"Space to Dream": Queer Speculative Disability Narratives & Their Liberatory Value

"Real Women Have Bodies" by Carmen Maria Machado

Found in Machado's collection, Her Body and Other Parties

IDs: Queer, Sapphic, Terminal Illness/Degenerative Disease
Author IDs: Bisexual, Latinx/Latine, Fat

In “Real Women Have Bodies,” Machado explores queer disability through a phenomenon called "fading," which results in women’s bodies “fading” out of existence. However, these women don’t completely disappear. Instead, a wisp of them remains in the world--only visible if one strains their eye. The cause of this fading is unknown, and its targets seem to share only their identities as women. The story focuses on an unnamed narrator and her relationship with a woman named Petra in this world of fading. About halfway through the story, Petra herself begins to fade. The fading process appears to take at least a few weeks, and our narrator brings us along through her and Petra’s relationship as Petra fades. Machado’s fading phenomenon creates space for a simultaneously embodied and imagined representation of queer disability. While fading is not a recognizable disability in our reality, Machado treats it as if it is. Therefore, we as readers witness an embodied account of fading that shares many traits with degenerative diseases or chronic illnesses that exist within our reality.

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