Synopses & Reviews
In
A Coincidence of Desires, Tom Boellstorff considers how interdisciplinary collaboration between anthropology and queer studies might enrich both fields. For more than a decade he has visited Indonesia, both as an anthropologist exploring gender and sexuality and as an activist involved in HIV prevention work. Drawing on these experiences, he provides several in-depth case studies, primarily concerning the lives of Indonesian men who term themselves
gay (an Indonesian-language word that overlaps with, but does not correspond exactly to, the English word andldquo;gayandrdquo;). These case studies put interdisciplinary research approaches into practice. They are preceded and followed by theoretical meditations on the most productive forms that collaborations between queer studies and anthropology might take. Boellstorff uses theories of time to ask how a model of andldquo;coincidenceandrdquo; might open up new possibilities for cooperation between the two disciplines. He also juxtaposes his own work with other scholarsandrsquo; studies of Indonesia, Thailand, the Philippines, Malaysia, and Singapore to compare queer sexualities across Southeast Asia. In doing so, he asks how comparison might be understood as a queer project and how queerness might be understood as comparative.
The case studies contained in A Coincidence of Desires speak to questions about the relation of sexualities to nationalism, religion, and globalization. They include an examination of zines published by gay Indonesians; an analysis of bahasa gayandmdash;a slang spoken by gay Indonesians that is increasingly appropriated in Indonesian popular culture; and an exploration of the place of warias (roughly, andldquo;male-to-female transvestitesandrdquo;) within Indonesian society. Boellstorff also considers the tension between Islam and sexuality in gay Indonesiansandrsquo; lives and a series of incidents in which groups of men, identified with Islamic fundamentalism, violently attacked gatherings of gay men. Collectively, these studies insist on the primacy of empirical investigation to any queer studies project that wishes to speak to the specificities of lived experience.
Review
andldquo;By exploring different formulations of time in canonical anthropological texts, in queer theory, and in his own ethnography on Indonesia, Tom Boellstorff challenges and reconfigures conventional anthropological and queer understandings of temporality. By focusing onandlsquo;coincidenceandrsquo;andmdash;the temporal simultaneity of two eventsandmdash;Boellstorff destabilizes more traditional notions of linear, hierarchical time that structure a range of hegemonic dualities, including male/female and modern/traditional. Boellstorffandrsquo;s nuanced treatment of andlsquo;coincidenceandrsquo; ultimately demonstrates the productive potential for a new interdisciplinarity that brings anthropology and queer theory into dialog around questions of gender, sexuality, modernity, and temporality.andrdquo;andmdash;Megan Sinnott, author of Toms and Dees: Transgender Identity and Female Same-Sex Relationships in Thailand
Review
andldquo;A Coincidence of Desires responds to the imperative in queer studies to resituate the fieldandrsquo;s epistemology by asking new questions about the relations between language, religion, sexuality, knowledge, and time. Drawing on a host of andlsquo;coincidencesandrsquo; between queer studies and anthropology, and using his extensive ethnographic experience in Indonesia, Tom Boellstorff casts his case studies as theoretical meditations in compelling and unexpected ways.andrdquo;andmdash;Robyn Wiegman, Duke University
Review
andldquo;This major study reflects a mature consideration of Boellstorffandrsquo;s decade and a half of ethnographic research. . . . Boellstorff is indeed to be praised for a study that draws solidly on Indonesia-based research to speak to analytical issues that are relevant well beyond that countryandrsquo;s borders.andrdquo;
Synopsis
An anthropological examination of non-normative male sexuality outside of the "West," using Indonesia as a case study.
About the Author
Tom Boellstorff is Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, Irvine. He is the author of The Gay Archipelago: Sexuality and Nation in Indonesia and a coeditor of Speaking in Queer Tongues: Globalization and Gay Language, as well as the editor of American Anthropologist. To learn more about Tom Boellstorffandrsquo;s work, visit his website.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments ix
A Note on Indonesian Terms and Italicization xiii
Tech Q&A
Read the Tech Q&A with Tom Boellstorff