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Straight Girls and Queer Guys: The Hetero Media Gaze in Film and Television PDF

200 Pages·2016·1.522 MB·English
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Straight Girls and Queer Guys The Hetero Media Gaze in Film and Television Christopher Pullen Straight Girls and Queer Guys In memory of Dora Carrington (1893–1932) Straight Girls and Queer Guys The Hetero Media Gaze in Film and Television Christopher Pullen © Christopher Pullen, 2016 Edinburgh University Press Ltd The Tun – Holyrood Road 12(2f) Jackson’s Entry Edinburgh EH8 8PJ www.euppublishing.com Typeset in Garamond MT Pro by Servis Filmsetting Ltd, Stockport, Cheshire, and printed and bound in Great Britain by CPI Group (UK) Ltd, Croydon CR0 4YY A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN 978 0 7486 9484 6 (hardback) ISBN 978 0 7486 9485 3 (webready PDF) ISBN 978 1 4744 1102 8 (epub) The right of Christopher Pullen to be identified as author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, and the Copyright and Related Rights Regulations 2003 (SI No. 2498). Contents List of Figures vii Preface viii Acknowledgements x Introduction 1 Unlikely Coupling and the Fag Hag 2 Politics, The Heidi Chronicles and Neoliberalism 5 Time Frames, Contexts and Case Studies 10 Conclusion 13 Chapter 1: The Hetero Media Gaze 15 The Gaze 16 The Panopticon and the Political Economy of the Sign 22 Doris Day and Rock Hudson Trilogy 25 A Taste of Honey, Darling and Zee and Co. 32 Conclusion 39 Chapter 2: Queer Gazes and Identifications 41 Queer Narcissism and the Gaze 42 Rope and Suddenly Last Summer 44 Swoon 52 Derek Jarman and Gregg Araki 56 Conclusion 63 Chapter 3: Film and Commodity 65 Queer Spectatorship, Femininity and Camp 66 Kenneth Williams and the Carry On Films 69 Sunday Bloody Sunday and Cabaret 75 The Gay Best Friend in Contemporary Film 81 Conclusion 87 vi Straight Girls and Queer Guys Chapter 4: Television and Domesticity 89 Domesticity and the Intimate Glance 90 Love Sidney 92 Tales of the City, Will and Grace and Gimme Gimme Gimme 95 Sex and the City, Girls, Queer as Folk and Looking 102 Bob and Rose and Torchwood 110 Conclusion 117 Chapter 5: Documentary and Performance 120 Documentary, the Body and Liminal Performance 121 Carrington 125 Platonic Devotion and Marriage in Documentary 129 Would Like to Meet 136 Queer Eye for the Straight Guy 138 Boy Meets Boy 141 Conclusion 144 Chapter 6: Youth, Realism and Form 147 Social Realism, Queer Identity and Youth in 1960s film 148 Beautiful Thing and The Way He Looks 151 Glee 155 Gayby and G.B.F. 160 Conclusion 166 Conclusion 169 Select Filmography 172 References 176 Index 184 Figures I.1 The Way He Looks 1 I.2 Tom Hulce and Jamie Lee Curtis in The Heidi Chronicles 6 I.3 Anne Baxter and Farley Granger in The North Star 9 1.1 Doris Day and Rock Hudson in Pillow Talk 29 1.2 Rita Tushingham and Murray Melvin in A Taste of Honey 33 2.1 Montgomery Clift and Elizabeth Taylor in Suddenly Last Summer 51 2.2 Brady Corbet and Mary Lynn Rajskub in Mysterious Skin 63 3.1 Kenneth Williams and Hattie Jacques in Carry On Doctor 73 3.2 Glenda Jackson and Murray Head in Sunday Bloody Sunday 77 3.3 Jennifer Aniston and Paul Rudd in The Object of My Affection 84 4.1 Sean Hayes and Megan Mullally in Will and Grace 100 4.2 Andrew Rannells and Lena Dunham in Girls 106 5.1 Emma Thompson and Jonathan Pryce in Carrington 125 5.2 James Getzlaff and Andra Stasko in Boy Meets Boy 142 6.1 Fabio Audi, Tess Amorim and Ghilherme Lobo in The Way He Looks 152 6.2 G.B.F. 162 Preface This book explores the representation of the heterosexual female with the homosexual, bisexual or queer male, within contemporary film and television forms, using the term straight girls and queer guys. While this coupling is often employed to characterise the female as a ‘Fag Hag’, framing a reductive terminology that clearly debases the straight girl and the queer guy, and there is a sense of mutual use, evident in the relationship appearing as a kind of masquerade or disguise for a ‘regular’ heterosexual coupling, I argue that the straight girl and queer guy archetype is an advancing and prolific form. Through examining this archetype within films and television programmes mostly produced in the United Kingdom and North America, or at least addressing Anglocentric audiences evident in my case study on the Brazilian film The Way He Looks, this book foregrounds the notion of the hetero media gaze. Critiquing the foundational work of Laura Mulvey (1975) with regards to the cinematic gaze, and extending the work of later writers such as Jackie Stacey (1987) with regard to the homosocial female gaze, and Richard Dyer ([1989] 2000) in relation to the commodification of the queer male body, this book develops a conceptual framework that contextualises film theory with television studies and performance studies. Key aspects include: questioning the fixity of the dominant gaze as gendered, or socially exclusive; examining the significance of the queer gaze in relation to consumption; considering the importance of spectatorship, and the relationship to celebrity; exploring the significance of the televisual glance in relation to domesticity; considering documentary and issues of performativity; and examining the significance of youth and the context of social realism. These are explored by considering key case studies, which, while they are not examined in terms of chronologi- cal progression, offer a discussion, generally within the time frame of between 1948 and 2015, in terms of media production. This includes examining prototypical representations of the queer gaze within the films Rope and Suddenly Last Summer, and the queering of male and female coupling in the performance of Kenneth Williams in the Carry On films. Also it includes the subliminal emergence of the hetero media gaze upon the straight girl and the queer guy within Hollywood films starring Doris Day Preface ix and Rock Hudson, its more vivid representation within John Schlesinger’s Darling and Sunday Bloody Sunday, and the impact of Christopher Isherwood’s novel Goodbye to Berlin on the film Cabaret, as establishing an archetypal form. Furthermore, aspects of social realism are foregrounded in films representing youth, particularly evident in A Taste of Honey, Beautiful Thing and The Way He Looks. Also the explicit commodity of the gay best friend is vivified in My Best Friend’s Wedding, The Object of My Affection and G.B.F. At the same time television form is examined, considering the enduring impact of the straight girl and the queer guy in popular situation comedies, such as Will and Grace and Gimme Gimme Gimme, and documentary and reality television representa- tions focusing on aspects of devotion, and sometimes marriage, evident in Boy Meets Boy, My Husband Is Not Gay and the biographical drama Carrington. However, a central premise of this book is that both the queer guy and the straight girl are abject others, as respectively female and queer, which while it implies a shared political vision, and the connectivity between feminism and queer identity politics, in fact offers an unstable and contentious cultural form. As part of this, the book considers the neoliberal, and post- feminist, context of the straight girl and queer guy union, which reveals the reliance on dominant identity forms, foregrounding a sense of absence as much as presence.

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