Sexual Futures, Queer Gestures, and Other Latina Longings

Winner of the Alan Bray Memorial Book Prize presented by the GL/Q Caucus of the Modern Language Association.

Finalist for the 2015 LGBT Studies Award presented by the Lambda Literary Foundation.

Sexual Futures, Queer Gestures and Other Latina Longings proposes a theory of sexual politics that works in the interstices between radical queer desires and the urgency of transforming public policy, between utopian longings and everyday failures. Considering the ways in which bodily movement is assigned cultural meaning, Juana María Rodríguez takes the stereotypes of the hyperbolically gestural queer Latina femme body as a starting point from which to discuss how gestures and forms of embodiment inform sexual pleasures and practices in the social realm.

Centered on the sexuality of racialized queer female subjects, the book’s varied archive—which includes burlesque border crossings, daddy play, pornography, sodomy laws, and sovereignty claims—seeks to bring to the fore alternative sexual practices that exist outside the sight lines of mainstream cosmopolitan gay male culture. Situating articulations of sexual subjectivity between the interpretive poles of law and performance, Rodríguez argues that forms of agency continually mediate among these various structures of legibility—the rigid confines of the law and the imaginative possibilities of the performative. She reads the strategies of Puerto Rican activists working toward self-determination alongside sexual performances on stage, in commercial pornography, in multi-media installations, on the dance floor, and in the bedroom. Rodríguez examines not only how projections of racialized sex erupt onto various discursive mediums but also how the confluence of racial and gendered anxieties seeps into the gestures and utterances of sexual acts, kinship structures, and activist practices.

Ultimately, Sexual Futures, Queer Gestures, and Other Latina Longings reveals —in lyrical style and explicit detail—how sex has been deployed in contemporary queer communities in order to radically reconceptualize sexual politics.

“Our sexual politics need to begin here in the grip between public policies that touch the soiled surfaces of our lives and utopian longings that pull us toward other sexual futures” (Sexual Futures, 187)

PRAISE

Fun, sensual, and theoretically sophisticated, Sexual Futures, Queer Gestures, and Other Latina Longings questions facile binary oppositions by exploring the intricate and perverse world of fantasy and pleasure, particularly in contexts in which marginality, submission, and racialization seem to foreclose key moments of identification for queer subjects of color.

Yolanda Martínez-San Miguel,author of Coloniality of Diasporas: Rethinking Intra-Colonial Migrations in a Caribbean Context

Through sensuous and seductive prose, Juana María Rodríguez demonstrates how queer gesture highlights the tension between socially inscribed corporeal regulation and agential enactments of subjectivity. Pivoting away from this binary through a reading of Latin@ excess, Sexual Futures, Queer Gestures, and Other Latina Longings demands that we radically reclaim abject sex as a site of queer futurity.

E. Patrick Johnson, author of Sweet Tea: Black Gay Men of the South—An Oral History

Can an encounter with an academic book feel like a deliciously queer one-night stand, outside of the confines of your semi-orderly life and leave you glowing with enthusiasm, satisfied, and yet eager for the promise of more?

Urlika Dahl, Lambda Nordica 

The book’s intriguing methodological protocols, its vibrant archives, and its foregrounding of a Latina femme perspective make it a commanding contribution to performance studies, porn studies, women of color feminisms, Latin@ studies, and queer of color critique. That it productively engages such a wide range of disciplines speaks to the success of its own amorous gesturing.

Alessa Dominguez, GLQ

Sexual Futures, Queer Gestures, and Other Latina Longings will seduce you, surprise you, and challenge you theoretically. It will require you to rethink queer sociality and sexuality, expanding our current meager political imaginaries, which beg to be redreamed.

Anahi Russo Garrido, Signs