David M Halperin-How To Be Gay-Harvard University Press (2012)
David M Halperin-How To Be Gay-Harvard University Press (2012)
David M Halperin-How To Be Gay-Harvard University Press (2012)
D AV I D M . H A L P E R I N
HOW to be GAY
T H E B E L K N A P P R E S S O F H A R VA R D U N I V E R S I T Y P R E S S
DAVID M. HALPERIN
Copyright 2012 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College
all rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America
and or
John
C ontents
Notes 459
Acknowledgments 527
Index 535
Let the pagans beget
and the Christians baptize.
PA R T O N E
+++
this attention. Eventually, I realized that earlier on the same day, Fri-
day, March17, 2000, the Registrars Office at the University of Michi-
gan in Ann Arbor, where in fact I do teach English, had activated its
course information website, listing the classes to be offered during
the fall term of the 20002001 academic year. At virtually the same
moment, unbeknownst to me, the website of the National Review, a
conservative magazine of political commentary founded by William
F. Buckley, Jr., had run a story in its series NR Wire called How To
BeGay 101. Except for the heading, the story consisted entirely of
one page from the University of Michigans newly published course
listings.
Staffers at the National Review may well be on a constant lookout
for new material, but they are surely not so desperate as to make a
habit of scanning the University of Michigans website in eager antici-
pation of the exact moment each term when the registrar announces
the courses to be taught the following semester.
Someone must have tipped them off.
It later emerged that there had indeed been a mole at work in the
University of Michigan Registrars Office. At least, someone with ac-
cess to the relevant information had e-mailed it in early March to the
Michigan Review, the conservative campus newspaper associated with
the National Review and its nationwide network of right-wing campus
publications. The Michigan Review had apparently passed the informa-
tion on to its parent organization. Matthew S. Schwartz, a student at
the University of Michigan who for two years had been editor-in-
chief of the Michigan Review, coyly revealed in an article in the MR the
next month that a U-M conservative newspaper tipped off a National
Review reporter about the breaking story. After that, as Schwartz put
it, the wheels of dissemination were in motion. Word ... trickled
down through conservative circles, and the story was well on its way
to mainstream media.1
So what was this story that was just too good for the National Re-
view to keep under wraps for a single day? It had to do with an under-
graduate English course I had just invented, called How To Be Gay:
Diary of a Scandal 5
Just because you happen to be a gay man doesnt mean that you dont
have to learn how to become one. Gay men do some of that learning
on their own, but often we learn how to be gay from others, either
because we look to them for instruction or because they simply tell us
what they think we need to know, whether we ask for their advice or
not. This course will examine the general topic of the role that initia-
tion plays in the formation of gay identity. We will approach it from
three angles: (1)as a sub-cultural practicesubtle, complex, and diffi
cult to theorizewhich a small but significant body of work in queer
studies has begun to explore; (2)as a theme in gay male writing; (3)as
a class project, since the course itself will constitute an experiment in
the very process of initiation that it hopes to understand. In particular,
well examine a number of cultural artifacts and activities that seem
to play a prominent role in learning how to be gay: Hollywood mov-
ies, grand opera, Broadway musicals, and other works of classical and
popular music, as well as camp, diva-worship, drag, muscle culture,
style, fashion, and interior design. Are there a number of classically
gay works such that, despite changing tastes and generations, ALL
gay men, of whatever class, race, or ethnicity, need to know them, in
order to be gay? What roles do such works play in learning how to be
gay? What is there about these works that makes them essential parts
of a gay male curriculum? Conversely, what is there about gay identity
that explains the gay appropriation of these works? One aim of ex-
ploring these questions is to approach gay identity from the perspec-
tive of social practices and cultural identifications rather than from
6 B+ COULD TRY HARDER
the perspective of gay sexuality itself. What can such an approach tell
us about the sentimental, affective, or aesthetic dimensions of gay
identity, including gay sexuality, that an exclusive focus on gay sexual-
ity cannot? At the core of gay experience, there is not only identifica
tion but disidentific ation. Almost as soon as I learn how to be gay, or
perhaps even before, I also learn how not to be gay. I say to myself,
Well, I may be gay, but at least Im not like THAT! Rather than at-
tempting to promote one version of gay identity at the expense of
others, this course will investigate the stakes in gay identifications and
disidentifications, seeking ultimately to create the basis for a wider ac-
ceptance of the plurality of ways in which people determine how to
be gay. Work for the class will include short essays, projects, and a
mandatory weekly three-hour screening (or other cultural workshop)
on Thursday evenings.
%
The course description for my class actually said nothing at all about
converting heterosexual students to homosexuality.2 It emphasized,
from its very first line, that the topic to be studied had to do with how
men who already are gay acquire a conscious identity, a common cul-
ture, a particular outlook on the world, a shared sense of self, an
awareness of belonging to a specific social group, and a distinctive
Diary of a Scandal 7
%
The course description indicated plainly that the particular topic to
be studied would be gay male cultural practices and gay male subjec-
tivity. The stated purpose of the course was to describe a gay male
8 B+ COULD TRY HARDER
%
The project of studying gay male culture encounters an initial, daunt-
ing obstacle. Some people dont believe there is such a thing as gay
culture. Although the existence of gay male culture is routinely ac-
knowledged as a fact, it is just as routinely denied as a truth.
To say that gay men have a particular, distinctive, characteristic re-
lation to the culture of the larger society in which they live is to do
nothing more than to state the obvious. But despite how obvious
Diary of a Scandal 9
not just some non-standard sexual practices; if you suggest that there
is such a thing as gay male culture; or if you imply that there must be
a connection of some kind between a specific sexual orientation and
a fondness for certain cultural forms, it is likely that people will im-
mediately object, citing a thousand different reasons why such a thing
is impossible, or ridiculous, or offensive, and why anyone who says
otherwise is deluded, completely out of date, morally suspect, and
politically irresponsible. Which probably wont stop the very people
who make those objections from telling you a joke about gay men
and show tuneseven with their next breath.
My ambition in this book, then, is to try and occupy whatever gap
I can manage to prise open between the acknowledged fact of gay
male cultural difference and its disavowed truth.
%
Happily for me, some large cracks have lately appeared in that fine
line between casual acknowledgment and determined denial. (Com-
plete obviousness combined with total unacceptability is typically
what distinguishes every worthwhile idea.) At least since the success
of such cable television series as Queer Eye for the Straight Guy and Ru-
Pauls Drag Race, it has become commonplace to regard male homo
sexuality as comprising not only a set of specific sexual practices but
also an assortment of characteristic social and cultural practices. Ac-
cording to this increasingly trendy way of thinking, male homosexu
ality somehow affords an unusual perspective on the world, along
with a cluster of superior insights into life, love, and matters of taste
in general. Being gay would seem to involve an entire attitude and set
of values, an entire cultural orientation. It implies a refined sensibility,
a heightened aesthetic sense, a particular sensitivity to style and fash-
ion, a non-standard relation to mainstream cultural objects, a rejec-
tion of common tastes as well as a critical perspective on the straight
world and a collectively shared but nonetheless singular vision of
what really matters in life.8
That flattering image of gay cultureof gayness as cultureis not
Diary of a Scandal 11
entirely new, even if its entry into the stock of received ideas that
make up the common sense of straight society is relatively recent.
That gay men are particularly responsive to music and the arts was
already a theme in the writings of psychiatrists and sexologists at the
turn of the twentieth century. In 1954 the psychoanalyst Carl Jung
noted that gay men may have good taste and an aesthetic sense.9 By
the late 1960s, the anthropologist Esther Newton could speak quite
casually of the widespread belief that homosexuals are especially sen-
sitive to matters of aesthetics and refinement.10 Many gay men, and
a number of their straight friends and enemies, have long suspected
that what makes gay men different from the rest of the world is some
thing that goes well beyond sexual preference or practice.
Richard Florida, an economist and social theorist (as well as a self-
confessed heterosexual), may have given that ancient suspicion a new,
empirical foundation. In a widely discussed and often disputed series
of sociological and statistical studies of what he has called the cre-
ative class, Florida argues that the presence of gay people in a lo
cality is an excellent predictor of a viable high-tech industry and its
potential for growth.11 The reason for this, Florida contends, is that
high-tech jobs nowadays follow the workforce; the workforce does
not migrate to where the jobs arenot, at least, for very long. (Flor-
ida used to teach in Pittsburgh.)
If cities and towns with lots of gay people in them are sure to pros-
per in the Creative Age, that is not only because the new class of
creative workers is composed of nerds, oddballs, and people with
extreme habits and dress who gravitate to places with low entry
barriers to human capital, where the locals are generally open and
tolerant of unconventional folks. It is also because gay people, ac-
cording to Florida and his collaborators, are the canaries of the Cre-
ative Age. Gay people, in other words, can flourish only in a pure at-
mosphere characterized by a high quotient of lifestyle amenities,
coolness, culture and fashion, vibrant street life, and a cutting-
edge music scene. The presence of gay people in large numbers
isan indicator of an underlying culture thats open-minded and di-
12 B+ COULD TRY HARDER
%
That distinctively gay way of being, moreover, appears to be rooted in
a particular queer way of feeling. And that queer way of feelingthat
queer subjectivityexpresses itself through a peculiar, dissident way
of relating to cultural objects (movies, songs, clothes, books, works of
art) and cultural forms in general (art and architecture, opera and
musical theater, pop and disco, style and fashion, emotion and lan-
guage). As a cultural practice, male homosexuality involves a charac-
teristic way of receiving, reinterpreting, and reusing mainstream cul-
ture, of decoding and recoding the heterosexual or heteronormative
meanings already encoded in that culture, so that they come to func-
tion as vehicles of gay or queer meaning. It consists, as the critic John
Clum says, in a shared alternative reading of mainstream culture.13
As a result, certain figures who are already prominent in the mass
media become gay icons: they get taken up by gay men with a pecu-
liar intensity that differs from their wider reception in the straight
world. (That practice is so marked, and so widely acknowledged, that
the National Portrait Gallery in London could organize an entire ex-
hibition around the theme of Gay Icons in 2009.)14 And certain cultural
forms, such as Broadway musicals or Hollywood melodramas, are
similarly invested with a particular power and significance, attracting
a disproportionate number of gay male fans.
What this implies is that it is not enough for a man to be homosex
ual in order to be gay. Same-sex desire alone does not equal gayness.
In order to be gay, a man has to learn to relate to the world around
Diary of a Scandal 13
%
Rather than dismiss that outrageous idea out of hand, I want to un-
derstand what it means. I want to figure out what on earth people
have in mind when they subscribe to it. What exactly is at stake in dif-
ferent definitions or conceptions or ideals of how to be gay? What is
the basis for determining the right way, or ways, to be gay? What are
the larger implications of such judgments?
And what do people actually mean when they talk as if being sexu-
ally attracted to persons of the same sex were not enough to make
you really gay? Or when they imply that there are certain things you
need to know, or do, in order to make the grade and be truly gay? Or
14 B+ COULD TRY HARDER
when they claim that some straight individuals are actually a lot gayer
than many gay men? What picture, what understanding of male ho
mosexual feeling and perception do such views reflect?
Take the example of some joker (straight or gay) who says to a gay
man, Youre not really very gay, you know. If you dont watch out,
theyre going to revoke your license. Or consider the case of one gay
man who says to another, You really need to know about this movie,
if youre going to be gay or I cant believe youve never heard of this
designer: let me show you her work, I just know youll absolutely
love it! What kinds of reasoning lie behind such remarks?
How about the friend who says to you, when he or she discovers
that you are a great dancer or cook; that you love Cher or Madonna,
Beyonc or Bjrk, Whitney Houston or Kylie Minogue, Christina
Aguilera or Mariah Carey, Tori Amos or Gwen Stefani (not to men-
tion Lady Gaga); that you have a weakness for mid-century modern;
that you would never dream of dressing for comfort; or that you drive
a VW Golf or a Mini Cooper convertible or a Pontiac G6, Gee, I
guess you really are gay!?15 What does male homosexuality have to
do with dancing, or cooking, or the music you like, or the car you
drive, or the clothes you wear, or your attachment to period design?
Are these just stereotypes about gay men? Are they expressions of a
kind of sexual racism? Is there anything at all to these stereotypes, or
anything behind them?
%
It was because I believed all those questions were worth taking seri-
ously that I decided to teach a class about how to be gay. For I sus-
pected that such questions registeredalbeit in some socially en-
crypted waya set of intuitions about the relation between sexuality,
on the one hand, and cultural forms, styles of feeling, and genres of
discourse, on the other. If that social code could be broken, and if
those questions could be successfully addressed, the resulting insights
would elucidate many aspects of gay male subjectivity. They would
Diary of a Scandal 15
%
That was the point of departure for my class, as it is for this book.
Precisely because the class focused on the cultural practice of male ho
mosexuality, not on its sexual practice, its audience was not limited to
gay men. (If the class had addressed itself solely to gay men, that
would have meant it wasnt open on an equal basis to all qualified un-
dergraduate students at the University of Michigan, and so it would
have been unprofessional of me to teach it.) Gay culture, after all, is
not something that you have to be gay in order to enjoyor to com-
prehend. In fact, it turns out that being gay gives you no automatic
intellectual advantage when it comes to appreciating, understanding,
or analyzing gay culture. In my long experience of teaching the class,
I found that women and non-gay male students routinely performed
in it at least as well as gay men did, and sometimes a lot better.
