The Language of Queerness

This book is a compilation of essays and research on the language used by queer people, focusing particularly on the ways language affects personal identity and community. How does language signal identity? How do the words we use to describe our identities serve to construct and assert them? How do changing meanings affect the way we form community?

I gathered and organized the essays, designed and typeset the pages, and printed and hand-bound the book in an edition of five.

Three identical books in a row, titled "The Language of Queerness". The title is in white bold italic high-contrast text on a black cover.
A book open to the title page, which reads "The Language of Queerness" in the same font as the cover.
Composite image of the book open to three different spreads.
First spread: The left page is solid black, and the right page reads "The Opacity of Queer Languages" in the title font.
Spread two: The left page has "by Anna T." in the title font, with a smaller sans serif subtitle. The right page has body text in a sans serif font, including a footnote.
Spread 3: Left page: Body text with two footnotes. Right page: Body text with a heading at the top in the title font, which reads "(At Least) Eight Ways to Speak Queer".
Three books, closed and arranged in a radiating stack, with the front cover visible on top.