Publications


peer-reviewed articles


Gore Aesthetics: Chilean Necroliberalism and Travesti Resistance.” In Journal of Latin American Cultural Studies , “Rethinking Obscenity in Latin America: Censorship and Libidinal Politics,” vol. 32, no. 4 (December 2023): 681-703.

*Winner of the “Sylvia Molloy Prize” for Best Article in the Humanities (2024) awarded by the Latin American Studies Association Sexualities Section.

This article develops a concept I call gore aesthetics by focusing on the regulatory and productive capacity of sexual obscenity and gore in contemporary performance art to diagnose shifts in neoliberalism’s perceptual regimes. It centers the artistic practice and legacy of Chilean performance artist and underground, travesti punk monstrosity Hija de Perra or Daughter of a Bitch (1980-2014). Reading her work, the extractive circumstances surrounding her untimely death from HIV/AIDS complications, and the postmortem performances that ensued through sexual obscenity and gore, I argue that gore aesthetics ultimately foreground necroliberalism’s intensification and operate as a travesti strategy of resistance to the extractive violence this form of power and governance occasions. At the same time, I consider gore’s limitations when state actors coopt gore aesthetics as with the Chilean estallido (2019).

 
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“‘No State Apparatus Goes to Bed Genocidal then Wakes up Democratic:’ Fascist State Violence and Transgender Politics in Post-Dictatorship Argentina.” In Radical History Review, “Fascisms and Antifascisms Since 1945,” no. 138, (October 2020): 82-107.

This article tracks the persistent legacies of fascist state violence in Argentina and such violence’s deadly imbrications with the politics of sex and gender. Analyzing state archives of terror and contemporary activist visual culture, this article claims that, in democracy, the enduring afterlife of fascism creates conditions of possibility for Argentine travesti and trans activists to mobilize shared experiences of fascist violence in the service of contemporary gender and sexuality-based rights claims.

 
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“Familiar Grammars of Loss and Belonging: Curating Trans Kinship in Post-Dictatorship Argentina.” In Journal of Visual Culture, “New Work in Transgender Art and Visual Culture Studies,” 19(2): 197-211.

*Short-listed for the International Association for Visual Culture and the Journal of Visual Culture Early Career Researcher Essay Prize.

This article analyzes a recent exhibition of the Argentine Trans Memory Archive. Turning to haptic images (Campt), I read trans kinship alongside national narratives of kinship and disappearance to argue that this exhibit and its attendant viewing rituals together refashion Argentine history by situating transwomen as the proper subjects of national mourning. Such a move challenges hegemonic narratives of loss and mourning by insisting on the centrality of trans life and death to projects of national collective memory and identity formation in the wake of dictatorship.


essays & roundtables


“Estéticas de sobrevida, arte de reparación / Aesthetics of Survival, Art of Repair” exhibition catalogue essay in ¿Cómo retratar a una sobreviviente? / How to Photograph a Survivor? Germán Menna (ed.) (accepted, expected publication Spring 2024). 

This catalogue essay explores the relationship between carceral photography and studio portraiture, connecting these two genres through trans women’s sensory acts of survival. Analyzing artist Germán Menna’s installation ¿Cómo retratar a una sobreviviente? (2022) I argue that, as an artistic act of repair, the work surfaces an aesthetics of survival by illuminating those sensory acts of subterfuge trans women employed to resist photographic capture and carceral detention. I suggest that tactics like “becoming-blur” disorder the liberal consolidation of both the subject of representation and the subject of repair, reimagining trans photographic portraiture and carceral photography alike beyond individual repair and figural representation. In this way, portraiture itself becomes a site to renegotiate and reimagine the subject of national injury and collective repair.  

*Image copyright and image courtesy of photographer Germán Menna

 

“Visualizing (trans)masculinities” Balam, no. 9, special issue “Nuevas masculinidades” (August 2023): 31-32, 250, 257. *Introduction to special issue of Balam, contemporary Latin American photography magazine in Spanish/English/Portuguese.

Go to the Balam site

Read the article here

Introductory catalogue essay to special issue of contemporary Latin American photography magazine Balam on new masculinities. Balam centers the work of queer, cuir, trans, and non-binary photographers and subjects working across the Américas to highlight the work of established and emerging artists.

 

“Trans Visibility and Trans Viability: a Roundtable” Journal of Visual Culture vol 21, no. 2 (2023): 297-320.