Gay male culture coincides, admittedly, with lesbian culture at cer-
tain moments. Some mainstream cultural artifacts that have played
significant roles in gay male culture also turn out to be lesbian clas-
sicssuch as Hollywood movies featuring Marlene Dietrich or Greta
Garbo, or the 1959 Doris DayRock Hudson comedy Pillow Talk, or
Richard Strausss opera Der Rosenkavalier. But even when the cultural
objects are the same, the respective relations of gay men and lesbians
to them are different, because lesbian and gay male audiences do not
engage or identify with them in the same way. So the meaning that
lesbians and gay men find in them is quite distinct.17 It would also
bemistaken to conceptualize lesbian cultures alternative reading of
mainstream culture according to the gay male model I have described
here, one that would consist in queering particular objects (such as
power tools), icons ( James Dean), and practices (softball). Lesbian
culture often involves the appropriation of entire ethical categories
from mainstream culture: honor, for example, or revenge, or ethics as
Diary of a Scandal 17
%
If gay can refer to a way of being, and to a distinctive cultural prac-
tice, that means gayness can be shared with others and transmitted to
them. And to the extent that gay initiation involves learning how
toqueer heteronormative culturehow to decode heterosexual cul-
tural artifacts and recode them with gay meaningsany undertak-
ing, such as mine, that studies this procedure also necessarily exem-
plifies and performs it. If gay men circulate specific bits of mainstream
culture among themselves, endowing them in the process with non-
standard meanings and consolidating a shared culture and sensibility
on that basis, then a college course, for example, that involves circu-
lating those specific items will also do the work of gay initiation, inso-
far as it introduces those students who have not yet encountered them
to a wealth of possible gay significations latent in the surrounding
culture.
In other words, a course that surveys and examines some of the ma-
terials on which gay men (both individually and in groups) have built
a common culture, or cultures, will also be a course that initiates stu-
dents, both straight and gay, into the cultural practice of male homo
sexuality, insofar as that practice consists precisely in the sharing and
examining of such materials. My course was likely to expose students
to non-gay works that had functioned in the past for some gay men as
Diary of a Scandal 19
%
We dont know what [Mr. Halperin] does in the classroom, darkly
observed Gary Glenn, the president of the Michigan chapter of the
American Family Association (AFA), but it is outrageous that Michi-
gan taxpayers are forced to pay for a class whose stated purpose is to
experiment with the initiation of young men into a self-destructive
homosexual lifestyle.21
In all the controversy that ensued, no one ever showed much con-
cern about the female students enrolled in my class, who typically
made up about half of it, or what effects my class might have on
them.22
In any case, once the news about the class had leaked out, the
wheels of dissemination, to borrow Matthew Schwartzs grandiose
formula, did not take long to start rolling. The story that the National
Review posted to its website on Friday, March 17, 2000, was picked up
by the Washington Times, which alerted a number of right-wing orga
nizations. Within days, and certainly by Tuesday, March 21, 2000, the
20 B+ COULD TRY HARDER
%
The next day, on Thursday, March 23, 2000, the Sydney Star Observer
(SSO), the most popular gay newspaper in Sydney, published a scath-
ing editorial about the class. The University of Michigans campus
newspaper, the Michigan Daily, had yet to pick up the story, but
thanks to the Internetit was already news in Australia. Under the
punning title, B+ Could Try Harder, the SSOs editorial treated the
class as a laughable academic appropriation of a common gay male
practice, implying that gay men hardly required any expert instruc-
tion in it, least of all from college professorsthey could do perfectly
well on their own, thank you very much.24 The editorial was accom-
panied by a cartoon, which eloquently expressed the papers attitude,
and which merits further attention in its own right (Figure1).
For in order to get the point of the cartoon, you need to under-
stand the meaning of the line uttered by the teacher caricatured in it.
And in order to do that, you need to have undergone a gay initiation
yourself.
Here is the background you require. The line What a dump! was
first pronounced by Bette Davis in a sublimely awful 1949 Hollywood
movie, directed by King Vidor, called Beyond the Forest. Indolently fil-
ing her nails in one of the early scenes, Rosa Moline (played by Davis)
descends a staircase in her large and comfortable house, greeting with
that disgruntled exclamation her loving and long-suffering husband:
an earnest, devoted, hardworking doctor (played by Joseph Cotten),
who is coming home from a sleepless and emotionally draining night,
Diary of a Scandal 21
martha (Looks about the room. Imitates Bette Davis): What a dump.
Hey, whats that from? What a dump!
george: How would I know what...
martha: Aw, come on! Whats it from? You know...
george: ...Martha...
martha: Whats it from, for christs sake?
george (Wearily): Whats what from?
martha: I just told you; I just did it. What a dump! Hunh? Whats
that from?
george: I havent the faintest idea what...
martha: Dumbbell! Its from some goddamn Bette Davis picture ...
some goddamn Warner Brothers epic...
george: I cant remember all the pictures that...
martha: Nobodys asking you to remember every single goddamn
Warner Brothers epic ... just one! One single little epic! Bette Da-
vis gets peritonitis in the end ... shes got this big black fright wig
she wears all through the picture and she gets peritonitis, and shes
married to Joseph Cotten or something...
george: ...Somebody...
martha: ...somebody ... and she wants to go to Chicago all the
time, cause shes in love with that actor with the scar. ... But she
gets sick, and she sits down in front of her dressing table...
george: What actor? What scar?
martha: I cant remember his name, for Gods sake. Whats the
name of the picture? I want to know what the name of the picture is.
She sits down in front of her dressing table ... and shes got this
peritonitis ... and she tries to put her lipstick on, but she cant ...
and she gets it all over her face ... but she decides to go to Chicago
anyway, and...
george: Chicago! Its called Chicago.
martha: Hunh? What ... what is?
george: The picture ... its called Chicago...
martha: Good grief! Dont you know anything? Chicago was a thir-
Diary of a Scandal 23
ties musical, starring little Miss Alice Faye. Dont you know any-
thing?
george: Well, that was probably before my time, but...
martha: Can it! Just cut that out! This picture ... Bette Davis comes
home from a hard day at the grocery store...
george: She works in a grocery store?
martha: Shes a housewife; she buys things ... and she comes home
with the groceries, and she walks into the modest living room of
the modest cottage modest Joseph Cotten has set her up in...
george: Are they married?
martha (Impatiently): Yes. Theyre married. To each other. Cluck!
And she comes in, and she looks around, and she puts her groceries
down, and she says, What a dump!
george: (Pause) Oh.
martha: (Pause) Shes discontent.
george: (Pause) Oh.
martha: (Pause) Well, whats the name of the picture?
george: I really dont know, Martha...
martha: Well, think!
The scene itself reads like a failed attempt at gay initiation. Its ac
tually a bit diffic ult to imagine a straight couple having that conversa-
tion, though it comes off plausibly enough on stage.
In any case, Bette Daviss line What a dump! already lent itself to
exaggerated performance, or reperformance, in the United States by
the early 1960s, at least on the evidence of Albees dialogue. It was its
own little mini-drama: a playlet within the play. I just did it, says
Martha, citing her own citation and identifying it as a demonstration.
What a dump! had apparently become something you could do.
%
The ability to perform such a line is treated by the cartoonist of the
gay newspaper in Sydney as a standard part of the gay male reper-
toire, a typical piece of gay male theater, which is at home in gay
male society but completely out of place in the classroom. It would
24 B+ COULD TRY HARDER
%
The following week, back in the United States, another hostile ac-
count of my class appeared in a gay paper, this time in San Francisco.27
The gay press did not seem to like the class any better than the Amer-
ican Family Association did. The reactions of some gay or gay-friendly
individuals were supportive and enthusiastic, to be sure, but many
others complained that I was being reckless and provocative, giv-
ing gay men a bad name, trading in stereotypes, implying that gay
men are different from straight men, propounding the crazy idea that
there is such a thing as gay culture and that it is distinct from straight
culture, confirming the homophobic notion that gay men recruit
straight men into the gay lifestyle, or giving the religious Right a
weapon to bash us with and thereby endangering the struggle for les-
bian and gay civil rights. So the gay response was often antagonistic
for one or more of those reasons. Still, I did receive strong expres-
sions of supportwhich I want to acknowledge here, with heart-
felt gratitudefrom the Triangle Foundation, Michigans statewide
GLBT civil rights and advocacy organization, and its director, Jef-
freyMontgomery; from students, colleagues, and administrators; and
from numbers of previously unknown well-wishers, both gay and
straight, at the University of Michigan, in the town of Ann Arbor, in
the state of Michigan, and around the world.
Meanwhile, there was a storm of chatter on talk radio and in the
national and international press. On Tuesday, May23, 2000, eight Re-
publican representatives in the Michigan state legislature sponsored
Diary of a Scandal 27
of Regents. He didnt get it, though the two Republicans who did
alsoopposed the teaching of the class. They were both ultimately de-
feated in the general election in November, when Michigan tilted
very slightly in favor of Al Gore.30
The Michigan branch of the American Family Association alleg-
edly gathered 15,000 signatures on a petition urging Gov. Engler, the
Legislature, and the U-M Board of Regents to do everything possible
to stop U-M offic ials from using my tax dollars to recruit teenage stu-
dents into a class whose stated intention is to experiment in the ini-
tiation of students into a high-risk lifestyle of homosexual behavior
that is immoral, illegal and a serious threat to personal and public
health. Gary Glenn presented the petition to the Board of Regents
of the University of Michigan on October19, 2000.31 Although it is
remotely possible that the homosexual behavior in questionsay,
frequent viewing of films such as Sunset Boulevard, All about Eve, and
AStar Is Bornmight ruin your health, there is in fact no law against
it, not even in Michigan, and I continued to teach the class without
interference.
Three years later, with my course once again in the news, a billwas
introduced into both houses of the Michigan legislature to amend the
state constitution in order to give the state legislature veto power over
course offerings at public universities in Michigan.32 It caused a great
deal of excitement in the media, on campus, and in the state capital,
but it did not get very far.
%
In order to make sense of all this, it helps to know that there had been
a change of leadership in the Michigan branch of the American Fam-
ily Association. Gary Glenn, who had formerly worked for an anti-
union organization, the Idaho Freedom to Work Committee, as well
as the Idaho Cattle Association, and who had made an unsuccessful
run for U.S. Congress after serving as a Republican commissioner in
Boise, moved to Michigan in 1998 to lobby for a school choice tuition
tax credit, which later failed to be approved by the voters. He then
Diary of a Scandal 29
took a job with the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, a conservative
think tank in Midland, Michigan. In the fall of 1999, half a year before
I came up with the bright idea of teaching a course on male homo
sexuality as a cultural practice, he had become head of the Michigan
chapter of the AFA.33
That local chapter had proved to be a comparatively sleepy out-
fit, concerned mostly with pornography and obscenity issues, until
Glenn took it over. Glenn made opposition to gay rights the focus of
the AFAs mission. As Kim Kozlowski, a journalist with the Detroit
News, put it in 2001, Glenn gelled the group into Michigans premier
antigay organization. Ive taken a leadership position in pro-family
values when under assault by the homosexual agenda, Glenn says.
We have become the most high-profile, pro-family organization in
the state and, quite frankly, one of the most high-profile in the coun-
try.34 It was really Glenn, not I, who intended to proselytize. As a
result, he and I found ourselves inadvertently collaborating on a kind
of reciprocal membership drive, in which we made a successful if re-
luctant team. His organization increased its numbers, and my course
got enrollments.
In fact, no one at the University of Michigan had paid any atten-
tion to my class before Glenn issued his press release on March22,
2000. One University of Michigan undergraduate, who eventually en-
rolled in the class, first heard of it when a reporter from a local TV
news team stuck a microphone in his face and asked him what he
thought about it. After imperturbably expressing support for it, he
raced off and signed up. So in the end, Glenn and I helped each other
recruit new adherents to our respective lifestyles. Never again
would my class attract so many students.
Beyond that local skirmish, gay issues were starting to become a
political obsession in the United States, occupying the forefront of
the national news with some regularity. Civil unions in Vermont,
boyscout organizations at the Supreme Court, the ordination of gay
bishops by the Episcopal Church, the resignation of gay governors in
New Jersey, the constitutionality of sodomy laws, gays in the military,
30 B+ COULD TRY HARDER
the rise of wedge politics, gay marriage and a batch of state and
federal constitutional amendments redefining marriage, to say noth-
ing of affirmative action, hate crimes, and the status of minorities: it
was all more than enough to make my class, which I continued to
teach every other year until 2007, a perennial and irresistible subject
of commentary, despite my best efforts to keep it out of the news. (I
wanted to shield the University of Michigan from hostile publicity.)
As late as January 7, 2008when Mario Lavandeira, a gay blogger
better known by his pseudonym, Perez Hilton, belatedly caught up
with the class and posted a long out-of-date course description on his
celebrity gossip websiteI was still studiously ignoring requests to
appear on Hannity & Colmes, The OReilly Factor, Fox News, CNNs
American Morning and Headline News, MSNBCs Scarborough Country,
ABCs Good Morning America, CBSs The Early Show, and NBCs The
Today Show.
Throughout all this time, the University of Michigan behaved im-
peccably. The course itself had been approved through the usual
channels and according to the usual bureaucratic process. Some peo-
ple at the university may have disapproved of it when it got into the
news, and some may have been unhappy with me for proposing such
a course, but no one thought that politicians or pressure groups out-
side the University of Michigan should determine what its faculty
teach. So there was no opposition of any kind to my course from
within the University of Michigan.
The student newspaper editorialized eloquently in its favor, and
the student government unanimously passed a powerful resolution
supporting it. Even the Michigan Review, which made relentless fun of
it, argued in favor of my right to free speech regardless of how re-
pulsive and amoral it really is.35 My colleagues, who had approved
the course, were generally enthusiastic about it. The university ad-
ministration at all levels supported both the course and my right to
teach it. The English Department, the office of the Dean of the Col-
lege, the presidents office, and the office of the Alumni Association
Diary of a Scandal 31
%
This book represents the explanation they never asked for.
