AMERICAN STUDIES PROGRAM
 
Center for the Americas
American Studies Program
Latin American Studies Program



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Weiss, Margot


Assistant Professor of American Studies
American Studies Program
860.685.5754
Center for the Americas 206

Assistant Professor of Anthropology
Anthropology Department
860.685.5754
Center for the Americas 206


BA University of Chicago
MA Duke University
PHD Duke University

EMAIL:

mdweiss@wesleyan.edu
PERSONAL HOME PAGE:

http://mdweiss.faculty.wesleyan.edu/
WESLEYAN PO BOX:

Anthropology Department
COURSES TAUGHT THIS SEMESTER:

ANTH101 - 01
AMST201 - 01
RESEARCH INTERESTS:

Margot Weiss holds a PhD in Cultural Anthropology and a Graduate Certificate in Women's Studies from Duke University. Her ethnographic research focuses on contemporary sexual cultures and politics in the United States. She teaches courses in queer studies, transnational sexualities, feminist anthropology, neoliberalism and American culture, and performance studies.
AREAS OF EXPERTISE:

Margot Weiss's first book, Techniques of Pleasure, Scenes of Play , is based on her dissertation fieldwork in the San Francisco Bay Area's BDSM communities. It explores new subjectivities, communities, and politics produced at the intersection of late-capitalism/commodification, neoliberalism/American culture, and gendered and raced SM performances. The book will be published by Duke University Press.

Her current research project focuses on the multiple discourses of "sexual rights" among contemporary queer activists. She is especially interested in the interconnections between sexual rights, concepts of "freedom," normativity, and US and transnational iterations of neoliberalism (most crucially privatization and individualization). She is also at work on a small project comparing BDSM ethnic/racial play in the US and Germany, with attention to the politics of "replaying" national trauma (e.g. slavery, the Holocaust) in queer temporal and spatial registers.

She has published articles on the politics of BDSM media visibility (in Journal of Homosexuality); on labor, leisure, and commodified sexuality (in Anthropologica); on the performative effects of BDSM interrogation scenes and the Abu Ghraib photographs (in Out in Public); and on neoliberalism, homonormativity, and new queer activisms (in Radical History Review).
OFFICE HOURS:

Tuesday 4-5:30pm and Thursday 12-1pm in CAMS 206