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Reading Meredith Talusan’s Fairest: A Queer Decolonial Critique of the U.S. Empire

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Abstract

This essay examines Meredith Talusan’s Fairest, the first book-length memoir by and about a trans Asian woman. I argue that Talusan’s gender and sexual reconstruction is an ongoing process of accepting, negotiating, and rejecting ideas deeply rooted in the white heteropatriarchy that prevails throughout the U.S. transnational empire. I first investigate Talusan’s critique of the colonial mentality that is imposed on Filipinos, and their suggestion to resist such a sense of indigenous inferiority. Next, I explore how Talusan molded themself to blend into the masculinity-obsessed American gay culture that renders Asian men undesirable, but they ultimately realized that either passing as white or gay erased certain parts of who they really are. Last, I analyze how Talusan proposes a new direction of trans feminism that centers on woman-identification while rejecting the male privileges that they had enjoyed before gender transition. Inspired by nineteenth-century British women writers, Talusan revisits the colonial history of Filipino transgender people as victims of gender-based violence.
Original languageAmerican English
Pages (from-to)1.1-1.16
JournalLanguage, Literature, and Interdisciplinary Studies
Volume6
Issue number2
StatePublished - Oct 16 2024

Keywords

  • LGBTIQ+
  • Asian American Queerness
  • Transwoman
  • Transfeminism
  • Filipino Transgender
  • Meredith Talusan
  • Sexual Fluidity
  • American Imperialism

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