It is an explanation that I feel I still owe them. I offer it, as well,
to all those who defended and believed in my work. Most of all, I
hope this book will serve to justify the value and seriousness of my
course How To Be Gay to everyone who was skeptical, perplexed,
offended, or outraged by it, who opposed it, or who criticized the
University of Michigan because of it.
I dont expect to convince everybody who reads this book that my
project is worthwhile, but I hope at least to make clear the genuine-
ness of the intellectual stakes in my inquiry into gay male culture.
124
H I S T O R Y O F A N E R R O R
what I know nownamely, that the mere title of the course would
end up costing the University of Michigan almost as much time and
effort to defend as the universitys continued support for affirmative
action in its admissions policiesI certainly would have called it
something else.
Once the controversy started, however, it was too late to change
the courses name. To do so would have been to yield to the cam-
paign of intimidation. It would have meant sacrificing academic free-
dom to public opinion and giving politicians or pressure groups the
authority to determine what I could teach and how I could describe
it. And that would have meant losing the precious right guaranteed to
researchers in a free society: the right to follow their thinking wher-
ever it may lead. After all, theres no point in having freedom if you
cant use it. Freedom that you are not free to exercise isnt freedom.
So although I would have been no less happy to see the title How
To Be Gay disappear from the course catalogue than from the media
spotlight, and although I was eager to spare my colleagues the labor
and annoyance of having to justify the class, I wasnt about to retitle
the class or stop teaching it for those reasons alone. The class reflected
my current research interests. It contributed meaningfully to the gen-
eral project of higher education: it was interesting, well designed,
thought-provoking, and rigorous. I got a lot of insight out of teaching
it, and the students seemed to benefit from taking it. My thinking
about male homosexuality as a cultural practice underwent a con-
stant evolution during the years I taught it. I certainly found it grip-
ping, as well as unsettling.
There was only one problem. I was the wrong person to teach it.
%
All my life, Ive been told that I have no idea how to be gay. I am, ap-
parently, utterly hopeless at it, a miserable failure as a gay man. That
is a large part of the reason I found the publicity surrounding the class
to be so embarrassing. It exposed me to the mockery of a number of
History of an Error 35
my friends, both straight and gay. Since when, they objected, are
you qualified to teach people how to be gay? What do you know about
it? Why, just look at how you dress! I could do better than that. Come
to think of it, I should be teaching this class. A number of students
over the years have made similar observations, more gently at some
times than at others.
But the point of my class was not to offer practical instruction in
how to be a successful gay man, much less to provide a living exem-
plar. Nor is that the point of this book. Such instruction is abundantly
available elsewhere. This book is not intended to compete, for in-
stance, with Joel Derfners Swish: My Quest to Become the Gayest Person
Ever and What Ended Up Happening Instead; Donald Reuters Gaydar:
The Ultimate Insider Guide to the Gay Sixth Sense; Cathy Crimminss
How the Homosexuals Saved Civilization: The True and Heroic Story of
How Gay Men Shaped the Modern World; Kevin DiLallos The Unofficial
Gay Manual; Judy Carters The Homo Handbook: Getting in Touch with
Your Inner Homo: A Survival Guide for Lesbians and Gay Men; Frank
Brownings The Culture of Desire: Paradox and Perversity in Gay Lives
Today; Daniel Harriss The Rise and Fall of Gay Culture; Bert Archers
The End of Gay: And the Death of Heterosexuality; or even Michael Bron-
skis classic survey, Culture Clash: The Making of Gay Sensibility. This
book, like my class, is called How To Be Gay because that phrase names
the topic, the phenomenon, the problem I want to explore and un-
derstandnamely, the very notion that theres a right way to be gay,
that male homosexuality is not only a sexual practice but also a cul-
tural practice, that there is a relation between sexuality and social or
aesthetic form.
Its precisely because Ive been told so often how bad I am at being
gay, and how much I need to learn how to be gay, that I find the
thrust of those four little words so intriguing. I have long wanted to
understand exactly what that mysterious imperative signifiedwhat
sense it might make to claim that there is a right way to be gay, a way
that needs to be learned even (or especially) by gay men themselves.
36 B+ COULD TRY HARDER
scribing the culture in its own terms. Instead of accounting for its
central features, you merely restate and reproduce them.
So Im going to have to do the explaining.
%
My explanation will be limited to a small number of examples. Like
What a dump! each example requires extensive commentary to de-
scribe how it works. Under these conditions, a general survey of gay
male culture is simply not an option, much as I would like to cover
everything. So I wont be able to account for the gay male fascination
with all the cultural forms I enumeratedHollywood cinema, the
Broadway musical, grand opera, classical and popular music, style
and fashion, interior decoration, and architectural designthough
I will touch on them. Instead, a great deal will be made of a very
fewcultural objects. For even ordinary cultural artifacts contain vast
figural possibilities, and gay male cultural practices often consist in
mobilizing the figural potential of seemingly unassuming, taken-for-
granted objects.
My plan is to examine the figural and formal dimensions of some
of the mainstream cultural objects that gay male culture appropriates
and endows with queer value. I will seek meaning in style and I will
look for queer content in form itself.2 For that purpose, what I need is
not a large quantity of empirical data, but a thorough, detailed under
standing of how some typical and particularly expressive gay male
cultural practices actually work. The goal is to make style speak, to
make sense of gay aestheticsof the peculiar, anti-social brand of
aesthetics in which gay male culture specializesand to seize hold of
social forms in all their specificity.
Given the current state of queer cultural analysis, it is much too
early to generalize about the meaning of divas, or melodramas, or
musicals, or fashion and design. Instead, each individual object that
gay male culture borrows from mainstream culture, each gay male
cultural practice, demands to be considered with full attention to its
38 B+ COULD TRY HARDER
%
For a long time I found it ludicrous to suppose that a gay man, a man
sexually attracted to men, a man who has sex with men, isnt really
gay, simply because he lacks some specific bit of in-g roup knowledge
or is ignorant of some particular item of gay cultural trivia. For me,
personally, being gay has always been an erotic experiencenot a
matter of sensibility or cultural practice or even a preference for spe
cific physical acts, but an experience of finding males sexually desir-
able. Period. I never thought that being gay, in and of itself, obligated
me to be a certain way, to like certain things, or to enjoy certain ac-
tivities. In the past, at least, I always insisted that being gay had abso-
lutely nothing necessarily to do with anything at all besides gay sex.
In this, I think I was pretty typical of my generationtypical, that
is, of gay men who came out in the mid-1970s, half a dozen years af-
ter the 1969 Stonewall riots, during the era of gay liberation which
those riots ushered in and which saw the emergence in major cities of
History of an Error 39
new gay social worlds. Those events vastly expanded the available op-
tions for gay male sexual and social life, created a public, visible, open
gay male culture, and forged a dignified, habitable gay male identity,
thereby changing radically, and forever, the terms on which male ho
mosexuality could be lived in the United States.
Gay men my age prided themselves on their generational differ-
ence. We were dimly aware that for a lot of gay men ten or twenty
years older than us, being gay had something to do with liking Broad-
way musicals, or listening to show tunes or torch songs or Judy Gar-
land, or playing the piano, wearing fluffy sweaters, drinking cocktails,
smoking cigarettes, and calling each other girlfriend. That was all
fine for them, no doubt, but it looked pretty pathetic to meand dis-
tinctly unsexy. In fact, it seemed downright desperate: a feeble way of
compensating for being old, frustrated, effeminate, and hopelessly
unattractive. From my youthful perspective, which aspired fervently
to qualify as liberated, those old queens were sad remnants from a
bygone era of sexual repressionvictims of self-hatred, internalized
homophobia, social isolation, and state terror. (It did not occur to me
at the time that some lingering self-hatred or internalized homopho-
bia of my own might be responsible for the righteous aversion I felt to
their self-hatred and homophobia, or what I took to be such.)3
In any case, if those sorts of queeniness and clannishness were
what gay culture was all about, I wanted no part of it. It certainly
wasnt my culture. I had already spent a certain amount of effort care-
fully cultivating my tastes, which I considered to be distinguished,
and which in my view expressed my particular relation to my histori-
cal moment, my chosen affiliat ion with certain movements or styles
in modern art and culture, and my political values. I liked to think
naively, of coursethat my tastes testified to my individual discern-
ment and did not necessarily make me resemble other boys, other
Jews, other middle-class kids, other Americans, other intellectuals, or
even other classicists (I have a Ph.D. in classical Greek and Latin from
Stanford, which makes me part of yet another weird minority). I
didnt see why being gay should be any differentwhy I should sud-
40 B+ COULD TRY HARDER
that it is the only gay culture there is, the obligatory culture of every
one who happens to be gay.6
That habit of thinking about gay life in terms of generational con-
trasts is understandable to a certain degree. Social attitudes toward
homosexuality have been changing rapidly over the past fifty years,
and the social conditions in which gay kids grow up have changed
as well. That gay culture, its appeal, and its audience should have
evolved radically during the same period is only to be expected. At
the same time, precisely because this process of historical change has
been going on for decades now, the persistent assertion that younger
gay men, unlike the half-generation of gay men before them, have no
need of gay culture is starting to wear thin and to look downright
suspiciousthe result of systematic amnesia and collective denial.
In fact, it cant be perennially true. For those sorry gay men in their
thirties, who supposedly cling to an old-fashioned and now pass ver-
sion of gay male culturea version of gay male culture that means
nothing, and is of no use, to anyone in their teens and twentiesare
obviously the very same people who, only a few years earlier, actually
were those pioneering teenagers, taking their first innocent steps in a
brave new world without homophobia, ignorant of gay culture and
indifferent to it. From gay men who had no need of gay culture, they
seem to become, in the twinkling of an eye, gay cultures stooges, its
dreariest representatives. Which makes you wonder what happens to
gay men in their mid- to late twenties that causes them suddenly to
appear so tired, so superannuated, so culturally retrograde. Could it
be gay initiation? Could gay male culture turn out to be not so irrele-
vant to gay men after all, once theyre gradually exposed to it? And
once they accumulate a bit of experience, a bit of self-knowledge, and
even perhaps a bit of humility?
Well, that might be one explanation. But there are also specific his-
torical reasons why gay male culture constantly embarrasses its own
subjects, why the previous gay generations disavowal of gay culture
is endlessly repeated by each new gay generation, why gay culture it-
self always turns out to besometimes in the view of younger gay
History of an Error 43
men and always in the view of those who speak for themthe exclu-
sive property of the older guys, the queens, folks who in one way or
another are simply past it: in short, other people, particularly other
people whose real or imagined embrace of gay culture always ends
up making them look both effeminate and archaic.
%
Let us recall that homosexuality, as a distinctive classification of sex-
ual behavior, sexual desire, and sexual subjectivity, was originally pre-
cipitated out of the experience and concept of gender inversion. The
first psychiatric definitions of deviant sexual orientation, elaborated
in the latter part of the nineteenth century, were definitions not
of homosexuality but of sex-role reversal or transgenderism: Carl
Friedrich Otto Westphals contrary sexual feeling of 1869 and Ar-
rigo Tamassias inversion of the sexual instinct of 1878.7 The patho-
logical mental condition those terms referred to involved same-sex
sexual desire but did not reduce to it. Instead, same-sex desire quali
fied as merely one symptom of a more profound reversal, or inver-
sion, of an individuals gender identity. Insofar as desire for a person
of the same sex was opposite, or contrary, to the individuals own
sex, it pointed to a deeper and more pervasive gender disorder: an es-
trangement from ones actual sex and an identification with the op-
posite sex, which is to say a transgendered psychological orientation.
It was this deviant orientation of the inverts subjectivity that the doc-
tors considered medically problematicthe feeling of being alien-
ated, with ones entire inner being, from ones own sex, as West-
phal memorably put it in a footnote to his 1869 article. Same-sex
desire was not the essence but merely a further extension of that ba-
sic gender trouble, a more developed stage of the pathological phe-
nomenon.8
That clinical definition drew on the inverts own testimony and ex-
periences. Karl Heinrich Ulrichs, the first political activist for homo
sexual emancipation, who began writing in the early 1860s, had de-
scribed himself in a notorious Latin phrase as having a womans soul
44 B+ COULD TRY HARDER
%
Kinsey and his categories of sexual behavior reflected the culmina-
tion of a long process of change in the systems of both sexual classifi
cation and sexual desire. That process had begun much earlier, and it
had been under way for a considerable time, but it was not complete
until the twentieth century. Heterosexuality had been slowly coming
into existence among the middle classes in England, northwestern
Europe, and their colonies ever since the late seventeenth century. As
time went by, its definition gradually became more stringent, requir-
ing stricter avoidance of any expression of same-sex affection.18 In the
United States, sexual, emotional, and romantic bonds between men,
which had once been conventional, started to dissolve well before
the end of the nineteenth century, and middle-class men began to
avoid physical contact with other men for fear of being considered
deviant.19
46 B+ COULD TRY HARDER
gay man just like himself. This romantic ideal was built on systematic
contrasts with other, earlier, queerer types; in fact, it thrived on ex-
plicit put-downs of effeminate or gender-deviant men, from whom
the hero or the author recoiled in horror. That is what we find espe-
cially in the explicit gay male fiction that emerged on both sides of
the Atlantic in the wake of the Second World War: Gore Vidals The
City and the Pillar (1948), Rodney Garlands The Heart in Exile (1953),
James Baldwins Giovannis Room (1956), and Mary Renaults The Char-
ioteer (1953), not to mention all of her Greek romances. A similar phe-
nomenon appeared in lesbian fiction in the postwar period with Patri-
cia Highsmiths The Price of Salt (1952) and, most aggressively, Rita
Mae Browns Rubyfruit Jungle (1973), in which butch lesbians from ear-
lier working-class lesbian bar culture are subjected to savage ridicule
and intense sexual depreciation.
