<P><EM>Queer Democracy</EM> undertakes an interdisciplinary critical investigation of the centuries-old metaphor of society as a body, drawing on queer and transgender accounts of embodiment as a constructive resource for reimagining politics and society.</P><P>Daniel Miller argues that this metaphor has consistently expressed a desire for social and political order, grounded in the social body¿s imagined normative shape or morphology. The consistent result, from the ¿concord¿ discourses of the pre-Christian Stoics, all the way through to contemporary nationalism and populism, has been the suppression of any dissent that would unmake the social body¿s presumed normativity. Miller argues that the conception of embodiment at the heart of the metaphor is a fantasy, and that negative social and political reactions to dissent represent visceral, dysphoric responses to its reshaping of the social body. He argues that social body¿s essential queerness, defined by fluidity and lack o