This article explores the queer qualities of feminist scientist Donna Haraway's ‘A Cyborg Manifesto’ (1985). In the first part, the article investigates the similarities between ‘A Cyborg Manifesto’ and the ideas circulating in queer theory, including the hybridity of identity, and the disruption of totalizing social categories such as ‘Gay man’ and ‘Woman’. In the second part, it is argued that ‘A Cyborg Manifesto’ evinced a decolonial feminist form of queerness. The article references the African-American, Chicana and Asian-American feminist sociology, theory, literature and history that ‘A Cyborg Manifesto’ takes up. The article does not wish to position Haraway's white-authored text as an authoritative voice on decolonial feminist queerness, instead arguing for the role of ‘A Cyborg Manifesto’ as a bibliographical work that readers may reference in their exploration of decolonial feminist beginnings of queer theory.
About this Journal
Founded in 1983, Paragraph is a leading journal in modern critical theory, exploring critical theory in general and its application to literature, other arts, including film and visual culture, and society. Regular special issues by esteemed guest editors highlight important figures and themes in modern critical theory.
Recent special issues include:
Critical Freedoms
Paul B. Preciado at the Limits of Theory
Derrida’s Geschlecht III
Samuel Beckett and Roland Barthes
Prehistory: Art, Cultural Theory and Modernity
Sarah Kofman and the Relief of Philosophy
New Takes on Film and Imagination
Editors and Editorial Board
Editorial Committee
Amaleena Damlé, Durham University
Lisa Downing, University of Birmingham
Ian James, University of Cambridge
Ian Maclachlan, University of Oxford
Johanna Malt, King's College London
Ankhi Mukherjee, University of Oxford
Annie Ring, University College London
Douglas Smith, University College Dublin
Michael Syrotinski, University of Glasgow
Advisory Editors
Terence Cave
Mairéad Hanrahan
Nicholas Harrison
Leslie Hill
Marian Hobson
Michael Holland
Diana Knight
Morag Shiach
Judith Still
Emma Wilson
Michael Worton
Individual issues are edited by members of the committee in turn, and by specially invited guest editors. Articles submitted are refereed by every member of the Editorial Committee and sent to outside referees where appropriate.
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Paragraph
Sample Issue
Recommended Articles
- Nov 2018 Paragraph
- Nov 1994 Paragraph
- Roundtable: Are We Queer Yet?How Queer is NowMichael O'RourkeNaming a Politics of Place on a Queerly Irish Landscape: Remembering WERRCAideen QuiltyAdvocating for LGBT Youth: Seeking Social Justice in a Culture of Individual RightsMichael Barron (BeLonG To)‘You Won't Re-route this Fruit’: Northern Ireland, ‘Queer’, and a Geopolitics of AffectionKathryn ConradMay 2013 Irish University Review
- Jul 2012 Paragraph
- May 2019 Dance Research
- Nov 2018 Deleuze and Guattari Studies
- Oct 2012 Comparative Critical Studies
- Oct 2012 Comparative Critical Studies