JVC Roundtable Abstract (by Cyle Metzger and Kirstin Ringelberg): “This Roundtable is crafted from the online event held on Saturday 20 November 2021 on Trans Visual Cultures. That event was organized to celebrate the recently published themed issue of Journal of Visual Culture on new work in transgender art and visual cultures, guest edited by Cyle Metzger and Kirstin Ringelberg, and suggested for the journal by Jill H Casid. The themed issue emerged from a session run at the College Art Association in New York, 2018, programmed by Metzger and Ringelberg. For the event in November 2021, some of the contributors to the journal’s themed issue (Kara Carmack, Sascha Crasnow, Stamatina Gregory, Cyle Metzger and Kirstin Ringelberg) were joined by interlocutor Jill Casid, and respondent Jack Halberstam to share their thoughts on trans visual culture/s now, and to consider what it is to write trans visual culture, as well as to live in relation to transness. The event happened to fall on Transgender Day of Remembrance. Given the fraught or ambivalent feelings that many have about such a day, the event was also taken as an occasion to talk about ways of untethering trans visibility from what is lethal to trans viability. After the event, the organizers solicited a few additional reflections on concerns that emerged – in particular around matters of the visual, trans visibility, and lived experience. These are brought together to act as a refractive prism for what happens when we center thinking seriously with the implications and potentials of trans art and visual culture for trans hopes and fears, kinship and community, lives and loves. The publication of this Roundtable takes the themed issue as a crucial springboard for critical, transversal trans* imaginings of the variant worlds to be unfolded by undoing the lock of the gender binary and its settler colonial and white supremacist violences, and to further the demand that thinking with trans alters substantially the ways we approach the visual.” -Metzger and Ringelberg

 

“Trans-, Translation, Transnational,” Translation Section introduction, TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly vol 8, no. 4 (November 2021): 532-536.

“As I sat to write this introduction as TSQ's new translation section editor, I realized that translation, when framed as a semiotic process, may appear at first glance as a misnomer for the intellectual and epistemic work that I hope this section can perform. Much of the intention behind the translation section has been “to decenter the Northern, white, anglophone bias” of trans studies by including work-in-translation (Stryker 2020: 303). To continue this important project and expand on its aims, this section now also invites short reflections that develop alternate genealogies for the field through knowledge formations and disciplines that do not reproduce the imperatives of US American studies, which has largely overdetermined trans studies' field imaginary. In other words, this will require recognizing trans studies for what it has often been to date: an unmarked area studies formation that takes US American studies as its unspoken...”

 
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“Latin/x American Trans Studies: Toward a Travesti-Trans Analytic.”TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly, “Trans Studies en las Américas,” vol. 6, no. 2 (2019): 145-156.

Introduction toTSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly special issue “Trans Studies en las Américas”(2019).

Versión en español: "Estudios trans latinoamericanxs: Hacia una analítica travesti-trans"

“Travesti activist Lohana Berkins stands in the foreground, her fist raised in struggle and solidarity (fig. 1). Behind a wave of blood red fabric, a swell of protestors chant, lifting pink and blue signs high above their heads demanding justicia for Diana Sacayán. The hand-painted word compañera peeks out from the fabric's folds, curling across the collective's banner in bold, black cursive outlined in soft baby blue. Compañera—a word thick with complicity, friendship, solidarity, and struggle—manifests the crowd's affective commitments. The banner enfolds the march in a loose, sensuous weave as protestors flood the streets of Buenos Aires denouncing Diana's murder…”


Edited volumes


Invited guest editor of NACLA: Report on the Americas special issue on queer and trans activisms and practices of resistance to state and other forms of violence. Volume in preparation, details and call forthcoming.

Expected publication date March 2025.

 
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Translation Section Editor of TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly, (2020-present).

The translation section is actively accepting submissions (up to 5,000 words) that treat translation as a cultural, aesthetic, and material process. Short essays on translation might attend to how transcultural, transregional, and transnational flows of ideas, subjects, capital, and resources impact the field of transgender studies—its constitutive categories, critical vocabularies, institutional boundaries, and disciplinary commitments. This includes theoretical reflections, meditations on artistic and aesthetic practices, and writing on activist projects that change how we conceive both translation and our field(s). In addition to featuring such reflections, the section will also continue to publish work in translation though this is no longer the section’s primary focus. The section encourages work by academics, artists, and activists working across disciplines, in and from the Global South, as well as work by scholars with deep area training.

*Please send all queries and submissions to cr3np@virginia.edu.

 

“Trans Studies en las Américas,” Co-editor with Juana María Rodríguez, Denilson Lopes, and Claudia Sofía Garriga-López. TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly 6:2 (May 2019).

This volume represents an unprecedented English-language collection and the first peer-reviewed special issue of its kind dedicated to Latin American Trans Studies. The special issue curates a conversation between trans and travesti studies scholars working across the Americas to explore how shifts in cultural epistemologies, aesthetics, geographies, and languages enliven theorizations of politics, subjectivity, and embodiment.


book reviews


Review of Mapping Memory: Visuality, Affect, and Embodied Politics in the Americas. In special issue, "Views from the Larger Somewhere," Women & Performance, 30:3 (April 2021).

Book review of Kaitlin M. Murphy’s Mapping Memory: Visuality, Affect, and Embodied Politics in the Americas. New York: Fordham University Press, 2018.

 
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“Hemispheric Translations,”GLQ, vol. 25, no. 1 (2019): 199-201.

Book review of Héctor Domínguez Ruvalcaba’s Translating the Queer: Body Politics and Transnational Conversations. London: Zed Books, 2016.