Tom Roach argues that queer friendship operates as something more radical than a safety net—it’s a deliberate refusal of the hierarchy that places romantic marriage and the nuclear family at the center of everything. He moves past the ‘born this way’ argument to examine how LGBTQ people construct bonds that function as both personal sanctuary and political act.
The book draws on multiple philosophical traditions to make a case: friendship can reshape what intimacy means. It can become a way of life, not just something you do alongside ‘real’ commitments. Roach works through cultural texts and queer history to show how these relationships refuse neat categories. Their fluidity—the way they shift and adjust and don’t conform to expected patterns—suggests an alternative architecture for human connection. One that’s less hierarchical, less predetermined, more honest about what people actually need from each other.
Details
| ISBN: 9781438440002 |
| Subtitle: Foucault, AIDS, and the politics of shared estrangement |
| Genre: LGBT Studies/Social Sciences; Non-Fiction |
| Subject(s): Friendship; Friendship – Philosophy; Gay and lesbian studies |
| Publication Date: 2012-04-01 |
| Original Publication Date: |
| Publisher: State University Press of New York |
| Language: English |
| Format: Paperback |
| Pages: 214 |
| Rating: |
| Notes: |
| Book_ID: 105857 |