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The Cambridge Introduction to Queer and Trans Studies

The Cambridge Introduction to Queer and Trans Studies

The Cambridge Introduction to Queer and Trans Studies

Mark Rifkin, University of North Carolina
October 2025
Not yet published - available from October 2025
Hardback
9781009435666
£75.00
GBP
Hardback
GBP
Paperback

    The book provides a detailed analysis of important work in queer and trans studies over the past thirty years. Stretching from early figures (such as Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Judith Butler, Cathy Cohen, José Muñoz, and Sandy Stone) to the most recent scholarship, it offers a rich account of these fields' major ideas and contributions while indicating how they have evolved. Centering race and empire, the book offers extended discussion of work in Black, Indigenous, Latinx, and Asian American studies as well as engaging the Global South. The Introduction further addresses historical considerations of sexuality and gender identity, and queer and trans temporalities, while also providing a robust account of social and political movements that preceded the emergence of queer and trans studies as scholarly fields. Accessible for those unfamiliar with these areas of study, it is also a great resource for those already working in them.

    • Provides an overview of queer and trans studies work in the humanities and humanistic social sciences over the past thirty years
    • Illustrates the centrality of race and empire to all aspects of queer and trans intellectual work
    • Includes chapters on movements that preceded queer and trans studies, histories of gender and sexual nonnormativity, queer and trans of color critique, and queer and trans studies work on nonwestern countries and the Global South

    Product details

    October 2025
    Hardback
    9781009435666
    280 pages
    229 × 152 mm
    Not yet published - available from October 2025

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction
    • 1. Reading and revising the 1990s
    • 2. Genealogies of queer and trans studies
    • 3. Histories of sexuality and gender identity
    • 4. Queer/trans of color and indigenous critique
    • 5. Global dynamics, refusals, and reorientations.
      Author
    • Mark Rifkin , University of North Carolina

      Mark Rifkin is Professor of Global Gender and Sexuality Studies at the University at Buffalo. He is the author of eight other books, including The Politics of Kinship: Race, Family, Governance (2024), Beyond Settler Time: Temporal Sovereignty and Indigenous Self-Determination (2017), and When Did Indians Become Straight?: Kinship, the History of Sexuality, and Native Sovereignty (2011). His work has won a number of national awards, including the John Hope Franklin Prize for best book in American Studies, the Subsequent Book Prize from the Native American and Indigenous Studies Association, and the Best Special Issue award from the Council of Editors of Learned Journals. He also has served as president of the Native American and Indigenous Studies Association.