Perversion: Transgressive Sexuality and Becoming-Monster

Authors

  • Patricia MacCormack Anglia Polytechnic University, Cambridge

Keywords:

perversion, transgressive sexualities, Deleuze and Guattari, sexuality and the body

Abstract

Perversion is traditionally thought as acts that depart from traditional heterosexuality through object, aim or performance. This article excavates the ways in which thinking desire through perversion can renegotiate how we think the body and subjectivity. By actively repudiating dominant paradigms of sexuality it is possible to understand subjectivity as flux, perversion as political and the body defined by its capacity to dissipate and refigure socio-sexual limits. Perversion is not simply against the normal but comes to present a means by which subjectivity may become-otherwise according to Deleuze and Guattari. Considering womanââ¬â¢s historical definition as the ââ¬Ëpervertedââ¬â¢ version of the male (be it castrated, maternal or otherwise), actively engaging in becoming-perverse calls for all subjects to negotiate the political potentials and risks of defining sexual habituation. Occupying the non-dominant position does not necessarily align one with being pervert, however this article will suggest perversion can be used as a means by which those in othered positions, and indeed all subjects, can volitionally explore the position of the other. Perversion is not that which one is named but can be a sexual-political project one undertakes.

Author Biography

Patricia MacCormack, Anglia Polytechnic University, Cambridge

Patricia MacCormack is a lecturer in Communication at Anglia Polytechnic University, Cambridge. She recently received her PhD from Monash University, Melbourne, Australia, which won the Mollie Holman doctoral medal for best thesis. She has published mainly on Italian Horror, sexuality, feminism, and the work of Deleuze and Guattari.

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