%
Fiction was not the only place where homosexuality triumphed over
inversion. Although the Stonewall rebellion may have been sparked
by drag queens, gay liberation in at least some of its later manifesta-
tions encouraged lesbians and gay men to act out new, positive, non-
deviant sex and gender roles in everyday life. To be sure, new styles of
hypermasculinity had appeared among gay men much earlier, in the
aftermath of the Second World War; they seem to have been popular-
ized in that period via the nascent gay social networks inadvertently
created by the mass mobilizations of the war and the gay bars in
coastal cities that catered to military personnel. Already by the late
1940s, as the historian George Chauncey has demonstrated and as
much anecdotal information attests, a new, distinctively American
butch style began to be adopted by some gay men: a look defined
bythe wearing of a white T-shirt, blue jeans, and a leather jacket.21
Whatever post-Stonewall mythology might claim, it was not only af-
ter 1969 that gay men learned how to be butch, or that butch styles
began to compete with earlier effete modes of self-presentation
among gay men.22
But if gay liberation, which tended in any case to promote forms
48 B+ COULD TRY HARDER
%
By the late 1970s, then, lesbian and gay male life in the gay urban ghet-
toes of the United States and Western Europe came to be distin-
guished by the hegemony of lesbian feminism and the emphatically
masculine culture of the so-called gay male clone, both of which
History of an Error 49
gay men were employing behind the scenes to embody the newer,
stricter standards of masculine self-presentation that the gay world
now imposed: I have found that practicing in front of a mirror is a
good way of ridding oneself of these added afflictions [i.e., effemi-
nacy], explained the writer. I was able to learn more normal move-
ments and expressions that way. Of course it took years of practice,
but now I can relax in public without the acute embarrassment of
finding myself limp-wristed or adopting effeminate postures.25 Fur-
ther pointers about being butch and perfecting butch movement,
butch noises, the butch body, butch dressing, and butch drugs
were provided in 1982 by Clark Henley in a scathing and hilarious but
genuinely instructive guide, The Butch Manual. According to Henley,
the real motivation behind the transition from queen to butch was
simply the desire to get laid, which gay masculinity made possible
to an extent previously undreamed of.26
In the gay society of the period, in short, the shift from deviant to
normative gender styles, the rise of sex as both symbol and practice,
and the euthanasia of traditional gay male culture were all strictly
correlated. As queen was to butch, so culture was to sex. Now that
gay men were living their homosexuality not as a cultural practice
but as a sexual identity, they required a new gender style; and the mas-
culine gender style that they adopted, by expanding their sexual op-
portunities, enabled them to consolidate a definition of gay existence
and a model of gay identity that focused on sex at the expense of
cultureand that excluded the feminine identifications that had in-
formed and defined much of traditional gay male culture.
%
And so in the rapidly expanding gay enclaves of the major cities in the
United States and elsewhere during the 1970s, a new and supposedly
modern style of gay masculinity acquired ever more solid form,
achieving a spectacular visibility.27 My straight friends in San Francisco
would ask me why all the gay men in the city seemed to have among
them only three or four different looks: construction worker, col-
legeathlete, lumberjack, motorcyclist. Frances Fitzgerald, visiting the
History of an Error 51
Castro district in San Francisco in the same period, described the side-
walks as overflowing with young men dressed as it were for a hiking
expedition, all wearing denim jeans, flannel shirts, hiking boots, and
down-filled nylon flight jackets.28 It would be easy enough to treat
gay macho as nothing more than a matter of shifting fashions, con-
cedes Alice Echols in a book on the culture of 1970s disco music. But
embedded in this macho turn were changes in gay mens identity and
subjectivity. Gays not only presented themselves differently, they re-
garded themselves differently, searched out unfamiliar sorts of sexual
partners, and expanded their sexual repertoire.29
Indeed, the new clone style was much more than a style of gender
presentation. It was also a sexual style, which consisted in the down-
playing of polarized roles.30 Gone were the supposedly self-hating
queens who lived only to service straight trade, who spent a lifetime
on their knees. No longer were gay men alternately one anothers sis-
ters and one anothers rivals for the favors of the young and the beau-
tiful; now they were one anothers preferred objects of desire. Were
the men weve been looking for was the watchword of the 1970s,
and as if to prove it, gay men held hands and kissed in public.31 Mutu-
ality and reciprocity were the expected sexual protocols, in gay life as
well as in gay porn. One-sided homosexual relations, though they
might still exist, were a vestige from the premodern past. Or so main-
tained Dr.Charles Silverstein and Edmund White, the authors of the
first edition of The Joy of Gay Sex, published in 1977. This sort of [ac-
tive/passive] role-playing, held to as a strict division, seems increas-
ingly on the wane, they added, assuring their readers that most gay
men would denounce such role-playing nowadays as old-fashioned
or unliberated.32
Just eight years earlier, in 1969, White had taken a very different
line. He had admitted that many gay men are constantly trying to
reproduce with their lovers a facsimile of straight marriage. One gay
man plays the butch while the other plays the femme.33 But by
1977, all that was already ancient history. From the freshly minted offi
cial perspective of the post-Stonewall gay male worldand from the
personal insight that many gay men had gained through intense sex-
52 B+ COULD TRY HARDER
%
Already by the early 1990s, the compulsory loyalty oaths to egalitar-
ian sex and gender roles that gay men had been obliged to swear for
more than a decade came in for gentle caricature from Pansy Divi-
sion, the queer San Francisco rock band. Here is the opening verse of
a song called Versatile:
man was looking for action, which was often. As Leo Bersani put it in
1987, Parody is an erotic turn-off, and all gay men know this. Much
campy talk is parodistic, and while that may be fun at a dinner party,
if youre out to make someone you turn off the camp.40
An acquaintance of mine, a gay man of my own generation, still
records the message on his answering machine thirty times over, until
hes sure his voice reveals no traces of effeminacy. Theres nothing
tongue-in-cheek about such a performance: it couldnt be more ear-
nest. And in fact it was quite wise, in that post-Stonewall era of butch
one-upmanship, not to take too many chances. There was no higher
compliment you could pay the trick of the moment than to say, You
know, when I saw you walk into the bar tonight, I thought to myself,
Theres gotta be some mistake. Does this guy know its a gay bar? He
cant be gay. Is he here for real? I cant believe hes not straight. To
which this paragon of masculinity would invariably reply, if he was in
a mood to be agreeable, Well, you know, if I just happened to see
you walking down the street, I would never think you were gay. Such
complimentsfor that is indeed what those remarks purported to
bewere not only exchanged in all seriousness; they were uttered in
a swoon of erotic delirium. In such circumstances, nothing was more
scandalous, or more unforgivable, than for the guy one was dating to
show up for a romantic dinner wearing an earringwhich is not to
say that such catastrophes never happened.
In short, post-Stonewall gay male life was defined by the emer-
gence of a new masculine, non-role-specific practice of gender and
sex, which gave rise to a new style and a new form of life, embodied
by the gay clone or butch gay man. Those developments betokened
the proud triumph of an undifferentiated gay sexuality over an ear-
lier, discredited, effeminate gay culture, from which the new sex-
centered model of gay male identity offered a long-overdue and wel-
come refuge.
%
No wonder that in the heady atmosphere of those glory days in the
late 1970s, before AIDS or the rise of the New Right, when sex was
56 B+ COULD TRY HARDER
everywhere (if you were under thirty, urban, butch, and not too bad-
looking), and when utopia seemed to be just around the cornerno
wonder that young gay men like me had little use for Judy Garland.
Traditional gay male culturewith its female icons, its flaming camp
style, its division between queens and trade, its polarized gender
roles, its sexual hierarchies, its balked romantic longings, its senti-
mentality, its self-pity, and its profound despair about the possibility
of lasting loveall that seemed not only archaic and outdated but re-
pulsive. It was an insult to the newer, truer, and better definitions of
gayness that gay men had recently invented, popularized, and labored
to embody as well as to exploit. In such a context, gay male culture, as
it had been traditionally constituted, appeared to be nothing more
than a series of stereotypesand homophobic stereotypes, at that
though all too often internalized, sadly, by gay men themselves.
So I had to move to Australia, settle down with a boyfriend half
my age, and undergo my own gay initiation in order to see for the
first time, in the 1990s, the movies from the 1930s and 1940s that I had
studiously avoided seeing in the 1970s. (They turned out to be pretty
good.) It was only then that I was introduced to the American gay
cultural curriculum that gay American men who were twenty years
older than me already knew by heart, but that I had resisted learning
about from them. Since I underwent this gay initiation at the hands
of a much younger lover, I am constitutionally immune to the claim
that pre-Stonewall gay male culture is irrelevant to more recent gen-
erations of gay men, or out of dateeven if it is, undeniably, and en-
dearingly, dated ... and even if it cannot help looking archaic from our
current, post-Stonewall perspective.
To study gay male subjectivity by studying traditional gay male
culture seems like such an intriguing thing to do nowadays precisely
because it feels so counter-intuitive, so shockingly retrograde, espe-
cially in the light of the social, conceptual, generational developments
I have just traced. It represents a reversal of previous, long-held con-
victions, a complete betrayal of the most cherished notions that many
of us thought we believed about the nature of male homosexuality
History of an Error 57
and that we also tried to make other people believe. It violates, in par-
ticular, the official post-Stonewall creed that gay men are no different
from anybody else, that sexual object-choice has nothing to do with
gender style, that gay sexuality has no relation to femininity, and that
homosexuality is a sexual orientation, not a culture or a subculture.
Which is no doubt why my class aroused so much hostility among
so many gay men.
%
For example, in the spring of 2000, before I had even taught How To
Be Gay for the first time, a man named John in Annapolis, Maryland,
sent an e-mail to the University of Michigans English Department,
protesting against the class. ( John used his full name, but I am with-
holding it, to protect his privacy.) Johns message was addressed not
to me but to the director of undergraduate studies, who had issued a
public statement defending the class. John disagreed with that state-
ment and, appealing to the authority of my administrative superiors
to resolve the matter, he urged them, in the strongest terms, to cancel
the class and remove it from the English Departments curriculum.
So far, there was nothing unusual about Johns message. It resem-
bled countless others that had been sent by members of the Christian
Right to various offices at the University of Michigan. But John was
not a religious conservative. He identified himself as a gay man in his
mid-thirties, who was no supporter of any of the right-wing evangeli-
cal organizations that had been lobbying against the class. Instead, he
said he was deeply disturbed by a number of its features, which pro-
moted what he considered to be stereotypes of gay people. Merely by
offering such a course, he argued, I was implying that gay men as a
group were characterized by universalities that could be discovered,
enumerated, and presented to undergraduates as if such things were
facts. But far from being facts, these sorts of generalizations about
gay men were common misconceptionsfor instance, that gay men
were fashion-savvy, or design-savvy, or had a penchant for dressing
like women.
58 B+ COULD TRY HARDER
John had been fighting those stereotypes his entire life, he said, and
he didnt like seeing them propped up by institutions of higher educa-
tion. Surely, every enlightened person understood that human indi-
viduals are all unique. There were lots of effeminate straight men and
lots of masculine gay men. Everyone was different, and people didnt
fall into neat little boxes. John himself happened to belong to the
latter category: he made it clear that he considered himself a mascu-
line gay man. And as someone who didnt fit the usual gay stereo-
types, he resented the assumption that just because he was gay, he
was bound to like certain things, such as particular works of music
and art. What would be next, he asked sarcasticallya course for Af-
rican Americans that would teach them how to enjoy fried chicken,
ribs, and watermelon?
In short, John admired any and all efforts to teach young people to
be tolerant of others, especially those unlike themselves. But he ob-
jected to clichs and assumptions and stereotypes that would give
students a skewed impression of gay men in America. Being gay, he
insisted, was a sexual orientation, not a subculture.
It would be altogether too easy to demean or to dismiss this com-
plaint by highlighting the writers defensiveness about his masculinity
or by making fun of his evident panic at the prospect of being lumped
together with a bunch of screaming queens. To be sure, as a self-
described masculine gay man, John had everything to lose by being
identified with men who were deviant not only in their sexual prac-
tices but also in their gender style, and who therefore ranked lower
on the scale of social acceptability than he did.41 If he objected to
the promotion of stereotypes, that was not necessarily because he
had problems with stereotypes in and of themselvesafter all, the
straight-acting and -appearing gay man that he claimed to be was
nothing if not a stereotype. Rather, it was because the particular ste-
reotypes he believed my class was promoting happened to be at odds
with his own proud and positive image of himself as virile and dig
nified.
Thats what John meant when he said that such stereotypes gave
History of an Error 59
%
The main reason it would be unwise to dismiss Johns objections in
some righteous or condescending way is that to do so would be to
underrate their political force and to overlook their grounding in a
particular set of social and historical developments, to which in fact
they offer an important and useful clue. John was registering and ex-
pressing a pervasive, enduring belief among gay men of the post-
Stonewall era, a belief I once held myself, a belief we were taught
to consider politically necessary as well as politically prog ressive
60 B+ COULD TRY HARDER
from the norm. Especially ifin the case of gay menthat difference
implies any identification with women or femininity. Merely to ques-
tion this doctrine is to risk conjuring up the dread specter of sexual
inversion, opening the door to a return of Victorian psychiatry, with
all its ancient prejudices about the congenital abnormality and psy-
chopathology and gender deviance of gay men.
But so long as we cling to the notion that gayness is reducible to
same-sex sexual object-choice, that it has nothing to do with how we
live or what we like, that our homosexuality is completely formed
prior to and independent of any exposure to gay cultureand so long
as we hold to that belief as to a kind of dogmathen the persistence
of gay culture will remain a perpetual embarrassment, as well as an
insoluble analytic puzzle.
