Description

Book Synopsis
Queer people may not have invented sex, but queers have long been pioneers in imagining new ways to have it. Yet their voices have been largely absent from the #MeToo conversation. What can queer people learn from the #MeToo conversation? And what can queer communities teach the rest of the world about ethical sex? This provocative book brings together academics, activists, artists, and sex workers to tackle challenging questions about sex, power, consent, and harm. While responding to the need for sex to be consensual and mutually pleasurable, these chapter authors resist the heteronormative assumptions, class norms, and racial privilege underlying much #MeToo discourse. The essays reveal the tools that queer communities themselves have developed to practice ethical sex—from the sex worker negotiating with her client to the gay man having anonymous sex in the back room. At the same time, they explore how queer communities might better prevent and respond to sexual violence without recourse to a police force that is frequently racist, homophobic, and transphobic.

Telling a queerer side of the #MeToo story, Unsafe Words dares to challenge dogmatic assumptions about sex and consent while developing tools and language to promote more ethical and more pleasurable sex for everyone.

Trade Review
"Reading Unsafe Words and the ways the various essays reckon with the #MeToo movement filled a need that had been lacking, a return to the hashtag and a pulling apart of what its focus had become. The essays in this book take a deep-dive into multiple facets of consent, grapple with white supremacy and mass incarceration and carceral attitudes within the queer community, talk about repair after harm, and reflect on situations where it’s unclear whether or how or to whom harm occurred. I found the book challenging in the best ways at times." * Autostraddle *
"With this dazzling collection of meditations and provocations from leading scholars in the field of sexuality studies, Unsafe Words offers something we desperately need: a place to ask the queer questions about consent that dare not speak their names. Can consent be queered? What happens when queer and feminist sexual politics clash over questions of consent? How does the prevailing consent paradigm perpetuate the harms of the criminal legal system and thwart more just possibilities for redress? This is a must-read for both activists and scholars of sexual ethics alike." -- Cati Connell * author of A Few Good Gays: The Gendered Compromises behind Military Inclusion *
"Unsafe Words provides many urgently needed, generative, and useful ways to think about sexual ethics beyond the punitive, and lets the kinds of people whose sex lives were never destigmatized (or even decriminalized) lead readers in asking better questions." -- Steven W. Thrasher * Anarchist Review of Books *

Table of Contents

Series Foreword by E. G. Crichton and Jeffrey Escoffier
Introduction
Shantel Gabrieal Buggs and Trevor Hoppe
Part 1: Queering Consent
1. Sex Workers Are Experts on Sexual Consent
Angela Jones
2. Consent in the Dark
Alexander Cheves
3. Lost in the Dark—Or How I Learned to Queer Consent
Trevor Hoppe
4. The Straight Rules Don’t Apply: Lesbian Sexual Ethics
Jane Ward
5. Momentos de consentimiento: Consent in Lesbian Relationships in Mexico City
Gloria González-López and Anahi Russo Garrido
6. Black Femmedom as Violence and Resistance
Mistress Velvet
7. Consent through My Lens: A Photo Essay
Don (D. S.) Trumbull
Part 2: Responding to Sexual Harm
8. Before Consent, after Harm
Blu Buchanan
9. Rejecting the (Black Fat) Body as Invitation
Shantel Gabrieal Buggs
10. My Firsts: On Gaysian Sexual Ethics
James McMaster
11. Was I a Teenage Sexual Predator?
Mark S. King
12. (Trans)forming #MeToo: On Freedom for the “Unbelievable” Survivors of Gender Violence
V. Jo Hsu
13. “Oppression Was at My Doorstep from Birth”: A Conversation on Prison Abolition
Dominique Morgan and Trevor Hoppe
Acknowledgments
Notes on Contributors
Index

Unsafe Words: Queering Consent in the #MeToo Era

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    A Hardback by Shantel Gabrieal Buggs, Trevor Hoppe, Angela Jones

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      View other formats and editions of Unsafe Words: Queering Consent in the #MeToo Era by Shantel Gabrieal Buggs

