Date
March 10, 2025

Location

754 Schermerhorn Extension


Time
6:15 pm – 7:30 pm

Event Organizer

The Institute for the Study of Sexuality and Gender


Event Sponsor

Institute for Comparative Literature and Society (ICLS)


Event Co-Sponsor(s)

REGISTER FOR IN-PERSON OR ONLINE

[Link to webinar will be sent on the day of the event]

COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY’S CAMPUS ACCESS RESTRICTIONS MAY APPLY TO NON-AFFILIATES. Please check Public Safety’s Website for more details. Registration does not enable campus access. 754 Schermerhorn Ext will be first come, first seated.

Is there such a thing as a ‘queer radical tradition?’ And what is the relationship between queerness and Marxism?

Alex Stoffel joins us to discuss his new book Eros and Empire: The Transnational Struggle for Sexual Freedom in the United States.

This talk reconsiders the history of radical queer politics since 1968. Against common framings of queer politics as either a progressive campaign for state recognition or as a subcultural rejection of prevailing gender norms, it provides an alternative view of queer radicalism that clarifies its true scale. Revisiting the gay liberation movement, Black lesbian feminism, and AIDS activism, it explores the relationship between struggles for sexual freedom and questions of capital accumulation, empire, and state violence. The queer radical tradition is shown to have not only conditioned the trajectory of LGBTI history, but also to have radicalized wider anti-imperialist, socialist, and abolitionist struggles past and present.

Dr. Alex Stoffel is an Assistant Professor in International Politics at Queen Mary University of London. His research takes up critical questions regarding the intersections of sexuality, race, and desire within capitalist expansion. He has published in, among other journals, International Studies QuarterlyThe European Journal of International RelationsThe International Feminist Journal of Politics,and Salvage and is an editor of the journal Historical Materialism, where he convenes the Sexuality and Political Economy Network.

Response will be given by Tulio Bucchioni, PhD candidate in LAIC/ICLS/ISSG.

 The Heyman Center for the Humanities, Room B-101
74 Morningside Drive
New York, NY, 10027
  (212) 854-4541
  (212) 854-3099