%
Will Fellows makes a similar point at the beginning of his own book
about male homosexuality as a cultural practice. In APassion to Pre-
serve: Gay Men as Keepers of Culture, Fellows inquires into the particu-
lar role gay men have played in historic preservation, architectural
restoration, and various antiquarian pursuits. At first, I was bothered
by this strong, gender-atypical trend in gay male behavior, he con-
fesses. I suppose I saw the apparently disproportionate presence of
gay men in historic preservation as the stuff of stereotype. And so I
failed to take it seriously. Fellows blames his initial, instinctive refusal
to see anything significant in this pattern of cultural practice among
gay men on
the old saw about gay males being no different from straight males
except for their sexual orientation. This notion developed as a central
tenet of the gay rights movement since the 1970s. ... If outside of our
sex lives we gays are just like straights, then it must be only a stereo-
typical illusion that gay men are inordinately drawn to being house
restorers and antiquariansor interior designers, florists, hair stylists,
fashion designers, and so forth. Now its clear to me that gay men re-
ally are extraordinarily attracted to these kinds of work. Rather than
62 B+ COULD TRY HARDER
We are now in a period when difference is the order of the day, and
queer orthodoxy denies the search for, or assertion of, commonality
now that the commonality posited by gay/lesbian identities has been
exposed as never really having existed (which is why queer theory will
never be able to account for why so many women and men defy the
odds to affirm identity again and again). But a sense of mutual recog-
nition, commonality, anddare one sayidentity endures despite the
many fractures and assaults that try to undermine it.48
The very attention that queer theory has lavished on difference, inter-
sectionality, and comparison has ended up screening out the ques-
tionof how, for a large segment of homosexual American men dur-
ing the past century or so, being gay has been experienced through
highly patterned forms of embodied sensibilityeven as those pat-
terns tend routinely to be disavowed by gay men in their efforts to
escape stereotypes and labels. It is no accident that the studies of
gay male culture that do focus most intensely on that question have
tended to be undertaken by academics like Will Fellows and John
Clum, who write at least in part for non-academic audiences, or
bycommunity-based intellectuals like Michael Bronski, Neil Bartlett,
64 B+ COULD TRY HARDER
%
This book, nonetheless, champions queer politics over gay politics in
a very particular way. While honoring the traditions of gay liberation
and gay pride that emerged in the wake of the Stonewall riots, it ex-
plores and even celebrates certain non-standard practices of sex and
gender. It also attempts to reclaim the culture of pre-Stonewall gay
men by connecting it with such post-Stonewall developments as the
queer and transgender movements. At the same time, it is deeply gay-
positive. For it is unashamed of gay male culture, even gay cultures
most unsettling or objectionable elements. At least, it is unashamed
of gay shameand therefore willing to linger over some features of
gay culture that continue to make gay men nowadays ashamed of
both gay culture and themselves.
Unlike the kinds of hostile stereotypes that are intended to de-
mean and denigrate the members of a minority group, the stereo-
types about gay male culture and identity that I am interested in here
are stereotypes that have been elaborated and propounded by at least
some gay men themselves. That alone makes them worthy of being
treated with seriousness, respect, curiosity, and analytical rigoreven
History of an Error 65
though certain proud gay men, like John from Annapolis, find them
skewed or even self-hating.
If, for example, it actually were the case that African Americans
largely defined themselves to themselves by their shared understanding
that being Black implied a distinctive, unusual, or marked preference
for fried chicken, ribs, and watermelon (to use Johns example), I
would not in fact be afraid to inquire into the cultural meanings that
might be involved in the selective appropriation of those foods.52 Be-
ing Black, after all, can also be understood as a set of peculiar and de
fining cultural practices, though it is a rare event when such a model
of Black identity makes its way into respectable political discourse
even as a joke. On January21, 2008, in the debate before the Demo-
cratic Partys electoral primary in South Carolina, Barack Obama was
asked what he thought of Toni Morrisons remark that Bill Clinton
was the first Black American president. He replied, I would have to
investigate more Bills dancing abilities.53 Black writers and critical
race theorists have recently taken up the topic of how to be Black
and have treated it as worthy of sustained investigation.54
In the case of gay men, it is not only (or even chiefly) homophobes
who think that gay men like Judy Garland. Gay men themselvesor,
at least, some gay men in the United States and Great Britain during
the past sixty yearshave thought the same thing.55 We are not deal-
ing with a hostile stereotype, then. We are dealingat least, within
certain historical, geographic, racial, and generational limitswith a
collective self-recognition, though a self-recognition that admittedly
continues to occasion a good deal of shame and therefore to produce
a considerable amount of unease, and even outright denial.
In order to face down that shame and resist that impulse to denial,
it is tempting to be shameless, to throw caution to the winds, to go all
the way to the other extreme and to entertain, if only for a moment
or two, the assumptionas our man in Annapolis saidthat just be-
cause one is gay, one must like certain things, such as particular works
of art and music. That assumption is plainly indefensible when it is
66 B+ COULD TRY HARDER
put in those terms. But what if we tried to discover what was behind
it? What if it were possible to connect the experience of gayness with
particular cultural tastes, with the love of certain cultural objects?
What if there actually were a certain logic to that connection? What
if we could derive the characteristic themes and experiences of gay
culture from the social conditions under which that culture arises and
is reproduced? What if we went even further and considered the pos-
sibility that gay male tastes for certain cultural artifacts or social prac-
tices reflect, within their particular contexts, ways of being, ways of
feeling, and ways of relating to the larger social world that are funda-
mental to male homosexuality and distinctive to gay men, despite gay
mens many differences from one another? What if gay male subject-
hood or subjectivity consisted precisely in those ways of being, feel-
ing, and relating?
What if, in short, post-Stonewall gay male attitudes were wrong,
and it turned out that male homosexuality was less about sex and
more about culture, as well as the feelings, emotions, and complex
combinations of affect (as epitomized by some gay mens love of Judy
Garland) that cultural practices imply? What if those old queens at
the Castro movie theater understood something about gayness
about how to be gaythat gay men of my generation, and the ones
that came after it, completely missed, at least when we were young
and new to the scene?
Which brings me back to my original, hazardous hypothesis. Per-
haps there really is such a thing as gay male subjectivity. And perhaps
gay mens cultural practices offer us a way of approaching it, getting
hold of it, describing it, defining it, and understanding it.
That, at least, is the hypothesis on which this investigation will
proceed.
PA R T T W O
+++
American Falsettos
134
G AY I D E N T I T Y A N D I T S D I S C O N T E N T S
S o what was it that those old queens at the Castro movie theater
understood about how to be gay that many members of my own
generation missed? If I had to convey in a few words what I think it
was, I would say they knew that gay male desire cannot be reduced ei-
ther to sexual desire or to gay identity.
Sexual desire is only one aspect of gay male desire. Sex is not the
sum of queer pleasure. Gay desire seeks more than the achievement
of gay identity. Gay identity does not answer to all the demands of
gay desire. Gay identity is inadequate to the full expression of gay
subjectivity. Gay identity may well register the fact of gay desire; it
may even stand in for its wayward promptings, its unanticipated urges
and satisfactions. But gay identity does notit cannotcapture gay
desire in all its subjective sweep and scope. It cannot express it.
Desire into identity will not go.
Gay identity cannot express gay desire or gay subjectivity because
gay desire is not limited to desire for men. Gay desire does not consist
only in desire for sex with men. Or desire for masculinity. Or desire
for positive images of gay men. Or desire for a gay male world. All of
those desires might, conceivably, be referred to gay identity, to some
aspect of what defines a gay man. But gay male desire actually com-
prises a kaleidoscopic range of queer longingsof wishes and sensa-
tions and pleasures and emotionsthat exceed the bounds of any
70 AMERICAN FALSETTOS
singular identity and extend beyond the specifics of gay male exis-
tence.
That is why a social movement grounded in a gay identity defined
by exclusive reference to gay peoplewith its LGBTQ community
centers and organizations, its lesbigay magazines and novels and
movies and popular music and TV shows and cable channels, its
neighborhoods, bars, clubs, vacation resorts, and churches, its politi
cal representatives and leaders and spokespeople and human-rights
lobby groups and street marches and demonstrations, its theoretical
and scholarly breakthroughs, historical discoveries, university classes,
and fields of researchthat is why all this commercial and politi
caland cultural infrastructure of gay identity remains a perennial let-
down, leaving many members of its gay constituency perpetually
unsatisfied. Gay identitygayness reduced to identity or understood
as identityfails to realize male homosexual desire in its unpredict-
able, unsystematic ensemble. It answers to only a single dimension of
gay male subjectivity.
And yet, identity has become the preferred category for thinking
about homosexuality. Moreover, it has been promoted at the direct
expense of pleasure or feeling or subjectivity.1
%
The lesbian and gay movement has long fought to win for queer peo-
ple the status of a political minority. It has tried hard to persuade oth-
ers to see us as defined by a political categorynamely, gay identity
because such a category is morally neutral. And so the lesbian and gay
movement has presented us as members of a social group that has
suffered and continues to suffer, through no fault of our own, from
both formal and informal discriminationranging from a lack of
equal rights to casual disrespect and denigration. To be gay, on this
view, is to be a member of a socially disadvantaged minority. That is
certainly a fair enough view of our situation. But there is also a quite
specific ideological payoff that comes from defining homosexuality as
a political and social condition, rather than a subjective one: such a
purely political definition of gayness helps to ensure that homosexu
Gay Identity and Its Discontents 71
%
Indeed, the whole point of gay identity politics has been to stop peo-
ple (ourselves included) from asking too many awkward or prying
questions about what goes on in our inner lives. One of the overarch-
72 AMERICAN FALSETTOS
ing aims of identity politics in general has been to make the world
safe for minority subjectivity by shifting the publics gaze away from
the distinctive features of minority subcultures, especially from ev
erything that might make people who dont belong to those subcul-
tures feel uncomfortable with them, suspicious of them, or excluded
from them. By focusing attention, instead, on specifically political
(and therefore less viscerally upsetting) demands for equal treatment,
social recognition, and procedural justice, prog ressive social move-
ments have achieved significant gains for members of stigmatized
groups. Accordingly, campaigns for minority rights have persistently
championed identity (who we are) over subjectivity (how we feel) and
emphasized such matters as social equality, the benefits of diversity,
the pleasures of difference, the ethics of peaceful coexistence.
The ultimate effect has been to imply that the spectrum of minor-
ity identities is no more shocking or offensive than a banquet of eth-
nic cuisine at an international food festival: a smorgasbord of de
lectable but insignificant and meaningless variations, open to all; an
invitation to broaden our cultural range, providing something for ev
eryone to enjoywithout anyone feeling obligated to sample every
thing, especially anything that looks particularly gross or disgusting.
Stepping back from the details of queer life, we take shelter in in
offensive generalities: promoting human rights, celebrating diversity,
valuing difference, supporting multiculturalism, fighting for social
justice.
The greatest beneficiaries of this vogue for representing cultural
difference in terms of innocent and harmless diversity have been
those marginalized groups that still bear a heavy burden of stigma
and whose public behavior continues, for that reason, to arouse strong
general aversion: African Americans using Black English in White so-
ciety, gay men kissing on the street, butch women claiming leader-
ship roles and asserting authority over men, or disabled people pain-
fully and obtrusively negotiating a built environment not designed
for them. Identity helps to cover the indiscreet and disruptive fea-
tures of socially excluded groups, their most flagrantly visible mani-
Gay Identity and Its Discontents 73
plete social acceptance. Gay liberation and the gay sensibility are
staunch antagonists.6
That antagonism has not led to the total exclusion of gay sensibil-
ity from the public scene, of course, nor have political imperatives
succeeded in suppressing all undignified expressions of lesbian and
gay desire, subjectivity, and cultural specificity. Gay pride celebrations
in major urban centers still do have their uniquely queer, transgres-
sive, carnivalesque contingentsfrom dykes on bikes to boy-lovers,
from drag queens to porn stars. But such figures represent a distinct
embarrassment to the official, public image of American gay identity,
with its politics of respectability, social responsibility, and affirma
tion.7 In the week following any gay pride parade, dozens of letters
typically appear in the local newspapers (both mainstream and gay)
complaining that gay pride has become a freak show and that the
presence of all those flaming creatures at the march gives homosexu
ality a Bad Name and is Bad For The Cause.
Gay identity politics has certainly procured for us an undeniable
and inestimable array of liberties and permissions. But now it is also
starting to reveal the defects of its very virtues and to subject us to a
surprising number of increasingly bothersome constraints. We may
have become proud of our gay identity, and unabashed about our
same-sex desires and relationships. Yet we remain hopelessly ashamed
of how queerly we feel and actashamed of our instincts, our loves
and hates, our attitudes, our non-standard values, our ways of being,
our social and cultural practices.8 Instead of celebrating our distinc-
tive subjectivity, our unique pleasures, and our characteristic culture,
we have achieved gay pride at their expense.
%
When, for example, I say that I am gaywhen I identify as gay or
disclose my gay identityI adopt an identity-based strategy, gener-
ated by gay identity politics itself, for dealing with the social differ-
ence that my sexual difference makes in a heteronormative world. In
particular, I choose to represent my sexuality as a neutral feature of
Gay Identity and Its Discontents 75
perative to deny our difference is less urgent than it once was. So why
are we still so skittish? Our avoidance is all the more puzzling insofar
as it perpetrates a grave slander against us: it implies that we are just
like everybody else. And so it obscures the very things about gay life
and gay culture that make them interesting and valuable. It denies the
unique genius in being queer.
%
This habit of foregrounding identity and backgrounding subjectivity
has not always felt like a constraint. The promotion of gay identities
at the expense of gay subjectivities could be more easily tolerated
during the 1980s and early 1990s, when that protective tendency
seemed to reflect the urgent demands of a catastrophic political situa-
tion.
