

Aaron Hammes, "TransGenre" (Cambridge UP, 2025)
Aug 26, 2025
Aaron Hammes, an independent scholar and sex workers' rights organizer with a PhD from CUNY, discusses his groundbreaking book, TransGenre. He explores how contemporary transgender literature challenges and reshapes genre conventions, particularly through road novels and chosen family narratives. Hammes delves into the political implications of minor literature and critiques traditional family structures in favor of chosen connections. By analyzing works like 'Nevada,' he reveals how these narratives redefine identity and societal perceptions, enriching our understanding of trans experiences.
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Long Academic Journey Sparked By A Novel
- Aaron Hammes recounts a long, circuitous educational path from sciences to humanities culminating in a PhD at CUNY Graduate Center.
- He links that trajectory to discovering Geordie Rosenberg's Confessions of the Fox, which opened his access to contemporary trans fiction.
Deterritorialization As Core Minor Mechanism
- Hammes collapses Deleuze and Guattari's three components of minor literature into deterritorialization as the central operation.
- He reads trans minor literature as remapping majoritarian boundaries to create communal meaning and political intervention.
Road Novel Recast As Precarious Becoming
- Hammes contrasts classic road-novel tropes with Nevada's depiction of a trans femme's precarious, destinationless journey.
- He shows the road becomes a space of becoming rather than triumphant teleology, ending without resolution.