A recurring criticism of queer theory, which often employs
sociological jargon, is that it is written, according to Brent Pickett, by a "small ideologically oriented elite" and possesses an evident
social class bias. It is not only class biased but also, in practice, only really referred to at universities and colleges. Likewise,
Ros Coward writing in
The Guardian, says that advocates of queer theory are like other elite academics that engage in
obscurantism with their use of jargon to protect their field from outside criticism and fail to deconstruct their own role and perspective as academics at elite institutions. According to
Joshua Gamson, due to its engagement in social deconstruction, it is nearly impossible for queer theory to talk about a "lesbian" or "gay" subject, as all
social categories are denaturalized and reduced to discourse. Thus, according to Adam Isaiah Green, a professor at the
University of Toronto, queer theory can only examine discourses and not subjectivities. Green further argues that queer theory might be doing a disservice to the study of queer people for, among other reasons, unduly doing away with categories of sexuality and gender that had an explanatory role in their original context. He argues that for instance the lesbians documented in the book
Cherry Grove, Fire Island chose to identify specifically as either "ladies", "dykes" or "postfeminists" for generational, ethnic and class reasons. While they have a shared sexuality, flattening their diversity of identity, culture and expression to "the lesbian community" might be undue and hide the social contingencies that queer theory purports to foreground (race, class, ethnicity, gender). For some feminists, queer theory undermines
feminism by blurring the boundaries between gendered social classes, which it explains as personal choices rather than consequences of
social structures.
Bruno Perreau, the Cynthia L. Reed Professor of French Studies at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, discusses various facets of the French response to queer theory, from the mobilization of activists and the seminars of scholars to the emergence of queer media and translations. Perreau sheds new light on events around
gay marriage in France, where opponents to the
2013 law saw queer theory as a threat to French family. Perreau questions the return of French Theory to France from the standpoint of queer theory, thereby exploring the way France conceptualizes America. By examining mutual influences across the Atlantic, he seeks to reflect on changes in the idea of national identity in France and the United States, offering insight on recent attempts to theorize the notion of "community" in the wake of
Maurice Blanchot's work. Perreau offers in his book a theory of minority politics that considers an ongoing critique of norms as the foundation of citizenship, in which a feeling of belonging arises from regular reexamination of it. In their work
Cynical Theories, scholars
Helen Pluckrose and
James A. Lindsay claim queer theory has a largely unscientific view on biology and objective reality as an intentional feature. They state that, "queer theory is a political project and its aim is to disrupt". As such within it, "there can be absolutely no quarter given to any discourse—even matters of scientific fact—that could be interpreted as promoting biological essentialism." Thus, according to them, queer theory knowingly misrepresents biological facts and research, especially on
intersex people, to conflate them with completely unrelated issues concerning constructed gender identities such as transgender. ==Queer theory in online discourse==