![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
This is the post where we take the Muñoz doll and the Our Flag Means Death dolls and make them kiss.
So I’ve been doing a (roughly) fortnightly series here reading José Esteban Muñoz’ book of queer theory Cruising Utopia (2009, 2019), chapter by chapter.
And then we all watched Our Flag Means Death.
It just seems right to try a mashup and see what happens.
Muñoz’s project in Cruising Utopia is to find and (re)claim visions of queer utopias in order to provide inspiration for livable queer futures outside of the stultifying constraints of capitalist heteronormativity.
Pirates are semi-famous for somewhat similar endeavours. Can Our Flag Means Death do some of that work (and play) with and for us? What visions can we use it to conjure?
We could boil down the central questions of the first three chapters of Cruising Utopia sort of like this:
Anyway, the formal invitation is to think about Muñoz with OFMD, but feel free to party any way you like, provided it's respectful and consensual.
And if part of the way you appreciate things is to talk about what's flawed or disappointing about them, that is welcome, too.
* * * * * *
Previous posts on Munoz:
Munoz Chapter 1
Munoz Chapter 2
Munoz Chapter 3
{rf}
So I’ve been doing a (roughly) fortnightly series here reading José Esteban Muñoz’ book of queer theory Cruising Utopia (2009, 2019), chapter by chapter.
And then we all watched Our Flag Means Death.
It just seems right to try a mashup and see what happens.
Muñoz’s project in Cruising Utopia is to find and (re)claim visions of queer utopias in order to provide inspiration for livable queer futures outside of the stultifying constraints of capitalist heteronormativity.
Pirates are semi-famous for somewhat similar endeavours. Can Our Flag Means Death do some of that work (and play) with and for us? What visions can we use it to conjure?
We could boil down the central questions of the first three chapters of Cruising Utopia sort of like this:
- How can the utopian visions of past queer communities inform our visions of a future that's livable for all queer folks, not just the privileged few?
- What do the utopian visions of the past tell us about what we are missing and longing for right now?
- What practices already exist in our present communities that could provide inspirations for queer futures?
- What images from the past (history, media) do you see Our Flag Means Death talking back to?
- Ex. histories of piracy, readings of history, queerbaiting in mainstream series, Black Sails?
- What are you longing for that these pirates have? How does OFMD illuminate what is missing in the present?
- What about this show (or how it came to be) could be useful in thinking about how to make queer art / art about queers going forward?
- Alternatively, what do you know about queerness and community that Our Flag Means Death doesn’t yet know?
Anyway, the formal invitation is to think about Muñoz with OFMD, but feel free to party any way you like, provided it's respectful and consensual.
And if part of the way you appreciate things is to talk about what's flawed or disappointing about them, that is welcome, too.
* * * * * *
Previous posts on Munoz:
Munoz Chapter 1
Munoz Chapter 2
Munoz Chapter 3
{rf}
no subject
Date: 2022-04-07 04:01 pm (UTC)it kind of is, isn't it?