The LGBT agenda for too long has been dominated by pragmatic issues like same-sex marriage and gays in the military. It has been stifled by this myopic focus on the present, which is short-sighted and assimilationist.
Cruising Utopia seeks to break the present stagnancy by cruising ahead. Drawing on the work of Ernst Bloch, José Esteban Muñoz recalls the queer past for guidance in presaging its future. He considers the work of seminal artists and writers such as Andy Warhol, LeRoi Jones, Frank O'Hara, Ray Johnson, Fred Herko, Samuel Delany, and Elizabeth Bishop, alongside contemporary performance and visual artists like Dynasty Handbag, My Barbarian, Luke Dowd, Tony Just, and Kevin McCarty in order to decipher the anticipatory illumination of art and its uncanny ability to open windows to the future.
In a startling repudiation of what the LGBT movement has held dear, Muñoz contends that queerness is instead a futurity bound phenomenon, a "not yet here" that critically engages pragmatic presentism. Part manifesto, part love-letter to the past and the future, Cruising Utopia argues that the here and now are not enough and issues an urgent call for the revivification of the queer political imagination.
"I’m always thinking about José Esteban Muñoz but especially this thinking around utopia. In his book, Cruising Utopia, he argued that queerness wasn’t yet here. It is an ideality that we pursue but queer is in the present, lived in ways that suggest that utopia is possible..."
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First published in 2009, José Esteban Muñoz’s Cruising Utopia rejected the stagnant present, arguing for queerness as a future-oriented, profoundly utopian mode of being and doing in the world #idahobit https://t.co/EhABw1gD10
Gillian Branstetter is a Communications Strategist at the A.C.L.U.
The introduction to Cruising Utopia by José Esteban Muñoz: "The here and now is a prison house. We must strive, in the face of the here and now's totalizing rendering of reality, to think and feel a then and there." https://t.co/VpROTZbdR2