

Aaron Hammes, "TransGenre" (Cambridge UP, 2025)
Aug 26, 2025
Aaron Hammes, an independent scholar and sex workers' rights organizer, discusses their groundbreaking work, "TransGenre," which rethinks genre theory through transgender minor literature. They explore how blending genres impacts literary interpretations, revealing the political nature of literary frameworks. The conversation covers the evolution of the road novel in trans narratives and the significance of minor literature in amplifying marginalized voices. Hammes highlights the complexities of gender identity and community dynamics in reshaping literary representations.
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Long Scholarly Journey Into Trans Fiction
- Aaron Hammes recounts a long, winding academic path from sciences to humanities and eventual PhD at CUNY Graduate Center.
- He describes encountering Jordi Rosenberg's Confessions of the Fox as a pivotal opening to contemporary trans fiction.
Minor Literature As Deterritorialization
- Hammes reframes 'minor literature' as a tool of deterritorialization rather than a lesser category of art.
- He argues genre offers fertile ground for minor literatures to remap and repurpose dominant literary territories.
Nevada's Bifurcated Road Narrative
- Hammes outlines Nevada's bifurcated structure: an urban collapse then a hazardous road journey to Star City, Nevada.
- He emphasizes Maria's precarious citified trans femme perspective subverts classic freewheeling road-novel tropes.