- ments their
personal experience in Gay Shame collectives in San Francisco and New
York City. âGay Shame emerged to create a radical alternative to the
confor- mity of gay neighbourhoods, bars, and institutions â most
clearly symbolized by Gay Prideâ (Sycamore, 2004: 238). Gay Shame is
âmostly anarchist leaningâ (2004: 239), and organizes gatherings, events
and direct action protests against capitalism and intersecting
oppressions. A San Francisco flyer asks, âAre you choking on the vomit
of consumerist âgay prideâ?â (2004: 239). Another poster entitled âGay
pride, my ass: Itâs all about gay shameâ (2004: 240) announces an
âautonomous spaceâ (2004: 240) outdoors on Tire Beach with performances,
art-making, bands, instal- lations, DJs, food, kidspace, and âpolitics
and playâ (2004: 240). The event hosted âspeakers on issues including
San Francisco gentrification and the US colonization of the Puerto Rican
island of Vieques, as well as prison, youth, and trans activismâ (2004:
241). The range of issues and events in the âautonomous spaceâ point to
a very different kind of sprawling, engaged public than Berlant and
Warnerâs indoor, circumscribed, queer counterpublic. âWe encouraged
people to participate in cre- ating their own radical queer space, and
people argued about political issues, painted, poured concrete and made
a mosaic, dyed hair, and mudwrestled nakedâ (Sycamore, 2004: 241).
Participation is a key element in the formation of a âQueer autonomous
spaceâ (2004: 237) or zone, as are multiplicities of political focus
(Puerto Rico, kids, youth, prisons, trans people, art production,
gentrifica- tion and so on) and an over-arching anti-capitalist practice
that includes free entrance, barter and trade, dressing to âragged
excessâ (2004: 240), and the provi- sion of âfree food, T-shirts and
various other giftsâ (2004: 241).
Queer autonomous zones thus are open-ended spaces in which participation
of all comers is encouraged through a direct (rather than liberal)
democracy model. They are facilitated via engagement with a multiplicity
of intersectional anti- oppression politics. Interactions in queer
autonomous spaces develop sustainable social relations and
value-practices, based on mutual respect, consent, sexual lib- eration,
and non-normativity, in which people engage in open-ended processes of
developing alternative ways of being, feeling, thinking, engaging,
acting and becoming-liberated. The question is â whatâs next? How do we
continue to expand our movements and theorizing to extend the
becoming-liberated of queer?
I would like to thank the reviewers for their helpful comments, Jamie
Heckert for encour- agement and patience with my process, and Sydney
Neuman for engaged proofreading.
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Sandra Jeppesen is an activist, writer, and Assistant Professor in
Communication Studies at Concordia University, Montreal, Canada. Her
research is in guerrilla texts and autonomous media, including analysis
of discourses produced through anti-poverty activism, anti-colonial
no-border activism, radical feminist and queer collectives, anti-racist
pedagogies, and other social movement texts. Address: Communication
Studies Department, Concordia University, 7141 Sherbrooke Street West,
CJ 3.230, 3^(rd) Floor, Montreal, Canada H4B 1R6.
[1] Following Vadeâs important article (2005) advocating the âGender
Galaxyâ which reveals the falsity of the gender/sex divide and the
negative legal impact of this distinction on trans people, I am using
the term âgenderâ to be comprehensive.
[2] In the USA this is particularly true. In Canada same-sex marriage
and human rights are protected by the Charter of Rights and Freedoms,
and immigration processes are begin- ning to include same-sex partners
in sponsorship claims, as well as considering persecution for sexuality
as a basis for refugee claims. These processes however remain
heteronorma- tive. Iâd like to thank Melissa White for sharing her
insights and research on this issue.