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A Coincidence of Desires - Anthropology, Queer Studies, Indonesia (Hardcover)
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A Coincidence of Desires - Anthropology, Queer Studies, Indonesia (Hardcover)
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In A Coincidence of Desires, Tom Boellstorff considers how
interdisciplinary collaboration between anthropology and queer
studies might enrich both fields. For more than a decade he has
visited Indonesia, both as an anthropologist exploring gender and
sexuality and as an activist involved in HIV prevention work.
Drawing on these experiences, he provides several in-depth case
studies, primarily concerning the lives of Indonesian men who term
themselves gay (an Indonesian-language word that overlaps with, but
does not correspond exactly to, the English word "gay"). These case
studies put interdisciplinary research approaches into practice.
They are preceded and followed by theoretical meditations on the
most productive forms that collaborations between queer studies and
anthropology might take. Boellstorff uses theories of time to ask
how a model of "coincidence" might open up new possibilities for
cooperation between the two disciplines. He also juxtaposes his own
work with other scholars' studies of Indonesia, Thailand, the
Philippines, Malaysia, and Singapore to compare queer sexualities
across Southeast Asia. In doing so, he asks how comparison might be
understood as a queer project and how queerness might be understood
as comparative. The case studies contained in A Coincidence of
Desires speak to questions about the relation of sexualities to
nationalism, religion, and globalization. They include an
examination of zines published by gay Indonesians; an analysis of
bahasa gay-a slang spoken by gay Indonesians that is increasingly
appropriated in Indonesian popular culture; and an exploration of
the place of warias (roughly, "male-to-female transvestites")
within Indonesian society. Boellstorff also considers the tension
between Islam and sexuality in gay Indonesians' lives and a series
of incidents in which groups of men, identified with Islamic
fundamentalism, violently attacked gatherings of gay men.
Collectively, these studies insist on the primacy of empirical
investigation to any queer studies project that wishes to speak to
the specificities of lived experience.
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