Reflections of a Racial QueerPosted in Articles, Autobiography, Gay & Lesbian, Identity Development/Psychology, Media Archive on 2012-09-12 17:40Z by Steven |
Multicultural Perspectives
Volume 12, Issue 2, 2010
pages 107-112
DOI: 10.1080/15210960.2010.481213
Aurora Chang-Ross
Beloit College, Beloit, Wisconsin
In this article, I reflect on my personal experiences of racial queerness. In an effort to speak my secrets, I explore my identity production as a Multiracial person by critically examining my positionality throughout various key stages in my life. I present Multiracial microaggressions –those accumulated moments that underscore my racial queerness and argue that these phenomena, while taxing, also confer agency. I propose a conceptual framework that incorporates both queer theory and borderlands theory as a potential framework from which to study how Multiracial individuals are positioned as racial queers. I argue that queerness, for the Multiracial individual, may denote both deviance (from the monoracial norm) and a unique individuality (stemming from one’s Multiracial background). By offering my testimonial as a racial queer and introducing the racial queer conceptual framework, I come a bit closer to naming my experience as a Multiracial individual and providing a space from which others can do the same.
Read or purchase the article here.