(Re)Turning to the Queer Archives / Daniel Marshall and Zeb Tortorici -- Archives, Bodies, and Imagination: The Case of Juana Aguilar and Queer Approaches to History, Sexuality, and Politics / María Elena Martínez -- Decolonial Archival Imaginaries: On Losing, Performing, and Finding Juana Aguilar / Zeb Tortorici -- Telling Tales: Sexuality, Archives, South Asia / Anjali Arondekar -- Ordinary Lesbians and Special Collections: The June L. Mazer Archives at UCLA / Ann Cvetkovich -- Performing Queer Archives: Argentine and Spanish Policing Files for Unintended Audiences (1950s - 1970s) / Javier Fernández-Galeano -- Looking After Mrs. G: Approaches and Methods for Reading Transsexual Clinical Case Files / Emmett Harsin Drager -- Naming Afrika's Archive "Queer Pan-Africanism" / Elliot James -- Second-hand Cultures, Ephemeral Erotics and Queer Reproduction: Notes on Collecting David Bowie Records / Daniel Marshall -- Pirates and Punks: Bootlegging, Archives, and Performance in Mexico City / Iván Ramos -- Unfixed: Materializing Disability and Queerness in Three Objects / Kate Clark and David Serlin -- An Archival Life: Unsettling Queer Immigrant Dwellings / Martin F. Manalansan -- Reassessing "The Archive" in Queer Theory / Kate Eichhorn -- Crocker Land: A Mirage in the Archive / Carolyn Dinshaw and Marget Long -- Coda: Who Were We to Do Such a Thing? Grassroots Necessities, Grassroots Dreaming: The LHA in Its Early Years / Joan Nestle. "Turning Archival traces the rise of "the archive" as an object of historical desire and study within queer studies. Highlighting the growing significance of the archival to LGBTQ scholarship, politics, and everyday life, the contributors draw upon multidisciplinary, geopolitically diverse, and embodied accounts of queer archival encounters in institutional, grassroots, and everyday repositories of historical memory. By analyzing how the many turns to the archives shape the relationship of the historical to queer forms of knowledge, evidence, and worldmaking, this book theorizes the notion of turning in performative terms as a way of understanding how meaning gets produced through encounters with archival materials. Drawing on a range of perspectives-from postcolonial, performance, trans, disability, and cultural studies-this collection examines the archival turn within queer studies and how it has fostered historical imagination and knowledge. Together, the contributors provide personal and critical reflections on the allure of the archives, on that which resists archival capture, and on what is at stake for queer and trans lives in these archival turns"-- The contributors to Turning Archival trace the rise of "the archive" as an object of historical desire and study within queer studies and examine how it fosters historical imagination and knowledge. Highlighting the growing significance of the archival to LGBTQ scholarship, politics, and everyday life, they draw upon accounts of queer archival encounters in institutional, grassroots, and everyday repositories of historical memory. The contributors examine such topics as the everyday life of marginalized queer immigrants in New York City as an archive; secondhand vinyl record collecting and punk bootlegs; the self-archiving practices of grassroots lesbians; and the decolonial potential of absences and gaps in the colonial archives through the life of a suspected hermaphrodite in colonial Guatemala. Engaging with archives from Africa to the Americas to the Arctic, this volume illuminates the allure of the archive, reflects on that which resists archival capture, and outlines the stakes of queer and trans lives in the archival turn. Contributors. Anjali Arondekar, Kate Clark, Ann Cvetkovich, Carolyn Dinshaw, Kate Eichhorn, Javier Fernandez-Galeano, Emmett Harsin Drager, Elliot James, Marget Long, Martin F. Manalansan IV, Daniel Marshall, Maria Elena Martinez, Joan Nestle, Ivan Ramos, David Serlin, Zeb Tortorici
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