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Reviewed by:
  • Steel Closets: Voices of Gay, Lesbian, and Transgender Steelworkers by Anne Balay
  • Raul A. Galoppe
Anne Balay. Steel Closets: Voices of Gay, Lesbian, and Transgender Steelworkers. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2014. xi + 172 pp. ISBN 978-1-4696-1400-7, $34.95 (cloth); ISBN 978-1-4696-1401-4, $16.19 (e-book).

Two of the questions that concern scholars dealing with queer studies are how to resolve the paradox of visibility and how to come up with an anchored definition of queer identity. Since Jacques Foucault redirected us to the creation of the homosexual as an agency, the complex interrelation between culture and society has exposed profound contradictions in terms of appearance versus essence and public versus private. As Elisa Glick convincingly argues, these tensions emerge and intensify with the capitalist modes of production and the mores of modernity.1 [End Page 696]

Because of that, queer subjects until now were represented as a homogeneous group: white, upper or middle class, educated, sophisticated, and urban. Anne Balay’s Steel Closets, a welcome addition to the discussion, changes the focus and concentrates on working-class individuals living in small, closed communities. Her monograph brings to the foreground the voices of gay, lesbian, and transgender steel-workers, most of them from northern Indiana, and exposes as well as analyzes the intricacies of queer sexual identities in nonurban environments and the perils of (in)visibility. In times in which LGBTQ politics keep lifting nonheteronormative causes associated with the power of coming out in certain privileged environments, Balay’s book reminds us that not all same-sex desires and queer identities fit the same mold. Large nonheterosexual populations, which until recently had remained underrepresented by queer studies, do not conform to the assumed idea of queerness; and for some, the closet, instead of a symbol of denial and cowardice, still stands as a locus of resistance.

Two quotes serve to delineate the parameters of Balay’s study: one by John Howard and the other by Judith Halberstam. Howard argues that “[n]otions and experiences of male-male desire are in perpetual dialectical relationship with the spaces in which they occur, mutually shaping one another.”2 Halberstam, in turn, states, “[m]ost queer work on community, social identity, and gender roles has been based on and in urban populations, and exhibits an active disinterest in the productive potential of nonmetropolitan sexualities, genders, and identities.”3

Balay expands Howard’s paradigm to incorporate female–female desire and responds to Halberstam’s assertion by giving voice to an underrepresented queer population with an uneven fight: coping with the dangers of their jobs while fully expressing or, in most cases, masking their nonnormative sexualities and identities. The result is an insightful exploration that cross-sections class, gender, and sexuality in nonurban America.

The first three chapters serve as a prelude to the core of the study: the testimonials. Chapter 1 sets the scene and provides cultural background on the region of northwest Indiana and its mills. Chapter 2 analyzes the dialectics of sexual identity and visibility in the context of changing economic patterns and how they affect those who fall outside the realm of perceived normativity. Chapter 3 explores the [End Page 697] logic of secrecy and its consequences in an environment such as the mill, where most queer steelworkers remain closeted and live in fear or experience harassment, violence, and even rape.

A strong component throughout the book, the testimonial accounts, gain relevance in Chapters 4 and 5 as they account for the experiences of female and male gay steelworkers shaped by the dominant macho culture at the mill. The author analyzes the genders separately because nonheterosexual males and females are not in parallel situations. These chapters serve as irrefutable affirmation of what queer theorists, such as Judith Butler and Tim Dean, have outlined regarding the body, desire, and the fallacy of binaries.4 Lesbians, for example, fit in much more easily than gay men because they share the same object of desire as the heterosexual male coworkers. In the case of men, homosexual acts are perceived in terms of active or passive roles and, in most cases, remain disconnected from...

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