With the rise of the New Right, the increasing devastation of HIV/
AIDS, the newly fashionable homophobia unleashed by the moral
panic surrounding the epidemic, and the failure of most governments
to respond effectively to the medical disaster overtaking their own
citizens, the understandable impulse of the gay movement was to in-
sist on our survival as a people, to defend ourselves as members of a
group that was at great collective risk. And so we strove to highlight our
common belonging to various social and ethnic identity-categories
and we sought to play down those subjective dimensions of homo
sexuality, as well as those distinctive features of gay male cultureto
say nothing of the emotional and erotic specificities of queer exis-
tencewhich in the minds of many people were responsible for the
spread of HIV in the first place.
If gay men did not feel terribly constrained by that bracketing of
emotion, sensibility, affect, and the felt difference of their lived experi-
ences, if the overwhelmingly politic al representations of gayness as a
collective social identity during this period did not strike them as par-
ticularly oppressive, that was due to a second, more subtle factor. Gay
subjectivity, far from having been silenced, seemed everywhere to be
triumphant. The public gay response to HIV/AIDS, after all, was pos-
Gay Identity and Its Discontents 79
struggling for psychic decolonization. The enemy was not only in the
corridors of power, but also in our souls (Hitler in my heart, as An
tony Hegarty, the lead singer of the group Antony and the Johnsons,
put it many years later). It was more than ever necessary to rid our-
selves of whatever affects prevented us from coming together collec-
tively in a newly militant and even militarized movement. This was
not the moment to celebrate the anti-social, self-indulgent queer plea
sures of narcissism and passivity.15
Part of what distinguished good gay emotion from bad gay emo-
tion, then, was that the good kind was not personally or psychologi-
cally revealing. Anger and grief could be publicly claimed and acted
out precisely because they did not express some peculiar, individual,
personal, and possibly pathological inward condition afflicting gay
men. Rather, they expressed our collective situation of political op-
pression and resistance, our collective victimization by an epidemic
and by a society that smugly watched it happen. They also expressed
our refusal to go quietly, to keep our suffering out of the public eye,
to hide our sexuality, to closet our relationships, to let our oppressors
off the hook.
As such, feelings of anger and grief did not need to be denied. Af-
ter all, they originated not in our damaged psyches, but in our objec-
tive, beleaguered situation. They were psychological responses to an
external threat, an external devastationa reaction to a calamity that
had been visited upon us from outside ourselves. They were a healthy
response to loss.
HIV/AIDS was precisely not the inner truth of male homosexual
ity, not the outward and visible sign of an inward or spiritual illness,
not the punishment of gay sin or gay crime, not what we had asked
for. Hence the characteristic political tactic of turning our grief into
anger, our mourning into militancy. The point was to express our
personal and collective insistence that HIV/AIDS was a public-health
catastrophe, exacerbated by indifference and homophobia, not the
working-out of the inner logic of male homosexuality itself. It was a
terrible historical accident, and it had nothing to do with us or with
Gay Identity and Its Discontents 81
C ontemporary gay culture has been slow to seize its newfound op-
portunity to explore the inner life of homosexuality. When questions
about the distinctive features of gay male subjectivity are raised, even
inadvertently, the typical response is to silence them. Nevertheless,
this censorship, though automatic, is usually not so quick or so total
as to prevent us from getting a glimpse of the various queer affects
that are hurriedly being shoved back into the closet. It is therefore
possible to form an idea of the purpose behind the clampdownand
to figure out what in particular is being so actively and so anxiously
defended against by means of it.
Consider a typical example, chosen almost at random. In the Arts
and Leisure section of the New York Times on Sunday, October 29,
2000, Anthony Tommasini, the papers main classical-music critic,
who is an openly gay man, published a story about David Daniels, the
celebrated countertenor, who at the time was still a young and up-
and-coming performer.1 Having just released a magnificent recording
of Handels Rinaldo with Cecilia Bartoli, Daniels was about to per-
form the title role in a new and much-anticipated production at the
New York City Opera. As Tommasini noted, though in much more
guarded terms, Daniels had once been a struggling tenor who occa-
sionally delivered impromptu operatic performances at gay parties,
where he sang female parts in a high falsetto voice. After undergoing
psychotherapywhich appears to have worked only too well, as we
Homosexualitys Closet 83
likes it. That description keeps the accent firmly on gay identity, on
gayness as same-sex desire. Gay identity is expressed here by a light-
hearted adherence to masculine gender norms, as well as by a proper
if modest pride in ones appearance, while same-sex desire makes it-
self visible in the respectable form of a conjugal relationship (Daniels
does in fact wear a wedding ring, at least when he is giving recitals).
%
So why does he sing so funny? He seems virtually normal. Is there ac
tually something wrong with him? Might there be any connection, of
any sort, between being gay and the gender-blurring ambiguity of
the voiceor the fact that, when he starts to sing, his alto voice has
a tender beauty that seems classically feminine? Is Daniels just a big
queen, a fairy, a gay clich after all?
For all the trouble Tommasini takes to shatter those very stereo-
types, by emphasizing so pointedly and heavy-handedly Danielss
virility, physical sturdiness, square shoulders, masculine confidence,
and (did he really have to go that far?) passion for team sports, he still
cant seem to help trafficking in all the usual signifiers of gayness, all
those tired equations of homosexuality with gender deviance, effemi-
nacy, and masculine lack, invoking everything from ambiguity to
gender-blurring to androgyny to castration to femininity. We are
clearly not so far removed from the ancient association of homosexu
ality with gender inversion and psychological deviance after all, even
if Tommasini is careful in the end to drain those gay signifiers of all
significance. To Mr. Daniels, the way he sings feels perfectly natu-
ral, Tommasini insists, though by the time he makes that remark it is
rather too late for a return to innocent naturalnesstoo late to put
the queer cat back into the bag of gay normality.
Still, the purpose behind Tommasinis belated insistence on Dan-
ielss sense of his own perfect naturalness (hard-won, admittedly,
through years of therapy) is to conjure away all those ghoulish phan-
toms of gay psychopathology and gender deviance that Tommasinis
own uneasy obsession with Danielss queer musical persona had
called up in the first place. Tommasinis point is that Daniels may be
Homosexualitys Closet 85
%
I dont mean to sound like I have a personal gripe with David Daniels.
I dont blame him one bit, in fact, for being cagey, if thats actually
what hes up to. Tommasinis article alone provides all the justifica
86 AMERICAN FALSETTOS
tion anyone could ever want for such wariness: it indicates exactly
why gay men would be well advised to think twice before using the
New York Times as a vehicle for exploring the emotional or erotic
meaning of their feminine identifications. Indeed, there is something
representative about the way the Times article insistently constructs a
connection between Danielss gender-blurring, on the one hand, and
his homosexuality, on the other, while following Danielss lead in re-
fusing to acknowledge any substantive relation between the two. In
part, this is simply a classic instance of journalistic innuendo: the ar-
ticles presumption that we all know what that means exempts it
from having to claim that that means anything at all. Tommasinis
rhetoric simply reflects and reveals the current conditions under
which gay people typically gain admittance to the public sphereand
to the official discourse of the news in particular: our difference from
normal folk is at once hyped and disavowed.
But we can get a better idea of the entity being closeted here by
noticing what it is that the article refuses to name except by impli
cation.
The target of the articles elaborate mobilization of suggestion,
connotation, association, and sexual coding is no longer homosexual
ity, as it would have been back in the Bad Old Days.4 At least it is no
longer homosexuality if by homosexuality we mean same-sex erotic desire
and same-sex sexual object-choice. After all, those are the very things that
both the gay countertenor and his gay critic are happy to acknowl-
edge openly and explicitly.
What remains unspoken, and what is therefore constantly, insis-
tently implied, is the womans soul supposedly enclosed in David
Danielss male bodythe secret, inchoate transgendered condition
evidenced by his high-pitched singing and by his paradoxical combi-
nation of masculine and feminine attributes, patterns of feeling, and
personae. The closet operates here to conceal not homosexuality as
identity or desire but homosexuality as queer affect, sensibility, subjectivity,
identification, pleasure, habitus, gender style.
What remains literally unspeakable is no longer the love that dare
Homosexualitys Closet 87
not speak its name. Daniels and Tommasini are quite happy to talk
about that. Instead, it is a less classifiable but still quite specific dimen-
sion of faggotry: whatever it is in particular that accounts for why so
many countertenors are gay.
After all, no oneno gay man, anywaywho has heard David
Daniels sing, or who has listened to his recording of Romantic art
songs written for the soprano voice, could fail to discern some connec-
tion between his appropriation of the female vocal repertory and the
queer form of emotional life that often seems to accompany homo
sexuality. What is the nature of that connection? Is there any mean-
ingful relation that links the cultural practice of singing countertenor
roles to a pattern of affect, to a particular way of feeling, and that
links either or both to homosexuality?
Dont ask Daniels. Dont ask Tommasini. Dont ask the Times. And
dont ask gay men.
No one is talking.
154
W H AT S G AY E R T H A N G AY ?
for serious lesbian and gay analysis is that which can be safely theo-
rized in the register of psychoanalytic abstraction. Which is a proce-
dure so conventional, so speculative, so detached from the daily prac-
tices of queer life, and so personally uninvolving, that it no longer has
the capacity to unsettle anyone. In fact, psychoanalysis continues to
be the privileged method within queer studies, as within cultural
studies in general, for thinking about the workings of human subjec-
tivity. But psychoanalysisas I have argued at length in What Do Gay
Men Want?is not useful for understanding the collective subjectivity
of specific social groups.
It is a psychoanalytic truism, of course, that desire exceeds identity,
that identity does not and cannot capture the boundless play of de-
sire. So psychoanalysis is hardly incompatible with the argument be-
ing put forward here. If I avoid couching this argument in psychoana-
lytic terms, that is first of all because I dont need to do it, since I have
plenty of concrete evidence on which to base my conclusions. I much
prefer to make my case by looking closely at the social phenomena
themselvesby performing a close reading of cultural objects or un-
dertaking a thick description of queer cultural practicesrather than
by appealing to the authority of any preexisting theory or doctrine.
And I am wary in general of replacing descriptions with interpreta-
tions, concrete objects and practices with a shadow world of mean-
ings, thereby refusing to see social phenomena for what they are in
themselves, in all their particularity, and ignoring what is there to be
observed.2
Second, when psychoanalytic thinkers advance their claim about
desire exceeding identity, the main purpose, or outcome, is to destabi-
lize heterosexual identity, to free heterosexuality from identitya proce-
dure whose effect is ultimately not to undermine but to promote and
to universalize heterosexuality.3 (Some queer theorists similarly in-
voke psychoanalysis to cast doubt on the reality of gay sexual orienta-
tion: the result, however, is not to reverse that heterosexist effect but
to deepen it.) I choose to take a different route, and to dramatize the
90 AMERICAN FALSETTOS
%
One of the few people in the world of queer studies who is talking is
D.A. Miller. In an extraordinary 1998 book called Place for Us, Miller
sets out to explore gay male subjectivity through an analysis of gay
mens pleasures and cultural practicesspecifically, their emotional
investments in the Broadway musical. And he comes to the conclu-
sion that I have taken as the starting point for this part of my argu-
mentnamely, that gay male desire cannot be reduced to gay iden-
tity, to gayness as identity. Gay identity is therefore not adequate to
the expression of gay subjectivity. This insight, I now believe, not only
constitutes a theoretical breakthrough; it also explains why so many
cultural practices characteristic of male homosexuality extend be-
yond the realm of gay sexbe they singing in falsetto or flower-
arranging, diva-worship or interior design.
Or, for that matter, the cult of Broadway musicals. That gay men
love Broadway musicals is of course a clich, a stereotype.4 As John
Clum says in his own book about the gayness of the Broadway musi-
cal, It is a stereotype that gay men have been particularly invested in
musical theater, indeed that love of musical theater is a sign of gay-
ness(29). But the mere fact that such a notion is a stereotype doesnt
mean its untrue. Like all stereotypes, it is problematic, Clum al-
lows, at best partially accurate, and it may be generational, though if
my [drama] students are any indicator, it continues to have some va-
lidity(5).5 To call it a stereotype, then, is neither to refute it nor to
grasp its significance. And merely to expose it as a stereotype is not to
disable its efficacy or to diminish its power. Just as straight men who
like Broadway musicals have to expend quantities of effort in order to
overcome the skepticism that naturally greets their claims to hetero-
sexuality, as Miller points out, so, in the case of gay men, though not
all or even most ... are in love with Broadway, those who arent are
hardly quit of the stereotype that insists they are.6
Whats Gayer Than Gay? 91
%
In the psyche of post-Stonewall man, Miller begins, the Broadway
musical lies like a nervously watched pod that, having been preserved
from a past geological epoch, may nonethelesssay, at any tempera-
ture above frigiditysplit open to reveal a creature that, in compari-
son with the less primitive forms of life around it, even with those
which must have evolved from it, will appear monstrous beyond rec-
ognition (26). By post-Stonewall man, Miller refers not only to
those gay men who grew up after the Stonewall riots. He also refers
to those men, like himself, who had come of age before Stonewall
when the Broadway musical was still a living cultural form,8 and a
public gay male culture did not yet existand who were so thor-
oughly and improbably transformed by their experience of gay liber-
ation that it gradually came to seem perfectly ordinary that I, of all
people, as Miller remarks, should frequent the company of men
wearing weight belts, or nipple rings, and utterly strange not only
that I should still be hearing music I have known since I was a child,
but also that there should be others, many of these men among them,
92 AMERICAN FALSETTOS
ship. And, by the way, we dont want to be reminded that twas not
ever thus.
