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- Title
Even Your Queer Reading Is White Vivek Shraya’s Poetic Justice.
- Authors
ATLURI, TARA
- Abstract
Racism is inextricable from queer politics. The prevailing whiteness of mainstream queer communities in Western secular contexts draws attention to the pressing need to consider how white supremacy wounds racialized queer people. Vivek Shraya is a transgender South Asian Canadian artist, whose multidisciplinary creative praxis and prolific writing is profoundly valuable in times of pervasive systemic oppression and commonplace cruelty (Vivekshraya.com 2016). Shraya’s most recent book of poetry, even this page is white (2016) is a visceral challenge to the racism that defines white settler colonial ideologies in Turtle Island. Shraya’s poetry smashes the veneer of an imagined polite, peaceful, and quaint “Canada” not marred by racism. By discussing whiteness as an economic, structural, and embodied form of sexual capital, the author shatters the illusion of a queer community that is not steeped in white supremacist ideology. Racist injunctions regarding whose aesthetics and bodies are constructed as “properly” queer and as deserving of love produce ostensible feminist and queer “communities” of normative and celebrated whiteness. even this page is white is a rich assemblage of queer anti-colonial art, a prosaic form of politics that refuses complicity in the face of oppression. Shraya’s brilliance lies in merging the aesthetics of poetic form with an affective political discourse that challenges the chilling violence of racism. even this page is white boldly confronts whiteness, contesting neo-Orientalist forms of multicultural pageantry and nauseating platitudes of “diversity” that are used to evade questions of systemic oppression. As a literary work, even this page is white interrupts the seamless systemic racism that structures canons of poetry and “queer readings” of “queer fiction” that are in fact white readings of white fiction. Shraya’s deft literary skill, artistic empathy, and political tenacity evoke the poetry of Audre Lorde who once wrote, “I am deliberate and afraid of nothing.”
- Subjects
RACISM; POSTCOLONIALISM; RULE of law
- Publication
Lambda Nordica, 2018, Issue 1/2, p110
- ISSN
1100-2573
- Publication type
Article