The Queer Matrix Through the Decades

Hoping not to prove you can have too much of a good thing, I’m continuing my queer ponderings this week, visual arts-style, with new Queer Matrices.

I spent way more time on these than I’d like to admit, but the results are quite a bit more polished than last week’s laughable mock-up.  I guess I was the last to know:  you can’t do diddly in Paint.

Some definitions first…

The X axis is Queer Content, which could include portrayals of same sex love and relationships, homoeroticism, gender bending, trans experiences, drag, or any representation of queer culture, politics and/or community.

No Queer Content is the absence of any of these.

The Y axis is Queer Sensibility.  The way I define it is looking at the world with a queer lens, through which homoeroticism and same sex love are celebrated, transexuality is transcendent, queer oppression is illuminated and indicted, and heteronormativity is challenged, subverted, and asked to please leave the building.

Non Queer Sensibility is the opposite, meaning looking at the world with a non queer lens, through which heteronormativity is centralized, traditionalized and/or assumed, a gender binary is de rigueur, and opposite sex relationships are the default setting.

Now we’ll take a look at Queer Matrices through the decades…

 

 

 

So what’s next?  The Queer Matrix:  Boy Bands?  Disney?  Punk Music Icons?  I’m open to entertaining suggestions.

What I am reading

I never feel like I have enough time to write, and I never feel like I have enough time to read.  The two things go hand in hand, I think, whether I’m doing research for a project, checking out markets, or just looking to activate my imagination.  Sadly, my relationship with books followed a typical trajectory.  I read constantly through school and college then sloughed into literary semi-detachment.  Polls show that readership in America is declining.  One quarter of adult Americans don’t read books at all.  Men seem to be especially lazy in this regard.  They only account for 20 percent of fiction readers.  E gads.

I purposefully set forth to read more when I started taking my writing seriously.  Now I’m always reading something and have three or four books in my reading queue.  In the past two months, I finished two great books:  Gregory Maguire’s Lost (I’ve now officially read everything by him) and Jeffrey Eugenides Middlesex (yeah, I’m playing catch-up on the modern classics).  I’m now reading Scott Heim’s Mysterious Skin.  Holy cow.  The book is frickin’ dynamite!  I’m simultaneously reading a novel manuscript by a member of my writers group.  Next up will be Eric Mays’ Naked Metamorphosis, which just arrived at my door from Amazon.  Then, I’m looking out for two books:  Scott Heim’s We Disappear and Gregory Maguire’s Matchless (just released).