Miller is not nostalgic, of course. No gay man could possibly re-
gret the trade of pre-Stonewall gay abjection for post-Stonewall gay
pride, he acknowledges. No gay man could do anything but be grate-
ful for itif, that is, it actually were a trade (26; italics added). The
problem, it turns out, is that instead of winding up in triumphant
possession of a gay pride and freedom that we can wholeheartedly
call our own, we have constructed a gay identity that actively represses
both the pathos and the pleasure of those residual queer affects that
we prefer to think we have liberated ourselves from and that we claim
have simply vanished from our consciousness. Instead of transcend-
ing the secret shame and solitary pleasures of our sentimentality, as
we would like to think, we have assiduously closeted them.
For example, back in the Bad Old Days, Miller observes, a gay man
had to be careful to hide his physique magazines in the closet. What
was acceptable to display in ones living room, by contrast, was ones
collection of playbills and original-cast Broadway musical albums.
Nowadays it is fashionableor, at least, it was fashionable in the com-
paratively defiant gay male culture of the 1980s and 1990s, when
Miller was writingfor a gay man to manifest his gay pride, his sexual
liberation, by keeping his stash of gay porn visibly exposed next to his
bed, along with various other erotic accessories. But that does not
mean that his closet lost its previous function. On the contrary. That
closet now serves to hide his old collection of original-cast albums
if their owner has not taken the further precaution of jettisoning
them altogether (2627). After all, no gay man acquires social or erotic
credit by coming off as a show queen.
%
Or so Miller discovered when he made the mistake of using an
original-cast album of South Pacific as a courting-g ift. It turns out that
theres no quicker or surer way to put an end to a budding romance.
The reasons for that are revealing. For they indicate the gulf that sep-
96 AMERICAN FALSETTOS
Gay desire typically seeks fulfillment, and finds it, in solitary queer
pleasure. That is why gay desire is often the enemy of gay sociality.
The emotions that gay men invest in the Broadway musical, like the
emotions released by it, are best savored all by oneself. They are at
home in privacy, secrecy, isolation, loneliness, and fantasy. The soli-
Whats Gayer Than Gay? 97
tude in which they flourish is not a sign of their fragility, but a testi-
mony to their stubborn autonomy. For that solitude is where they
have maintained themselves, and maintained their hold on the gay
subject, since childhood. No wonder, then, that the pleasures bound
up with these solitary transports remain entirely sufficient to them-
selves and require no supplementation from external sources, such as
other people. No wonder that they are positively refractory to sexual
exchange. They are not about being with anyone else. They are about
being all alone with your dreams.
Those dreams may take the form of longing for a boyfriend, but
they get in the way of having one. That continues to be true even in
our more enlightened age, despite the availability of gay identity, the
comparative acceptance of gay sexuality, and the visibility of gay rela-
tionships.
For example, it was the case for many years that gay men looking
for partners on the Internet would attach the poster from Brokeback
Mountain to their profiles. In so doing, they betrayed emotional in-
stincts every bit as much at cross-purposes with their ostensible goals
as D.A. Millers were when he thought he could acquire a boyfriend
by giving him that old recording of Some Enchanted Evening. For
what is the point of such a gesture if not to impart to your prospec-
tive love-objects a homosexuality of one?
Far from inviting another person to join you in romantic bliss, far
from announcing to your suitors that you have learned the lesson of
the film, opened your soul to the possibility of gay love, and made
room in your life for someone to share it with, the invocation of
Brokeback Mountain indicates that you have no need or place in your
life for anyone else, because your inner world is fully occupied by the
gay romance you are already living out in it with utter and complete
sufficiency. You have so thoroughly anticipated your ideal relation-
ship, along with the enchanted evening on which you will meet the
love of your life across a crowded room, bar, or webpage, that you are
in fact unable to accommodate the real thing. Which is just as well,
since no actual relationship could possibly equal the satisfactions of
98 AMERICAN FALSETTOS
the imaginary romance you have been fervently enjoying in the soli-
tude of your own imagination, in the isolation of your singular ho
mosexuality.
%
Broadway, then, is not something that modern gay pride can be proud
of. Because this kind of gay culture, as well see in Chapter10, is so
inimical to gay eroticism, so deflating of sexual intensity, so antago-
nistic to the displays of stolid virility that solicit gay male sexual de-
sire, it produces widespread aversion on the part of gay men, at least
when they want to appear modern instead of archaicthat is, when
they wish to present themselves as sexual subjects and objects.
In fact, to judge from the evidence we have reviewed so far, gay
men nowadays have a tendency to treat the Broadway musicalor
Judy Garland, or Barbra Streisand, or grand opera, or any of the other
cultural artifacts that supposedly encode similar forms of archaic
gaymale sentimentwith phobic rejection, avoidance, repudiation.11
Like D.A. Millers polite but skittish love-object, gay men pride them-
selves on their easy and casual contempt for such artifacts, enjoying
the social and erotic credit they get by denouncing them, keeping
them at arms length, and disclaiming all personal susceptibility to
them. What is more, gay men often dis-identify from such artifacts
even or especially when they are profoundly moved by them. Or pro-
fessionally involved in producing them.
For all his love of the Broadway musical, or indeed because of it,
Miller himself was hardly immune to that tendency. On discovering
that a man he was dating not only owned some recordings of Broad-
way musicals, but had actually amassed a collection of them, Miller
suddenly heard himself exclaim,
My God, you really are gay. By which I must have been expressing,
not my amazement at the sexual orientation of my new friend, al-
ready established to my complete satisfaction, but my suddenly al-
tered sense of his standing within the gay milieu, as in a strange sort of
Whats Gayer Than Gay? 99
swimming pool where such acts of grown-up sex as we had been in-
tending to perform took place at the shallow end, with little danger
that, from whatever positions we came to assume, we couldnt at a
moments notice recover our land legs, while the kid stuff like listen-
ing to Broadway albums ... had required him to submit to a nearly
total immersion in what my first phobic ejaculation confirmed was
pretty deep water. (22)
%
Miller was determined to open homosexualitys closet door by at least
a good crack or two. He proceeded to do so by means of literary and
social analysis, demonstrating that it is possible to approach gay male
subjectivity without recourse to ego psychology. If we return to ex-
amine the three instances of queer subjectivity that Miller ascribed to
the proto-gay male child of the 1950s and that he identified as early
pre-sexual realities of gay experience, we find that they consist not in
aspects of an originary pathological formation, but in psychic inscrip-
tions upon the subject of the pathogenic consequences of living in a
homophobic social world. The affects involved are not specific to the
individual: they are collective and generic.
For example, the excessive sentimentality that was the necessary
condition of sentiments allowed no real object points not to some
typical or characteristic or distinctive identifying feature of gay male
subjectivity per se, but to the particular effects on the psychic life of
the Cold Warera gay male subject of his compulsory membership in
a society that made the merest possibility of openly expressing same-
sex desire or gender dissidence unimaginable and inconceivable, let
alone the possibility of acting on it and making it a prominent, public
part of daily life.
Similarly, since the Broadway musical flourished at a historical mo-
ment when nothing specifically gay could be allowed to enter the
realm of mass public representation, and since the gay men who cre-
ated it could do so only by engineering the systematic and absolute
exclusion of their own sexual identity from visibility within it, the
proto-gay response to the particular gayness of the Broadway musical
necessarily involved an awareness of the systematic and absolute ex-
clusion of gay male identity from overt recognition within the musi-
Whats Gayer Than Gay? 101
cal itself. That awareness was not simply a recognition of the absence
of gay men as such from the scene of cultural origination, but a real-
ization of the hopelessness of their ever being acknowledged under
that description by the cultural forms that they themselves had cre-
atedand thus an awareness of the utter hopelessness of any so-
cialacknowledgment of gay identity (3239). The Broadway musical
thereby taught its proto-gay adepts that their responsiveness to the
gayness of the genre could be expressed only on the condition of
their isolation and concealment.
[No boy was] ever so overwhelmed by his passion [for the Broadway
musical] that he forgot to manage the secrecy in which he indulged it,
or if he did, if once ... he was by some chance distracted enough to
omit to draw the curtains on his performance [i.e., singing and danc-
ing along with original-cast Broadway albums], so that other boys in
the neighborhood had been able to catch him in the act of vibrating
sympathetically to the numbers that neither he nor they had ever seen,
he soon understoodthat is to say, too latethat his sense of embar-
rassment had been given to him, like the gag reflex in his throat, to
warn against the social humiliation that must ensue if he were such a
cockeyed optimist as not to heed it. (11)
%
The genius of Millers approach to the Broadway musical is that it
enables him to inquire into gay male subjectivity and its constitution,
while side-stepping the psychic life of the individual by using a mass-
cultural form popular with gay men to document and to recover
thedistinctive organization of subjectivity produced in gay men as a
group by a specific set of historical and cultural conditions. That is an
irreducibly social approach to the constitution of gay subjectivity.
Millers emphasis on collective rather than individual subjective
formation was not, however, a strategy for escaping the psychic alto-
gether. Rather, its effect was to locate psychic life in the social rather
than in the merely personal.
Miller made that point clear in the course of explaining why gay
mens peculiar but shared investments in particular works of main-
stream popular culture might be a good source of information about
the distinctive features of gay male subjectivity.
The stuff of mass culture (as our first culture) conducts psychic flows
with an efficiency that the superior material of no second, later cul-
ture ever comes close to rivaling. It is by way of Shane, not Sophocles
or Freud, that Oedipus stalks our dreams. ... We do not begin to un-
derstand how fundamentally this stuff outfits our imagination of so-
cial space, and of our own (desired, represented, real) place in it, by
refusing to acknowledge the stains that such psychic flows may have
deposited in a given sample. On the contrary, our cathexes correspond
to an objective structure of soliciting, shaping, and storing them that
contributes far more to the significance of a work of mass culture than
the hackneyed aesthetic design, or the see-through ideological propo-
sition, that is all that remains when they are overlooked. (6869)
Whats Gayer Than Gay? 103
%
Ultimately, what the gay male love of the Broadway musical taught
Miller is the very lesson on which I have been insisting herea lesson
I originally learned from himnamely, that gay identity is inadequate
to the expression of gay subjectivity. Gay identity does a very bad job
of capturing what it feels like to be gay, because it fails to translate
into expressive form the full extent and range of gay desire. Even gay
sex, or its telltale signs, or the presence of gay men, or their public
visibility and acceptance are insuffic ient to the tasks of representing
what it feels like to be gay and expressing what gay men want. All those
things may stand in for us; they may denote who we are. But they do
not convey what we feel; they cannot by their mere presence embody
our emotional world, our longings and aspirations, our sentimental-
ity, our pleasures, the feelings that make us queer. The Broadway mu-
sical, for all its lack of specifically gay subject matter, comes a lot
closer and does a better job. As an aesthetic form, and as a specifically
gay genre, it gives expression to a kaleidoscopic range of queer emo-
tions, pleasures, and desires.
That does not mean that the Broadway musical performs such a
function for all gay men. Barry Adam, for example, claims to be com-
pletely unresponsive to the gay appeal of the Broadway musical. And
yet he does not hesitate to accept Millers claim that the musical offers
a clue to the workings of gay male subjectivity. I, for one, am not
alone in being left cold by the Broadway musical/opera complex that
is undeniably an important facet of culture for many gay men, Adam
104 AMERICAN FALSETTOS
%
The problem, or the paradox, is that the gay identity to which we
have entrusted our own politics, ethics, sex lives ... stands in an es-
sentially reductive relation to the desire on which it is based. Gay
identity is but a kind of homogenous precipitate that can never in it-
self suggest how variously such desire continues to determine the
density, color, taste of the whole richly embroiled solution out of
which, in so settled a state, only a small quantity of it has fallen (132).
Gay identity is therefore not up to the job of capturing or expressing
gay desire, which exceeds in its transformative, world-altering aspira-
tions and uncategorizable pleasures the comparatively humdrum per-
sons or themes that gay merely denominates.
In the era when all gay denotation was banned from Broadway, the
musical performed a much more gay-expressive double operation:
not only of hiding homosexual desire, but also of manifesting, across
all manner of landscapes, an extensive network of hiding placescall
them latenciesapparently ready-made for the purpose. The Broad-
way musical created a world in which gay desire, though never visi-
ble, was everywhere at home.
What made the Broadway musical so gay, in the end, was not that
it portrayed gay desire (it didnt), but that it realized it. By its wide-
ranging hospitality to gay desire as well as by its very form, whose
interruptive mode-shifting abolished normal, ordinary reality and re-
placed it with a lyrical, playful, wacky, ecstatic alternative, the musical
conveyed to certain kinds of gay spectators, even as it was being de-
nied, the homosexual disposition of the world (132133). Without ever
recognizing gay men, and in the very act of disavowing their exis-
tence, the Broadway musical permitted them to partake in queer
ways of being and feeling. It put them in imaginative and emotional
possession of a queer reality. It denied their identity, but it offered them a
world. Nothing short of that sublime vision, as Miller calls it (133),
could adequately expresswithout reducing, simplifying, or betray-
ingthe world-making force of gay desire.
164
THE QUEEN IS NOT DEAD
The response I got, however, was quite different from what I ex-
pected. My gay male students, who on the first day of class had in-
deed said gratifying and predictable things such as Im taking this
course because Ive waited my entire time in college to be able to take
a course like this, soon acted as if they were having second thoughts.
They certainly started looking very bored, and they ended up treating
the course like just any other tedious English class with a lot of diffi
cult reading to do and too many papers to write.
But thats not because they were completely insensible to the ap-
peal of gay culture. There was at least one thing that held their in
terest.
