THESES
AND DISSERTATIONS
Unrepresentable blood: Canadian blood donation, “gay blood” and the queerness of Blackness.
Abstract 287
Through centring a black queer diasporic analytic and reading practice, I am able to interrogate the ontological problem made of blackness. I contend that queerer modalities of thought are necessary to account for the complicated realities of racialized sexuality lived through black queered bodies and by black queer and trans people (and their blood).
I analyze a diverse set of archives, including the donor questionnaire; websites of social and political organizations involved in the gay-blood debates; and legal, news, and government documents pertaining to the Canadian blood system. I seek to break the public silence on how blood continues to be used to justify the denigration of the lives of black people, both inside and outside of gay spaces, to push against the narrow, normative Eurocentric structures of gay blood. Thus, this reading acts as a decolonial, diasporic, transgressive project of writing blackness. My intervention into these anti-normative, anti-colonial discussions of blood, queerness, and blackness engages in a form of “epistemic disobedience” necessary to think differently about and disrupt both the homonationalist framing of gay blood and, more importantly, how we envision queer communities in our diasporic home-making. It is this that I seek to provoke in this thesis: to bring together the tangible and incoherent realities of our lives in order to articulate and engage in transformative justice.
Author
Title
Unrepresentable blood: Canadian blood donation, “gay blood” and the queerness of Blackness.Subjects
Blackness, Canadian Blood Services, Canadian Nationalism, Diaspora, Queer SexualitiesDocument Type
PhD dissertationSource
University of TorontoLanguage
EnglishPublication Date
2016