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Creep: A Life, A Theory, An Apology

Jonathan Alexander

Published on August 29, 2017 by punctum books

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Pages
172 pages
Languages
English
Dimensions
5⤫8 in.
ISBN (Paperback)
ISBN: 978-1-947447-10-3 (Paperback)
ISBN (PDF)
ISBN: 978-1-947447-11-0 (PDF)
LCCN
LCCN: 2017950838
BISAC subject codes
BISAC: BIO031000, LIT004160
Thema subject codes
THEMA: 5PSG, DNC, JBSJ

Creeps surround us, seemingly everywhere. People creep up on each other both on the streets and online, with digital technologies vectoring a lot of cyber-stalking. It’s so easy to spy on people that “creep catching” has even become a form of news entertainment in shows such as “To Catch a Predator.” But what defines a creep is so broad that nearly anyone can be a creep at times. Many of us wonder if we ourselves have been creepy, or if perhaps we engage in behavior that, if others knew, would easily earn us the title “creep.” Even Donald Trump, during the raucous 2016 campaign, was called a “creep” on several occasions by various news media.

Indeed, for many of us, the specter of the creep is not just threatening, but exciting – exciting perhaps in the possibility of threat. Yes, we get creeped out. But we are also fascinated by creeps, perhaps in part because we all sense the potential inside ourselves for creepy behavior.

In this provocative and engaging new book, Jonathan Alexander interweaves personal narrative and cultural analyses to explore what it means to be a creep. Calling this work a* critical memoir,* he draws on his own experiences growing up gay in the deep south, while also interrogating examples from literature and popular film and media, to approach the figure of the creep with some sympathy. Ranging widely over contemporary culture, especially the ever-creeping presence of nearly ubiquitous surveillance, Alexander confesses his own creepiness while also explaining to us what being creepy can show us in turn about our culture. He also resurrects some famous “creeps” from the past, such as J.R. Ackerley, to explore what makes a creep creepy, and how even the best of us succumb at times to being creeps. Ultimately, Alexander argues, a study of creepiness might offer us critical insight into the fundamental perversity of how we live.* Creep: A Life, A Theory, an Apology* is a timely meditation for our strange and creepy times.

Biographies

  • Jonathan Alexander

    (Author)

    University of California, Irvine

    Jonathan Alexander is the author, co-author, or editor of twelve previous books. A frequent contributor as essayist and reviewer to the Los Angeles Review of Books(opens in new tab), he’s also Chancellor’s Professor of English at the University of California, Irvine and lives in Southern California.

Endorsements

Adam Kotsko

author of Creepiness

In a remarkable study that creeps between the genres of memoir, theory, and even manifesto, Jonathan Alexander gives us a fresh perspective on creepiness. Drawing on his experience as a victim of homophobia, he suggests that labeling someone creepy may be the creepiest move of all—while at the same time practicing a vulnerable, critical, and hopeful form of creepiness all his own.

Kevin Sessums

author of I Left It on the Mountain

Setting out to write a memoir is already a creepy sort of impulse, but Creep, Jonathan Alexander’s exploration of his inner one, solves that impulse by confronting it — theoretically and wittily and with a rhetorician’s persuasive aplomb. Confronting it? Well, not exactly. He seduces the reader by seducing himself in this meta exercise in memoir writing. I’ve never “meta creep” I didn’t finally like in some way. I certainly liked this Creep and the man and writer who, confessing to be one, created this book.

Reviews

Awards

  • Lambda Literary Award

    Short Listed · Gay memoir · 2021

Additional resources

Audiobook

Memoirist, composition theorist, and educator Jonathan Alexander joins hosts Eric Newman and Kate Wolf to talk about his new critical memoir "Creep: a Life, a Theory, an Apology." With wit and sharpness, Alexander walks us through the definitional morass that informs our cultural accounts of the "creep" in a wide ranging discussion that shuttles from the Deep South to Hollywood to the White House. Also, author Janet Fitch return to recommend Sergei Dovlatov's The Suitcase: A Novel.

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Genres

  • Autotheory
  • Cultural Studies+Critical Theory
  • TransQueer

Keywords

  • creepiness
  • gay memoir
  • homophobia
  • queer studies
  • sexuality