Throwing down the theoretical gauntlet, Lee Edelman
outlines a radically uncompromising new ethics of queer
theory. His searing polemic takes aim at the figure of
the child, whom he contends is the lynchpin of an entire
rhetoric and politics of "reproductive futurity."
Edelman argues that in the popular imaginary, the
child--innocent, angelic, and imperiled--represents the
possibility of the future and the queer is constructed
as its radical negation, as the embodiment of morbidity,
corruption, and stasis. He insists that in such a
thoroughly heteronormative culture, the efficacy of
queerness lies in its resistance to the social and
political order. In No Future, Edelman urges queers to
abandon accommodation and embrace their status as
figures beyond the consensus of those always "fighting
for the children." Looking to literature and film, No
Future offers several models of queer characters who
take a perverse pleasure in repudiating the cult of the
child. Edelman makes a compelling case for imagining
Charles Dickens's Ebeneezer Scrooge without Tiny Tim and
George Eliot's Silas Marner without little Eppie.
Looking to Alfred Hitchcock's films North by Northwest
and The Birds, he embraces two of the director's most
notorious creations: the sadistic Leonard stepping on
the hand that holds the heterosexual couple above the
abyss and the birds themselves, predators attacking
couples and children. Edelman breathes new life into
psychoanalytic theory as he brings it to bear not just
upon film and literature but also upon current political
issues such as gay marriage and gay parenting. A call to
arms for a queer theory too often banalized, No Future
is sure to incite passionate debate.
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