Associate Director, The Center for Research in Feminist, Queer, and Transgender Studies
Office Location
Fisher-Bennett Hall, Suite 345
Room 342
Che Gossett is a Black non binary writer and critical theorist specializing in queer/trans studies, aesthetic theory, abolitionist thought and black study. From May 2021-May 2024 they were the Racial Justice Postdoctoral Fellow at the Initiative for a Just Society, Columbia Law School. Che was also a visiting fellow at Harvard Law School, in the Animal Law and Policy Program from 2022-2024. Che received their doctorate in Women's and Gender Studies from Rutgers University, New Brunswick in May 2021. They received a BA in African American Studies from Morehouse College, an MAT in Social Studies from Brown University, an MA in History from the University of Pennsylvania and were a 2019-2020 Helena Rubenstein Fellow in the Whitney Independent Study Program. Che received a Ruth Stephan Fellowship from Beinecke Library at Yale University for the summer of 2022, to research the papers of queer feminist filmmaker Barbara Hammer. Che has been a fellow at the Centre for Life Writing at Wolfson College, Oxford University, as well as the Centre for Visual Culture and Corpus Christi College at the University of Cambridge.
Currently Che is finishing two manuscripts for Duke University Press -- the first being a political biography of AIDS activist Kiyoshi Kuromiya, and the second emerging out of their dissertation, theorizing the ways in which abolition is activated in Black contemporary art. Che has co-edited a special issue of TSQ "Trans in a Time of HIV/AIDS" with Professor Eva Hayward, and their syllabus on trans and non-binary methods for art and art history co-authored with Professor David Getsy won the College Art Journal Award for Distinction. For the fall semester of 2023 they are in residence as assistant professor/visiting scholar at the Pacific Northwest College of Art.