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MEAN BOYS by Geoffrey Mak

MEAN BOYS

A Personal History

by Geoffrey Mak

Pub Date: April 30th, 2024
ISBN: 9781635577945
Publisher: Bloomsbury

A young, queer, Chinese American writer “well versed in the theoretical discourse” takes on fashion, social media, and urban nightlife.

Mak has published nonfiction in a wide range of media, from Artforum and Art in America to the Guardian and the Nation, and he’s a co-founder of a writing and performance series called Writing on Raving. Most of these pieces began as internet essays intended for friends, derived from extended Facebook posts that dealt in gossip, fashion, and sex. The author worked in the New York advertising world and then “came of age” in Berlin’s club scene before drug addiction and a psychotic breakdown brought him back to his parents’ home to recuperate. Mak recounts his experience in the fashion world as often being the “smartest person in any room” but also the “most invisible,” and he offers trenchant observations about the emasculation of the Asian American male and identity-based rejection. His insider status gives him insight into how new-media models emerged from fashion blogs and the street, and how social media and the iPhone brought about the “collapse of fashion time.” The author also writes powerfully about being sexually assaulted, describing how the traumatic experience led him to surrender to nightclub life “to distract myself” in a milieu where he felt safest in underground rooms. In Berlin, Mak introduces readers to “a lost generation who had entered an evaporated job market after the 2008 financial crisis.” Throughout the book, this “skinny Chinese kid from the suburbs” offers a wealth of observations on topics ranging from transgressive literature (Jean Genet, Siouxsie Sioux) to the power of the erotic (“All fear is erotic, motivated by compulsion over reason, and perhaps the greatest fear, in the evangelical mind, is the fear of the erotic”).

After fashion, career, psychosis, and recovery, a personal essayist finds “grace in the ordinary.”