"This work is original and stimulating. The particular method of critique and address is unique – drawing from autotheory and memoir, this author explicates several artists’ work by implicating themself in both interpretation and personal consequence. This sometimes brutal dance of explication and implication is a tour de force of personal writing. At the same time, the author skillfully brings in critical theory and philosophy to make the case for a new way of encountering queer art. It’s really well-done. Specialists in rhetoric and writing studies would welcome this book as a leading example of how to do queer rhetoric instead of just talk about it." - Jacqueline Rhodes, Joan Negley Kelleher Centennial Professor of Rhetoric and Composition at the University of Texas at Austin "A 'meditation on how to survive with pain' in relation to queer experience and visual artworks, Jonathan Alexander’s Damaged is a beautiful book. It draws on queer feminist modes of deep interpretation, daring to expose the most intimate aspects of the personal and his own embodied proclivities and attachments/repulsions to do justice to the "damaged" bodies of queer culture – his own and those of artists from Laura Aguilar to Cathie Opie and Carlos Martiel. Most profoundly, the book deploys and explores queer images to make sense of how any or all of us survive and thrive with the pain of being human, demonstrating the power of pictures to transform." - Amelia Jones, Robert A. Day Professor at the Roski School of Art & Design, University of Southern California "Thinking about his own intrepid selfies alongside an archive of self-representations by important artist-activists, Alexander composes an impassioned meditation on the aesthetics of queer damage, one that ultimately, astonishingly longs toward the hope and beauty of a broken world. His disclosure of the vulnerable body – his own, our own – is an artistic offering of stunning generosity, a gift no less profound than the very possibility of joy." - Alice Dailey, Villanova University. !Most queer lives are marked by kinds of damage straight people will never know. There are some tried and true ways that queer art tries to work the damage, perhaps too quickly, into some other emotion, pride for example. Jonathan Alexander invites us to linger a little longer with what wounds, to find other paths to ongoingness, in queer art and life. His willingness to be present for those discomforting moments leads to rich readings of some of the canonic images and image makers of gay life." - McKenzie Wark, author of Love and Money, Sex and Death and Reverse Cowgirl