The range, both in chronology and subject, of this collection should provide much food for thought to dedicated scholars of auteur cinema and its intersections with queer filmmaking and criticism.
~Kathleen McCallister
In this essential collection of writings by one of our foremost contemporary film theorists, the category of authorship finds itself both defended and queered: as écriture, as biography, and as a concept that connects the queerness of lived experience to the aesthetic deterritorializations of cinema. Tantalizing readings of Epstein, Eisenstein, Riggs, Minnelli, Honoré, and others are supplemented by a series of profound reflections on politics, aesthetics, and friendship, demonstrating that the project of queer film criticism and theory is one of film studies' most crucial and enduring legacies.
~Damon Ross Young, Associate Professor of French and Film and Media, University of California, Berkeley
Queer Imaginings takes up the question of the auteur and sheds new light on the overlapping processes of filmmaking and film writing. Gerstner expands our understanding of where the labor of cinema happens by foregrounding the economy of queer friendships—intimate exchanges built through conflict, 'burgling,' remembering, and generosity.
~Tara Mateik, Associate Professor of Media Studies, College of Staten Island/Cuny
In Queer Imaginings, David Gerstner delves into relations of relations—queer self and other, critic and artist, critic and self, reader and writer, friendship, queer auteurist and queer auteur, and more—pushing and pulling and blurring boundaries in an almost erotic way. The result is a rich collection of metacritical essays that are politically insightful, aesthetically sensitive, and frequently very moving.
~Kyle Stevens, Editor of the Oxford Handbook of Film Theory
In Queer Imaginings, David Gerstner offers a provocative meditation on the relationship between cinema, queerness, and the radical promise located at their intersection. Sweeping in his objects of study, Gerstner's collected essays span time, place, and scholarly categorization to create a rich and multilayered vision of the possibilities for cinema and cinema studies. With an approach to both classic discourses and emerging queries in the arts that demonstrates a profound and moving level of care, Queer Imaginings is a stunning reminder of the love for their work that both artists and scholars share.
~Racquel Gates, Author of Double Negative: the Black Image and Popular Culture
Gerstner leaves his book with a proclamation on the powers of writing and friendship, not from a theoretical standpoint (the author seems aware that this is well covered by this point), but from a very personal place. It's one that pushes readers to explore and revel in the language and peoples who we surround ourselves with. In ending his vast and varied anthology in such a way, Gerstner launches his work not to an end point but to a new beginning, exemplifying a very curious and creative drive that all great ecriture auteurs must possess.
~George Cunningham