"Language is my Second Language": Dangerous writing and Hiv-affected communities in Tom's Spanbauer In the City of Shy Hunters
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Barozzi, StefEditorial
Journal of Homosexuality - Routledge
Fecha
2023-10-15Referencia bibliográfica
Stef Barozzi (2023): “Language Is My Second Language”: Dangerous Writing and Hiv-Affected Communities in Tom Spanbauer’s In the City of Shy Hunters. Journal of Homosexuality. (70), 12: 1-21
Resumen
This paper aims to analyze the U.S. writer and teacher Tom Spanbauer’s novel In the City of Shy Hunters by means of theoretical
perspectives that embrace both queer and communitarian epistemologies. The novel, set mainly in New York City in the mid-1980s, is narrated in first person by the protagonist and shows how HIV/AIDS, and the elevated social stigma surrounding it, affects different classes and ethnicities, as well as gender, sexual and corporal diversities. It experiments with a particular writing style and teaching method that Spanbauer calls dangerous writing; that is, how to expose our inner life and secrets, which are often related to social taboos. The main objective of this paper is to demonstrate the connection between dangerous writing, queer studies (Judith Butler, Annamarie Jagose) and community theory (Jean-Luc Nancy, Maurice Blanchot and Roberto Esposito) by adopting a multidisciplinary approach to literary critical analysis. The main result of this study demonstrates that the singularities represented in the novel, who are mostly queer and affected by HIV/AIDS, can create inoperative communities and communities of lovers, open to otherness as well as being spontaneous, antisocial and momentary, with a recognition and acceptance of mortality.