Roderick A. Ferguson

Roderick A. Ferguson’s Followers (27)

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Roderick A. Ferguson



Average rating: 4.23 · 1,025 ratings · 84 reviews · 18 distinct worksSimilar authors
Aberrations in Black: Towar...

4.34 avg rating — 357 ratings — published 2003 — 10 editions
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Black Queer Studies: A Crit...

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4.29 avg rating — 247 ratings — published 2005 — 6 editions
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One-Dimensional Queer

4.28 avg rating — 168 ratings4 editions
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We Demand: The University a...

3.87 avg rating — 117 ratings4 editions
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The Reorder of Things: The ...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 99 ratings — published 2012 — 6 editions
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Strange Affinities: The Gen...

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4.31 avg rating — 35 ratings — published 2011 — 6 editions
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Black Sexualities: Probing ...

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3.92 avg rating — 13 ratings — published 2009 — 5 editions
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Youth Streetwork in South L...

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In View of the Tradition: B...

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Men Like That: A Southern Q...

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“Remaining independent and functioning autonomously in the university is necessary, especially for the critical intellectual who does not see institutional favors, decorations, and promotions as the goal of our work but understands that the creation of critical masses of minoritized subjects of all types within this stubborn place and other like it is the prize.”
Roderick A. Ferguson, We Demand: The University and Student Protests (American Studies Now: Critical Histories of the Present)

“Modern gay rights politics has depended on a certain representation of the transgender women who participated in Stonewall as spontaneous subjects who were seized by an apolitical rage. It was
necessary to erase the drag queens as activists prior to Stonewall in order to produce them as pre-political subjects who merely provided a stepping stone to a presumably more mature and single-issue gay rights politics. Rendering them into pre-political subjects was also a way to erase the active dialogue that was taking place in and between movements, and a way to obscure the role that transgender women played in that dialogue. As Rivera's remarks suggest, it is more accurate to say that trans women were the intersectional linchpins between anti-racist, queer, and transgender liberations.”
Roderick Ferguson, One-Dimensional Queer

“While chapter 2 asks how one-dimensional discourses of queerness underpin liberal capitalism, chapter 3 attends to how those discourses undergirded transformations within US cities. More specifically, this chapter examines how the mainstreaming of queerness and the closeting of race have promoted the development of neoliberal urban space. This version of neoliberalization involves the use of queerness as an alibi for an economic and racial cleansing of disfranchised neighborhoods, a move that requires the ideological separation of sexuality from other struggles. Indeed, if single-issue politics have worked to deradicalize homosexuality and separate it from issues of racial, gender, and class justice, then the neoliberal city is the embodiment of that deradicalization. As a result, the chapter looks at gentrifying practices in metropolitan areas as an instance in which queerness helps to define hipness, a hipness that is established by spatially dislocating working-class communities and people of color.”
Roderick Ferguson, One-Dimensional Queer



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