Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/110313
Title: Margins and marginality : Jean Genet and the queer essay
Other Titles: The essay at the limits : poetics, politics and form
Authors: Aquilina, Aaron
Keywords: Genet, Jean, 1910-1986 -- Translations into English
Authors, French -- 20th century
French literature -- 20th century -- History and criticism
Philosophy in literature
Existentialism in literature
English literature -- 20th century -- History and criticism
Issue Date: 2021
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Citation: Aquilina, A. (2021). Margins and marginality : Jean Genet and the queer essay. In M. Aquilina (Ed.), The essay at the limits : poetics, politics and form (pp. 137-149). London & New York: Bloomsbury.
Abstract: In opening up the idea of the 'queer essay, one must, in a manner quite conventional and not very queer at all, begin by defining what is meant by the term. Quickly, however, any attempt at defining the 'queer essay' reveals itself not only as difficult because of the term's invisibility throughout the essay's tradition, but also self-contradictory, for to define the queer would be to limit or even eradicate its very queerness. This chapter thus aims to address this taxonomic term, taking Jean Genet's essays as primary examples, while leaving open the possibility of queering the act of taxonomization itself. Let us then begin with taxonomy, which emerges as rather crucial if the categorization of 'queer essay' is indeed a speciation of the essay in a manner similar to how 'the homosexual [is now considered] a species'. In, for instance, Tracey Chevalier's Encyclopedia of the Essay - here taken as an exemplary attempt of division and classification - the term 'queer essay' evades any sort of dedicated entry. Perhaps aptly so, we are left to suppose that it lies instead somewhere 'in between' those 'subjects that must obviously have entries, and those that must obviously not and thus assume that our present term lies cryptically hidden somewhere beneath, or perhaps even beyond, Graham _ Good's 'four main categories of the essay - formal, national, individual, [ and] periodical'.' As is made abundantly clear in the Encyclopedia, these four can be split up indefinitely: there are American essays, autobiographical essays, critical essays, familiar essays, film essays, historical essays, humorous essays, journalistic essays, medical essays, review essays, philosophical and religious essays, satiric essays, essays that are chapters ones that are character sketches, memoirs, dialogues, letters, sermons, diary entries or newspaper columns, and essays that disappear into apothegms and aphorisms. I am leaving out many, but - and especially when one takes Chevalier's compendium as reflective of numerous traditional and canonical theories of the essay - there is, categorically, no such thing as 'queer essay'.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/110313
ISBN: 9781350134485
Appears in Collections:Scholarly Works - FacArtEng

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