Queering the Border: Essays

$19.95

Explores Chicana feminism and relationships between the powerful and the powerless against the backdrop of the Southwest borderlands

by Emma Pérez

ISBN: 978-1-55885-958-6
Publication Date: November 30, 2022
Format: Trade Paperback
Pages: 163

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“You will never know how it feels to have brown skin and a Mexican name. You will never know what it is like to watch your mother struggle with white words.” In this collection of prose pieces, author and scholar Emma Pérez explores the intersection of race, class, gender and sexuality.

A Chicanx queer lesbian “who honors my mother and her plight within patriarchal institutions” that limit women’s choices and opportunities, Pérez writes about issues—including sexual politics and power relations between Anglo and Hispanic men—that have impacted her Tejano family for generations. A historian by training, her work aims to decolonize the Southwest by uncovering voices from the past that validate multiple experiences.

Essays reveal the influence of Gloria Anzaldúa’s scholarship; recount the controversy surrounding artist Alma López’s digital print, “Our Lady,” in which the Virgin of Guadalupe appears in a provocative bikini; and evaluate interviews with 25 LGBTQ people in the El Paso/Ciudad Juárez area to expose life on the border as a queer of color. This collection also includes short fiction and an epistolary love poem to the first feminist of the Americas, Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, or in this case, Sor Juanx. Bringing together the work of a noted Chicanx writer and academic, this volume reinforces the body of work by LGBTQ people of color dealing with racism and sexism, conquest and colonization, power and privilege, all with a particular emphasis on the Southwest borderlands.

Click here to watch Emma Pérez in the APP Authors Speak series talking about her creative process.

Readers “will find the Latinx historian and academic author’s socialist-feminist-lesbian attitudes thought provoking [and] the book will surely challenge and stimulate readers.”—Booklist

“Perez’s collection of essays, all profoundly intersectional, contributes to the fields of Chicanx/Latinx Studies, migration and border studies, decolonial studies, and gender and sexuality studies.”—GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies

EMMA PÉREZ is the author of numerous books, including Testimony of a Shifter (Arte Público Press, 2023), Queering the Border (Arte Público Press, 2022) and The Decolonial Imaginary: Writing Chicanas into History (Indiana University Press, 1999). Her novel, Forgetting the Alamo, Or, Blood Memory (University of Texas Press, 2009), received the Christopher Isherwood Writing Grant, the National Association for Chicana/Chicano Studies Regional Book Award for fiction in 2011 and was a finalist for the Lambda Literary Awards in 2010.  Her book, Electra’s Complex (Bella Books, 2015), is a mystery that mocks the perils of academe. Pérez was born in El Campo, Texas, and lives in Tucson, where she teaches at the University of Arizona.