Queer Seductions
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2026-05-01
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<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title> <jats:p>The relationship between psychoanalysis and queer theory has been a vexed if at times inspiring one. Certainly queer theory’s insistence on studying sexuality beyond the confines of identity has found resources in Freud, Lacan, and/or Klein even as concerns about the pathologizing impulses and racialized blind spots of the psychoanalytic clinic have never been put to rest. But it has been within queer theory that some of the most contentious debates have been staged, as scholars have wrestled with what the priority psychoanalysis gives to sexuality entails for attending to and understanding race and racism. The primal scene of this contestation is the “anti-social thesis,” which has garnered a reputation for pitting the intersectional demands of queer of color critique against a race-blind view of sexuality as ontological negativity. Avgi Saketopoulou’s Sexuality Beyond Consent: Risk, Race, and Traumatophilia bears the imprint of this contestation and offers a tacit resolution by deploying Jean Laplanche’s metapsychology to build a theory of sexuality as “normative perversity” without ignoring race or analogizing it to sexuality (40). The tensions that emerge are as important as the queer pleasures the text offers in configuring “aesthetic experience” as the vehicle for coming into contact with sexuality’s ego-shattering force (14). This review essay looks first at Saketopoulou’s seductive inventiveness in crafting a traumatophilic approach to both clinical and cultural work before turning toward a broader consideration of the critical consequences and conundrums of the book’s polygamous queer commitment to a theory of sexuality differentiated from and yet attentive to race.</jats:p>
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Wiegman, Robyn (2026). Queer Seductions. American Literary History, 38(1). pp. 202–219. 10.1093/alh/ajag001 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/34799.
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Robyn Wiegman
Robyn Wiegman is Professor of the Programs in Literature and Gender, Sexuality, and Feminist Studies, and former Margaret Taylor Smith director of Women's Studies at Duke University (2001-2007). She earned her Ph.D. in American Literature at the University of Washington in 1988 and has taught at Syracuse University, Indiana University, and the University of California, Irvine. Her publications include two monographs---Object Lessons (2012) and American Anatomies: Theorizing Race and Gender (1995)---and five edited collections---Who Can Speak: Identity and Critical Authority (1995), Feminism Beside Itself (1995), AIDS and the National Body (1997), The Futures of American Studies (2002), and Women's Studies on Its Own (2002). Wiegman's research interests include feminist theory, queer theory, American Studies, critical race theory, and film and media studies. She was co-director of the Dartmouth Summer Institute on American Studies from 1998-2004 and director of Women's Studies at UC-Irvine from 1997-2000. She has two monographs in progress: Racial Sensations, on affect and anti-racist aesthetics, and Arguments Worth Having, on key debates in feminist and queer theory, and has recently curated a special issue on "autotheory" for Arizona Quarterly. She has forthcoming essays and interviews in Feminist Studies, Feminist Theory, SAQ, and differences. In 2013 she received the Dean's Award for Excellence in Mentoring from the Graduate School at Duke University. In 2015, she was a Fulbright visiting lecturer in Naples, Italy where she taught "Love and Sex in American Literature" at L'Orientale University.
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