Gay and lesbian cultures have learned how to talk--and talk and talk and talk--about sex; no aspect of erotic life is too taboo for discussion. Issues of class and economics, however, have been so closeted that they are rarely discussed. Queerly Classed breaks through this door with almost two dozen personal and critical essays that explore the intersections between class and alternative sexual identity. Queerly Classed is neither dogmatic nor preachy, but is political in the best sense of the it opens both minds and hearts, encouraging people to think about these difficult issues in a clearheaded, honest way.
An interesting collection, almost 30 years old but still containing some vital and stirring pieces. I particularly enjoyed the pieces by Eli Clare ("Losing Home"), Kennette Crockett ("Putting Down Roots"), and the two chapters written as dialogue. There are also some poems included, which help save this from feeling too academic. There are a lot of recurring themes of course: ideas of "coming out" about one's class position as well as one's sexuality; exploring intersections of class and race and queerness; the need to reach out to other oppressed groups in society and acknowledged a shared struggle. Also, the time and place where most of these chapters were written are uncomfortably resonant: America's ascendant right wing, the precarity of queer rights, all felt a little too close to home.
Probably one of the most personally significant books I've ever read. It fits together the complex web of issues involved in sexuality and class, touching on racism and urban/rural issues and so many other things worth considering.