EBOOK

Writing and Desire
Queer Ways of Composing
Jonathan AlexanderSeries: Composition, Literacy, and Culture(0)
About
Writing and Desire is a sustained, multimovement exploration of how writers, particularly queer writers, think and feel through desire as central to their writing practice. In a time of political, social, global, and ecological unrest, how might we understand desire-the desire for things to be different, the desire for a better world-as a crucial dimension of contemporary human experience? What might such a recentering of desire offer us, personally and politically? And how is writing itself, as one of the primary ways through which we express and explore ourselves, central to the expression and exploration of desire? Drawing on recent theoretical work in queer theory and the new materialism, Jonathan Alexander studies a range of queer and trans writers and artists who center desire in their practice and argues that conceptualizing writing as desire allows us to reexperience both writing and our world as saturated with our dreams and wishes for change. In a book both elegant and unsettling, and by turns personal, analytic, and experimental, Alexander challenges us-and himself-to think about desire and writing as the deepest manifestation of our hopes for the future.
Related Subjects
Reviews
"This book is exciting and groundbreaking in its important interventions into writing studies and queer studies. It is significant as a queer text because of its unsanitized queerness and because of its unapologetic queer intervention into writing studies; it's important as a writing studies text because of how it invites readers to use queer interventions to reconceptualize what writing (broadly
Ian Barnard, author of Sex Panic Rhetorics, Queer Interventions
"There are subjects we queer compositionists have been gesturing toward for years. It's fitting that Alexander (one of the early innovators in queer composition/rhetoric) be the bold scholar who moves us attentively and directly to desire. It's not easy to do, and this book does it with intellectual flair, generosity, and interesting movement. Alexander is a dazzling interpreter who offers reading
Stacey Waite, University of Nebraska