"Every now and again an edited volume comes along and sets a new agenda for a field. This absolutely dazzling piece of scholarship is precisely such a landmark contribution. Encountering the scrambled landscape of gay life in the post-
Obergefell world while grappling with the new possibilities for commitment made possible by the legalization of gay marriage,
Long Term is a truly original and outstanding work." -- Benjamin Kahan, author of * The Book of Minor Perverts: Sexology, Etiology, and the Emergences of Sexuality *
"The essays in
Long Term enter the quotidian realm of queer commitments not to settle scores with the outsized celebration of antinormativity that writes the political into prerecorded narratives of heroic refusal, but to inhabit the small acts and minor tempos that compose the work, anxiety, and yes even the pleasure of ordinary endurance. Lushly descriptive and wholly engaging, this collection is both a living document and a critically nuanced guide to the persistence of queer commitments." -- Robyn Wiegman, author of * Object Lessons *
"Disability and carework are the volume's most prominent scenes of queer commitment: palliative care for a dying mother or companion animals; living on after a partner's catastrophic stroke; living with gendered and queered chronic illness. . . . The authors pause on small scenes of the mundane, finding queer attachments in 'suspended time and repetitive actions' and the thickness of the everyday." -- Margot Weiss * Public Books *
"Long Term plunges us into everyday scenes of belonging, which are rife with complicity, ambivalence, and damage. We move from deathbeds to the dance floor, from prisons to hospitals, from gay adoption to companion species caretaking. . . . Herring and Wallace loosen heteronormativity's fierce grip on the narration of the long term while better attuning queer theory to practices of care that enable queerness to endure."
-- Tyler Bradway * American Literary History *