This paper examines how hybrid language and embodied vulnerability in Cherríe Moraga’s Watsonville: Some Place Not Here (1996) reframe the spatial and political dynamics of racial injustice and labor resistance. The play highlights how common vulnerability reveals a deeper interdependence within experiences of suffering and struggle. Situated at the intersectionality of race, gender, and sexuality, Watsonville also exposes the workings of biopower that disproportionately render marginalized bodies precarious. Drawing on Judith Butler’s ethics of alterity and politics of precarity, this study analyzes how hybrid bodies and border-crossing language in the play function as sites of both trauma and relational possibility. The dissonance and silences experienced by Chicanas become openings into a relational ontology, wherein precariousness fosters unexpected solidarities. Ultimately, Moraga’s drama gestures toward an ethics of unchosen cohabitation ― one that affirms the vulnerability of embodied life and the imperative to respond to suffering across distance. In doing so, the play not only critiques structural violence but also envisions an ethics of cohabitation grounded in precarity and linguistic vulnerability.
Ji-Hyeon Lee (Sat,) studied this question.