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A review by draconic
Unsafe Words: Queering Consent in the #MeToo Era by Shantel Gabrieal Buggs, Trevor Hoppe
5.0
What a fascinating and enlightening read. This book gave me much to chew on and is exactly the kind of thing I'm likely to reference in my own conversations with friends and community members.
This book tackles the issue of sexual consent from the perspective of various people who have navigated sexual scenarios that don't fit into the narrative for sex that arose as the ideal during the #MeToo movement (one of a monogamous cis man and cis woman having sex with vocally enthusiastic consent on both sides), arguing that this view on sex and consent is limited and harmful in scope because it leaves unheard stories from people to whom these situations are either not applicable or not desired.
It argues that the simple divide of "yes" or "no" to sexual acts is not as clear-cut as people wish it to be due to the system of complex power dynamics that shape our society -- and that queer people specifically can offer insight into what consent means (and when it applies) more so than the mainstream precisely because they operate outside of society's normal sexual constraints. It also argues that our society's systems in and of themselves, including the ones meant to address the topic of consent and punish sexual offenders, have fundamental flaws to them.
I won't run through each essay individually (there total thirteen, and all are worth reading) but will mention a few of the ones I found most interesting:
Consent in the Dark by Alexander Cheves
Chaves speaks of how his own experiences as a sexual active and promiscuous gay man are fundamentally incompatible with an enthusiastic consent model. He touches on a variety of scenarios and situations in which consent is either assumed waved or done in a non-verbal fashion. He speaks of how his own normal notions of "yes" and "no" don't always match with how he feels during and after sex -- and claims the very notion that people always know themselves and what they want to be faulty, particularly in states of heightened emotion.
The Straight Rules Don't Apply: Lesbian Sexual Ethics by Jane Ward
Ward discusses the ways in which sexual pleasure is tightly tied to gender by our society regardless of the individuals involved and that, because it is set apart from this dynamic, lesbian sex (even when with roles faultily assumed by non-lesbians to match het society's roles like butch/femme) operates under different rules and assumptions: "Much is possible when patriarchy is not the context in which women are being fucked."
My Firsts: On Gaysian Sexual Ethics by James McMaster
McMaster talks about his experiences as a gay Asian man growing up in a culture that prioritizes whiteness and straightness and how the intersection between queerness and race can matter in ways that are difficult to quantify: "Consider this: I'm at Elixir and another gaysian wraps his arms around me. I don't consent to this, but they seem tipsy, friendly, and harmless enough so I giggle and wiggle away. That same night, someone -- I don't see who -- grabs my ass. This act in a straight bar might cross a line, but does it here? Does the race of the grabber matter? Does the fact that I was more flattered than offended make it okay?"
Was I a Teenage Sexual Predator? by Mark S. King
King talks about how he, as a 14-year-old teenager, had sex with adults often double his age because at the time he found it easier than getting boys his own age to do things with him. He talks of how he feels he gave full consent even when he wasn't aware of or thoughtful to the possible consequences. He speaks of how when therapists and other tells him he was sexually abused that he feels abandoned by them because they don't seem to accept his own thoughts and feelings on the matter, leaving him to find his own ways to cope. "I am still puzzled by it all, still unsure whether I belong in the group of adventurers or with the abused. I can't seem to locate my own feelings. I have no judgement or anger or regret or shame. I don't feel much of anything about it. That might be the most troubling of all."
Oppression Was at My Doorstep from Birth: A Conversation on Prison Abolition by Dominique Morgan and Trevor Hoppe
A discussion of the flaws of the US prison system from people who have experienced it firsthand -- and of how concerns within the queer community are often buried or not talked about as they should be due to people unwilling to address issues that do not directly impact themselves. The link between prison reform and the queer community is one not often pushed or acknowledged, so I appreciated this essay greatly.
This review of "Unsafe Words: Queering Consent in the #MeToo Era" was provided in exchange for an advance review copy through NetGalley. Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for this opportunity.
This book tackles the issue of sexual consent from the perspective of various people who have navigated sexual scenarios that don't fit into the narrative for sex that arose as the ideal during the #MeToo movement (one of a monogamous cis man and cis woman having sex with vocally enthusiastic consent on both sides), arguing that this view on sex and consent is limited and harmful in scope because it leaves unheard stories from people to whom these situations are either not applicable or not desired.
It argues that the simple divide of "yes" or "no" to sexual acts is not as clear-cut as people wish it to be due to the system of complex power dynamics that shape our society -- and that queer people specifically can offer insight into what consent means (and when it applies) more so than the mainstream precisely because they operate outside of society's normal sexual constraints. It also argues that our society's systems in and of themselves, including the ones meant to address the topic of consent and punish sexual offenders, have fundamental flaws to them.
I won't run through each essay individually (there total thirteen, and all are worth reading) but will mention a few of the ones I found most interesting:
Consent in the Dark by Alexander Cheves
Chaves speaks of how his own experiences as a sexual active and promiscuous gay man are fundamentally incompatible with an enthusiastic consent model. He touches on a variety of scenarios and situations in which consent is either assumed waved or done in a non-verbal fashion. He speaks of how his own normal notions of "yes" and "no" don't always match with how he feels during and after sex -- and claims the very notion that people always know themselves and what they want to be faulty, particularly in states of heightened emotion.
The Straight Rules Don't Apply: Lesbian Sexual Ethics by Jane Ward
Ward discusses the ways in which sexual pleasure is tightly tied to gender by our society regardless of the individuals involved and that, because it is set apart from this dynamic, lesbian sex (even when with roles faultily assumed by non-lesbians to match het society's roles like butch/femme) operates under different rules and assumptions: "Much is possible when patriarchy is not the context in which women are being fucked."
My Firsts: On Gaysian Sexual Ethics by James McMaster
McMaster talks about his experiences as a gay Asian man growing up in a culture that prioritizes whiteness and straightness and how the intersection between queerness and race can matter in ways that are difficult to quantify: "Consider this: I'm at Elixir and another gaysian wraps his arms around me. I don't consent to this, but they seem tipsy, friendly, and harmless enough so I giggle and wiggle away. That same night, someone -- I don't see who -- grabs my ass. This act in a straight bar might cross a line, but does it here? Does the race of the grabber matter? Does the fact that I was more flattered than offended make it okay?"
Was I a Teenage Sexual Predator? by Mark S. King
King talks about how he, as a 14-year-old teenager, had sex with adults often double his age because at the time he found it easier than getting boys his own age to do things with him. He talks of how he feels he gave full consent even when he wasn't aware of or thoughtful to the possible consequences. He speaks of how when therapists and other tells him he was sexually abused that he feels abandoned by them because they don't seem to accept his own thoughts and feelings on the matter, leaving him to find his own ways to cope. "I am still puzzled by it all, still unsure whether I belong in the group of adventurers or with the abused. I can't seem to locate my own feelings. I have no judgement or anger or regret or shame. I don't feel much of anything about it. That might be the most troubling of all."
Oppression Was at My Doorstep from Birth: A Conversation on Prison Abolition by Dominique Morgan and Trevor Hoppe
A discussion of the flaws of the US prison system from people who have experienced it firsthand -- and of how concerns within the queer community are often buried or not talked about as they should be due to people unwilling to address issues that do not directly impact themselves. The link between prison reform and the queer community is one not often pushed or acknowledged, so I appreciated this essay greatly.
This review of "Unsafe Words: Queering Consent in the #MeToo Era" was provided in exchange for an advance review copy through NetGalley. Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for this opportunity.