      Publisher: Rutgers University Press
      Publication Date: 10/02/2023
      ISBN13: 9781978825413, 978-1978825413
      ISBN10: 1978825412

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Queer people may not have invented sex, but queers have long been pioneers in imagining new ways to have it. Yet their voices have been largely absent from the #MeToo conversation. What can queer people learn from the #MeToo conversation? And what can queer communities teach the rest of the world about ethical sex? This provocative book brings together academics, activists, artists, and sex workers to tackle challenging questions about sex, power, consent, and harm. While responding to the need for sex to be consensual and mutually pleasurable, these chapter authors resist the heteronormative assumptions, class norms, and racial privilege underlying much #MeToo discourse. The essays reveal the tools that queer communities themselves have developed to practice ethical sex—from the sex worker negotiating with her client to the gay man having anonymous sex in the back room. At the same time, they explore how queer communities might better prevent and respond to sexual violence without recourse to a police force that is frequently racist, homophobic, and transphobic.

      Telling a queerer side of the #MeToo story, Unsafe Words dares to challenge dogmatic assumptions about sex and consent while developing tools and language to promote more ethical and more pleasurable sex for everyone.

      Trade Review
      "Reading Unsafe Words and the ways the various essays reckon with the #MeToo movement filled a need that had been lacking, a return to the hashtag and a pulling apart of what its focus had become. The essays in this book take a deep-dive into multiple facets of consent, grapple with white supremacy and mass incarceration and carceral attitudes within the queer community, talk about repair after harm, and reflect on situations where it’s unclear whether or how or to whom harm occurred. I found the book challenging in the best ways at times." * Autostraddle *
      "With this dazzling collection of meditations and provocations from leading scholars in the field of sexuality studies, Unsafe Words offers something we desperately need: a place to ask the queer questions about consent that dare not speak their names. Can consent be queered? What happens when queer and feminist sexual politics clash over questions of consent? How does the prevailing consent paradigm perpetuate the harms of the criminal legal system and thwart more just possibilities for redress? This is a must-read for both activists and scholars of sexual ethics alike." -- Cati Connell * author of A Few Good Gays: The Gendered Compromises behind Military Inclusion *
      "Unsafe Words provides many urgently needed, generative, and useful ways to think about sexual ethics beyond the punitive, and lets the kinds of people whose sex lives were never destigmatized (or even decriminalized) lead readers in asking better questions." -- Steven W. Thrasher * Anarchist Review of Books *

      Table of Contents

      Series Foreword by E. G. Crichton and Jeffrey Escoffier
      Introduction
      Shantel Gabrieal Buggs and Trevor Hoppe
      Part 1: Queering Consent
      1. Sex Workers Are Experts on Sexual Consent
      Angela Jones
      2. Consent in the Dark
      Alexander Cheves
      3. Lost in the Dark—Or How I Learned to Queer Consent
      Trevor Hoppe
      4. The Straight Rules Don’t Apply: Lesbian Sexual Ethics
      Jane Ward
      5. Momentos de consentimiento: Consent in Lesbian Relationships in Mexico City
      Gloria González-López and Anahi Russo Garrido
      6. Black Femmedom as Violence and Resistance
      Mistress Velvet
      7. Consent through My Lens: A Photo Essay
      Don (D. S.) Trumbull
      Part 2: Responding to Sexual Harm
      8. Before Consent, after Harm
      Blu Buchanan
      9. Rejecting the (Black Fat) Body as Invitation
      Shantel Gabrieal Buggs
      10. My Firsts: On Gaysian Sexual Ethics
      James McMaster
      11. Was I a Teenage Sexual Predator?
      Mark S. King
      12. (Trans)forming #MeToo: On Freedom for the “Unbelievable” Survivors of Gender Violence
      V. Jo Hsu
      13. “Oppression Was at My Doorstep from Birth”: A Conversation on Prison Abolition
      Dominique Morgan and Trevor Hoppe
      Acknowledgments
      Notes on Contributors
      Index

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