Bed/Life: Chronic Illness, Postcolonial Entanglements, and Queer Intimacy in the Stay

Heidi andrea restrepo Rhodes
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Abstract

In the conceptual sculpture titled, I Think We’re Alone Now (Host), Constantina Zavitsanos presents the bed as a site of desire, intimacy, and horizon for the sick/disabled queer body, bringing a multitude of meanings to the notion of “host.” This paper engages this artwork considering the politics and poetics of hosting and “the stay” as queer intimacies are formed in and with bodies—both in the chronicity of pathogenic presence effected through transnational flows of medical coloniality; and as an anti-colonial practice of disalienation, hospitality, and invitation into the erotic and social life lived in the space of the bed. I approach this work of disability scholarship through a feminist understanding that chronic illness is a condition of global entanglement within the colonial and postcolonial milieu of racial capitalism, its afterlives, and its historical traumas. To host challenges the notion that to be chronically sick and bedbound is an existence delimited by isolation and social death produced in the bedbound subject as one denied full entry into the western, liberal, public-political articulation of the human. I reflect on what it means to be a queer, brown, sick/disabled body and turn toward the possibilities of the bed as a material spacetime and hermeneutic for alternative expressions of aliveness through stillness and immobility as the entanglements of our histories and medical conditions also open space for our entangled practices of countermemory and ontological disobedience: how we refuse to be colonized objects of ruin. As settler colonial framings of illness evoke an always-already racialized diagnostic apparatus through which surveillance, impugnment, negation, and alienation are deployed via the medical industrial complex and the medical gaze as a subjugating mode of relation, bedlife is a vital counterpoint to this violence, a portal to crip fugitivity, existential and political affirmation, and connection. Finally, through encountering different artworks, this essay explores the linkages between intimacy and future-making, collapsing the space between queer desire for each other and one another’s bodies, and the particularly queer politics of desire for a world unbound by oppressive structures and the limitations of imposed binaries. Against what disability scholars Eli Clare and Eunjung Kim, among others, have critiqued as the hegemonic imperative toward cure, which seeks to get us out of bed and into capitalism’s racist and ableist coercive temporalities, this paper looks to the bed as a heuristic and material site for a radical politics of feminist carework, queer desire, crip time, and decolonial worldmaking. What it is to want — in all its senses, suggests there is a relevant kind of intimacy between what we are denied as sick and disabled queers in a heterosexist society founded on racial capitalism and colonial regimes of body, self and other—and how we share closeness, cultivating desire for each other and other possible worlds.
床/生活:慢性疾病、后殖民主义纠葛和留宿中的同性恋亲密关系
在这个名为“我想我们现在是孤独的(主人)”的概念雕塑中,Constantina Zavitsanos将床呈现为病态/残疾酷儿身体的欲望、亲密和地平线,为“主人”的概念带来了多种含义。本文运用这一艺术作品,考虑到在身体内部和与身体形成的酷儿亲密关系中的政治和诗意,以及“停留”——无论是通过医疗殖民的跨国流动影响的慢性致病存在;作为一种反殖民主义的实践,去异化,好客,邀请进入色情和社会生活,生活在床上的空间。我通过一种女权主义的理解来完成这项残疾奖学金的工作,即慢性疾病是种族资本主义的殖民和后殖民环境中全球纠缠的一种情况,它的后遗症,以及它的历史创伤。《宿主》挑战了这样一种观念,即长期患病和卧床是一种被隔离和社会死亡所界定的存在,这种存在是在卧床的主体中产生的,因为一个人被拒绝完全进入西方的、自由的、公共政治的人类表达。我思考作为一个酷儿,棕色,生病/残疾的身体意味着什么,并转向床作为一种物质时空的可能性,以及通过静止和不动来表达活力的解释学,因为我们的历史和医疗条件的纠缠也为我们的反记忆和本体论不顺从的纠缠实践打开了空间:我们如何拒绝成为废墟的殖民对象。由于殖民者对疾病的定义唤起了一种早已种族化的诊断工具,通过这种诊断工具,监视、指责、否定和异化通过医疗工业综合体和医疗凝视作为一种征服关系的模式被部署,床上生活是这种暴力的重要对应物,是一种削弱逃亡、存在主义和政治肯定以及联系的门户。最后,通过接触不同的艺术作品,本文探讨了亲密关系与未来创造之间的联系,瓦解了酷儿对彼此和彼此身体的欲望之间的空间,以及对一个不受压迫结构和强加二元限制的世界的特别酷儿政治的渴望。残疾学者伊莱·克莱尔(Eli Clare)和金恩荣(Eunjung Kim)等人曾批评,这是对治愈的霸权要求,它试图让我们从床上爬起来,进入资本主义的种族主义和残疾主义的强制性暂时性,而本文将床视为女权主义护理、酷儿欲望、残废时间和非殖民化世界构建的激进政治的启发和材料场所。在一个建立在种族资本主义和身体、自我和他人的殖民政权基础上的异性恋社会中,我们作为生病和残疾的酷儿而被拒绝的东西,以及我们如何分享亲密,培养对彼此和其他可能世界的渴望之间,存在着一种相关的亲密关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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