In Fractal Repair, Matthew Chin sets out to perform a historical and narrative form of repair in our understanding of Jamaican queer history by adopting the methodology of fractal geometry. Exploring how the social hierarchies and interaction between colonially imposed constructions of race, class, gender, and sexuality have framed queerness as antithetical to Jamaican identity and culture, each chapter explores a variety of texts, oral histories, and organizations that show queer sexualities and intimacies as disruptors of the heteropatriarchal cohesion and coherence of the nation-state.