Feminist Conspiracies, Security Aunties, and Other Surveillance State Fictions Cover Image

Feminist Conspiracies, Security Aunties, and Other Surveillance State Fictions
Feminist Conspiracies, Security Aunties, and Other Surveillance State Fictions

Author(s): Patricia Stuelke
Subject(s): Language and Literature Studies, Gender Studies, Social Theory, Studies in violence and power
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Śląskiego
Keywords: US surveillance state; feminism; Aunty work; antisocial theory; the commons

Summary/Abstract: This article investigates two recent fictional representations of the feminized US surveillance state and its “security feminists” (Grewal), with an eye towards limning what visions of social transformation and political life such representations make possible. It first examines Gish Jen’s 2020 novel The Resisters, considering how the novel’s characterization of the US surveillance state as a snoopy suspicious Aunt maintains American liberal fantasies about the value of productive work and institutionally-sanctioned responses to state violence, even as the novel attempts to find grounds for reinvigorating a democratic commons. Jeff Vandermeer’s 2021 novel Hummingbird Salamander, in contrast, is suspicious of democratic visions of the social. Instead, the novel unravels the privatized figure of the “security mom” (Grewal) in order to experiment with how a queer antisocial orientation might confront environmental and institutional collapse and reimagine the idea of “security” itself.

  • Issue Year: 15/2022
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 51-68
  • Page Count: 18
  • Language: English