Cruising for the Skyward City: Muñoz and Hebrews

 The last open-access peer-reviewed article I have published recently is “Cruising for the Skyward City: Muñoz and Hebrews" with the journal Bible & Critical Theory.  This is the first piece on Hebrews I have published since my monograph; that is, over a decade. It was nice to come home in a sense to Hebrews when I researched, wrote, presented, and published this article.  

Here is the abstract: 

This essay entangles Abraham’s sojourn in Hebrews 11, José Esteban Muñoz’s Cruising for Utopia, and transgender embodiment in a choreography of resonances and dissonances of wandering, desiring, and hoping. In Hebrews 11-12 the heroes of faith sojourn and reach for a skyward city always just out of reach. Muñoz similarly speaks of queerness as a utopian hope always on the horizon; it is something approached through “cruising” but not yet here. Many people refer to gender transition as a “journey” and a perpetual state of becoming. The pistis of Hebrews 11-12 queerly touches the queerness Muñoz articulates in Cruising as they both, through informed hope, stretch out through desire for a future utopia that is always just out of reach.

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