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Abstract

Although the separation between “real life” and “play” appears to reinscribe liberal notions of autonomy, BDSM practitioners actually mobilize this boundary to trouble liberal understandings of the liberal autonomous rational agent. Through understandings desires as inextricable from power, and fetishes as displacements of anxieties, BDSM practices recognize “irrational” desires and multiple, fractured selves. In examining kink practices of queer women of color in the Netherlands, this paper explores the transformative potentials of BDSM for queer people of color, especially in resisting colonial discourses that privilege liberal discourses of agency and conceptualize bodies of color as nonmodern, inferior, exotic, and irrational. In the face of discourses that pit Dutch freedom and sexual expression against ethnic minorities and sexual constraint, marginalized kinksters are forming communities that radically centralize marginalized kink experiences and reject pathologizing discourses, as they critically alter the implications of and possibilities for slippages between daily life and kink.

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Biographies

Michelle Liang is the Policy & Communications Manager for NAKASEC, an Asian-American organization organizing for racial, social, and economic justice. She graduated from Harvard College in 2019 with a joint degree in History & Literature, and Studies of Women, Gender, & Sexuality, minoring in Ethnicity, Migration, and Rights. Previously, she was a policy intern at Amnesty International and Kushinga, a mental health organization in Zimbabwe. At Harvard College she was a Weatherhead Center for International Affairs Associate, Frank M Boas Fellow, Lenn Thrower Fellow, Institute of Politics Director’s Internship recipient, and Global Health Institute Summer Fellow. She also conducted research in Jordan focusing on the refugee crisis and health and humanitarian action.