Achy Affects

Crisis and Compositions of Selfhood

Achy Affects deftly weaves poetics and theory with personal narrative on topics like divorce, ‘coming out,’ and on-the-ground work in harm reduction. CE Mackenzie imagines new ways to be in the pains and pleasures—the aches of life—as a refusal of capitalism’s demands for product, a position that reframes not only what it means to know and how we know, but also what it means to live a meaningful life or to simply live. Achy Affects offers a breath of fresh air and a much-needed intervention into affect studies and recent resedimentations of a binary of ‘good’ and ‘bad’ feeling.
KJ Cerankowski, Oberlin College

Achy Affects is the first affect text to refuse the emotional binary. CE Mackenzie’s insistence on recognizing the range of feelings, specifically their collisions and overlaps, is grounded in community outreach, formed through life writing and positioned at the intersections of health rhetoric, trans and affect theories, and composition studies. Organized into four affects—wonder, shame, shyness, and nostalgia—with a final chapter on ache, Achy Affects explores how capitalist logics make communities of people—specifically queer, trans, and drug using—into rhetorical spectacles for the purpose of productive futures. Mackenzie asks how an affective sensitivity toward ache can lead us into deeper compositions of selfhood. Ache, as a heuristic for writing without fix, for writing into the daily and chronic realities of our felt selves, complicates emotion by describing it as collaged, not binaried. Affect has too long relied on dichomtized notions of feeling, but by centering ache, Mackenzie attempts to skirt the trap of positive versus negative to instead release the human body from the spectacle it is forced to perform.

200 Pages, 5.5 x 8.5 in.

June, 2025

isbn : 9780822948568

about the author

CE Mackenzie

CE Mackenzie is a multidisciplinary humanities scholar specializing in health rhetoric, queer and affect studies, and harm reduction. They are currently a postdoctoral associate and the program coordinator for the Humanities Center at the University of Pittsburgh.

learn more
CE Mackenzie