“Can a man write as a woman? Can a white lesbian write as a black lesbian? . . . As if! Staging a surprising, yet timely return to early queer and gay/lesbian criticism’s experimentations with cross-identifications across gender and race, <i>As If!</i> masterfully demonstrates how all identifications, even those with identities to which one legitimately ‘belongs,’ are at once generative and fraught.” - Kadji Amin, author of <i>Disturbing Attachments: Genet, Modern Pederasty, and Queer History</i> <br /><br />“Chase Gregory’s insightful readings return us to the early days of queer theory to track how scholars enacted cross-identification within their literary criticism. <i>As If!</i> is an important, revelatory, and groundbreaking reinterpretation of queer theory’s methods that develops an account of queer reading that will inspire a new generation to take seriously the playful and politically generative possibilities of cross-identification.” - Teagan Bradway, author of <i>Queer Experimental Literature: The Affective Politics of Bad Reading</i>