As the semester wore on, the attendance sheet I circulated to keep
track of student participation kept taking longer and longer to make
its way around the classroom. By the time it finally reached me, it was
lusciously decoratedmore and more floridly as the term drew to a
close. Some of the gay male students in the class, it turned out, were
compensating for their evident lack of interest in the assigned read-
ings and the class discussions by embellishing the back of the atten-
dance list with amusing drawings of various members of the class,
including myself on occasion, decked out in drag and embodying var-
ious female characters from The Golden Girls or Steel Magnolias (Fig
ures 2 and3).1
Those students may not have been fans of Judy Garland or the
Broadway musical (though who knows?), but they knew what they
liked.
In short, my students had no trouble responding to the queer
charm of certain non-gay representations. They enjoyed appropriat-
ing and queering works of mainstream, heterosexual culture. In fact,
they preferred doing that to reading gay novels. They got more of a
charge out of non-gay sources than they got out of the explicitly gay
texts we were supposed to be studying. At least, they discovered more
queer possibilities in adapting and remaking non-gay material, and
thus more uses for it, than they found in good gay writing.
The obvious conclusion was that the hard-won possibility of an
2 Attendance sheet for
thecourse entitled
Contemporary Gay Male
Fiction, University of
Michigan, November30,
1999. By kind permission
of Brent Caburnay.
open, uncensored, explicit, and reflective gay male literature had not
exactly extinguished the queer appeal of all that oblique, encrypted
material so beloved of traditional gay male culture. It still hasnt.
Coded, indirect, implicit, figural representations that somehow man-
age to convey the homosexual disposition of the world continue to
exercise a powerful attraction that unencoded, direct, explicit, literal
representations of gay men and gay life have trouble equaling. Such
coded material, though not itself gay-themed (any more than the
classic Broadway musical was), conforms to the requirements of gay
desire more closely, and often succeeds in expressing such desire bet-
ter, than gay identity or its tokens can do.2
Which is why gay men nowadays, who finally have the opportu-
nity to watch TV shows about gay men and gay life and gay sex, like
Queer as Folk, massively prefer Sex and the City or Desperate House-
wivesjust as D.A. Miller continued to prefer South Pacific or Gypsy to
La Cage aux Folles or Rent. (Of course, the fact that Queer as Folk used
to be the most moralistic show on television probably didnt help.)
%
Gay men routinely cherish non-gay artifacts and cultural forms that
realize gay desire instead of denoting it. They often prefer such works,
along with the queer meanings those works express, to explicit, overt,
thematically gay representations. There are in fact quantities of non-
gay cultural forms, artworks, consumer products, celebrities, and
performers that gay men invest with gay value. Cultural objects that
contain no explicit gay themes, that do not represent gay men, that
do not invoke same-sex desire, but that afford gay men opportunities
for colonizing them and making them over into vehicles of queer af
firmation exercise a perennial charm: they constantly get taken up by
gay male culture and converted to queer uses. These objects serve a
purpose that even positive images of gay men do not fulfill.
Like the Broadway musical, non-gay cultural forms offer gay men
a way of escaping from their particular, personal queerness into total,
global queerness. In the place of an identity, they promise a world. So
The Queen Is Not Dead 113
to end all queer anthems. Elton John went so far as to say it would
erase I Will Survive from our memories, our jukeboxes, and our
pride parades.5 Recognizing that she had been catapulted to pop star-
dom by her huge gay fan base, Gaga had been taking increasingly
overt and explicit political positions in favor of gay and lesbian rights;
in 2010 she had given political speeches and rallied her fans on be-
half of the repeal of Dont Ask, Dont Tell, the Cong ressional stat-
ute banning non-heterosexuals from serving openly in the U.S. mili-
tary.6 This political engagement culminated in her new single, Born
This Way, which insisted that God makes no mistakes and that
allof lifes disabilities (among which Gaga explicitly includes non-
standard sexualities and genders, homophobically enough, along with
non-White racial and ethnic identities) are therefore natural and right.
The song was a defiant defense of individual differences, particularly
of stigmatized ones which left you outcast, bullied or teased, and
an implicit rebuke to biblically based homophobia, especially of the
evangelical Christian variety, which holds homosexuality to be a sin-
ful choice rather than a natural, or innate, condition.7
Despite Elton Johns prediction, Gloria Gaynors 1978 disco classic
I Will Survive, which makes not the slightest reference to gay men,
will in all likelihood survive Born This Way. Gagas queer anthem
has left her gay fans grateful but underwhelmed. Commenting on the
general disappointment, Mark Simpson wrote, This is an atrocious,
disastrous mistake on Gagas part. ... And its because Im a fan Im
so disappointed. ... Its a catchy single, of course, and will make a lot
of money, but everything about this song is backwards. . . . Its as
if someone decided to remake The Rocky Horror Picture Show as a
GLAAD public service announcement, with Harvey Fierstein or Dan
Savage in the role of Frank-N-Furter.8
Gaga, in short, has simply mistaken the nature of her gay appeal.
The latter has a lot to do with everything that is not explicitly gay-
themed about her persona and her performance but that speaks to a
queer sensibility and subjectivityher outrageous look, her defiance
of normality, her collaboration with Beyonc, her reinvigoration of
116 AMERICAN FALSETTOS
%
We keep being told that gay culture is dead. Traditional gay male cul-
ture, or so the story goes, was tied to homophobia, to the regime of
The Queen Is Not Dead 117
the closet, to the Bad Old Days of anti-gay oppression. That is why it
is no longer relevant.12 Now that we have (some) gay rights, and even
gay marriage (in half a dozen states, at least, as well as in Canada, sev-
eral European countries, South Africa, Argentina, and Nepal), the
sense of exclusion, and of specialness, that gay men have long felt is
out of date. Once upon a time, gay culture was rooted in the aes-
theticism of maladjustment, as Daniel Harris calls it. With those
roots in social rejection and marginalization now definitively severed,
traditional gay culture is certain to wither away. In fact, it has already
withered away. The grain of sand, our oppression, that irritated the
gay imagination to produce the pearl of camp, has been rinsed away,
Harris explains, and with it, there has been a profound dilution of
the once concentrated gay sensibility.13
Similar arguments also used to be made about drag, highlight-
ingits outdatedness and forecasting its imminent disappearance. But
since drag continues all too obviously to live on, no doubt to the em-
barrassment of many, and since it continues to take new formsfrom
RuPauls Drag Race on the Logo Channel to late-night appropriations
of deserted Walmarts for drag displays by queer youththe reports
of its demise that continue to be issued seem increasingly to lack con
fidence and conviction.
In the case of gay culture in general, however, a death knell is con-
tinually sounded, often by forty-something gay men projecting their
sense of generational difference, as well as their utopian hopes for the
future, onto younger guysor anyone who represents the latest gen-
eration of gay men to emerge onto the scene. These kids are said to
live in a brave new world of acceptance and freedom, mercifully dif-
ferent from that prison house of oppression, that cage of exclusion
(albeit gilded ... with magnificent ornaments), which their elders
knew.14
If you want to gauge just how well younger gay men nowadays
are assimilated into American society at large, you only have to look
or so the advocates of this view insistat how ignorant of gay cul-
ture these boys are, how indifferent to it they are, how little need they
have of it. That, you are assured over and over again, is a particularly
118 AMERICAN FALSETTOS
telling sign: it shows that gay kids nowadays are happy and healthy
and well-adjusted. For the first time, starting apparently in the
1990s, according to Andrew Sullivan, a cohort of gay children and
teens grew up in a world where homosexuality was no longer a taboo
subject and where gay figures were regularly featured in the press.
The result of that change in mass-media representation, Sullivan con-
tends, was a complete merging of straight and gay worlds, as well as a
new fusion between straight and gay culture, with the latter now los-
ing its edge and distinctiveness:
If the image of gay men for my generation was one gleaned from the
movie Cruising or, subsequently, Torch Song Trilogy, the image for the
next one was MTVs Real World, Bravos Queer Eye, and Richard
Hatch winning the first Survivor. The new emphasis was on the in-
teraction between gays and straights and on the diversity of gay life
and lives. Movies featured and integrated gayness. Even more dramat-
ically, gays went from having to find hidden meaning in mainstream
filmssomehow identifying with the aging, campy female lead in a
way the rest of the culture missedto everyone, gay and straight, rec-
ognizing and being in on the joke of a character like Big Gay Al from
South Park or Jack from Will & Grace.15
Too bad no one bothered to tell my students. Maybe they would have
stopped identifying with The Golden Girls and immersed themselves
instead in The Swimming-Pool Library. Then I could have taught a suc-
cessful class on contemporary gay male fiction. And I wouldnt have
had to write this book.
%
In fact, the new generation of gay kids on whose behalf such declara-
tions are ostensibly made often refrain from making those kinds of
categorical assertions themselves. My lesbian and gay male students,
including the ones who later enrolled in How To Be Gay, may have
been properly skeptical of claims that a lot of arcane material from
obscure reaches of American popular culture in the distant past some-
how constitutes their culture, but they did not insist that gay culture
The Queen Is Not Dead 119
%
What all this indicates to me is that gay identitythe concept on
which the entire design of my class on contemporary gay male litera-
ture was implicitly and uncritically baseddoes not answer, even
now, to what many gay men want when they look for gay representa-
tions. Gay culture may or may not be dead, but the politicized and
sexualized gay identity that was supposed to replace it, that many of
us were convinced actually had replaced it, has not exactly prevailed
over it. And traditional gay culture itself refuses to disappear com-
pletely. Like homophobia, it is adept at taking new forms and finding
new expression.
Gay people have been reluctant to recognize this. And they have
been even slower to acknowledge it. Gay identity, or some post-gay
version of it, remains what many gay people think they want. It is
what they think they prefer to traditional gay culture. But only until,
for instance, they encounter an identity-based politics, or movement,
or literaturea literature, written by gay authors, that actually por-
trays gay people and gay life. Confronted by such an identity-based
culture, by the world they thought they had wanted, many gay peo-
ple become rapidly and radically disillusioned with it.
The Queen Is Not Dead 121
%
One implication of all this, and not the least surprising one, is that
some young gay men today may well have more in common with gay
men in the period before Stonewall than anyone of my generation
has been prepared to believe or to admit. Perhaps, in some important
122 AMERICAN FALSETTOS
respects, Stonewall did not make such a huge difference after all. De-
spite the vast historical and social changes in the conditions of gay
male life that have taken place over the past fifty years, gay kids con-
tinue to grow up in a straight world, straight culture continues to
matter deeply to them, and gay male culture still operates through
and indeed thrives ona metaphorical or figural reading of straight
culture: a reappropriation of it that is also a resistance to it.
Furthermore, what gay men have always sought out is not only
direct or literal representations of themselves, but also figural or met-
aphorical or encoded or encrypted representations of gay desire.
There seems to be something about figurality itself that they like. And its
not hard to figure out what that is. For by freeing the imagination
from the confines of a particular, literal representation of gay male
identity, figuration is more easily able to convey what D. A. Miller
called the homosexual disposition of the world. It is better able to
capture the kaleidoscopic range and breadth of gay subjectivity. It
therefore stands a better chance of answering to the needs of gay de-
sire and queer pleasure.
Another way of putting this is to say that gay identity affirms itself
not only through identity, an experience of sameness with other gay
men like oneself, but also through identification, the feeling of close-
ness to, or affinity with, other peoplewith anything and everything
that is not oneself. Identific ation, too, expresses desire: a desire to
bring oneself into relation with someone or something that is differ-
ent from oneself.
So if gay men of an earlier era knew how to attune themselves to
gay aspects of the Judy Garland persona, maybe it wasnt only be-
cause they didnt have Barney Frank or Rufus Wainwright or Ander-
son Cooper to identify with instead. And maybe it wasnt just because
they were oppressed or did not enjoy the right to marry. Perhaps they
were seeking a wider range of expression. Perhaps they were looking
for a way of imaginatively expanding their experience, going beyond
themselves, escaping from the known world, and realizing their de-
sires without being limited by who they were. That may well have
been the whole point of identifying with Judy Garland: she wasnt a
The Queen Is Not Dead 123
gay man, but in certain respects she could somehow express gay de-
sire, what gay men want, better than a gay man could. That is, she
could actually convey something even gayer than gay identity itself.17
Similarly, young gay men today evidently continue to find mean-
ing and value in artifacts of heterosexual culture that were not cre-
ated for them but that they can make their own and invest with a vari
ety of queer significations. The kinds of relations they can create with
those objects serve to express a richer sense of what it means to them
to be gay than the more straightforward audience relations that they
can establish with images of gay men.
Which is the point that D.A. Miller made about the pre-Stonewall
Broadway musical: its queer figurality offered a more satisfactory an-
swer to gay desire than any representation of gay men possibly
could.
So here is the lesson I took from my failure to interest my gay male
students in contemporary gay male fiction. Instead of asking what on
earth we would still want with the Broadway musicalor with torch
songs, divas, grand opera, old movies, or the perfect interiornow
that we have gay identity and gay sex, I concluded, rather against my
better instincts, that the more pressing question to ask was the oppo-
site one: Why on earth would we want gay identity, when we have (as
we have always had) gay identification? Why would we want Edmund
White, when we still have The Golden Girls? Or rather, since there are
very good reasons for wanting to have gay identity, and gay men, at
least some of the time, we might wonder what gay identification does
for us that gay identity cannot do. And what it is exactly that Judy Gar-
land or the Broadway musical or other congenial artifacts of main-
stream culture offer us that an explicit, open, unencrypted gay male
culture does not provide. I actually didnt much like those questions;
they didnt make me very comfortable. But I wanted to find some an-
swers to them. Thats why I decided to teach How To Be Gay.
%
The only real reward for asking such difficult and unwelcome ques-
tions is the prospect that any successful answers to them we manage
124 AMERICAN FALSETTOS
All the more striking, then, that it has been so seldom examined.
Queer studies of popular media abound, but nearly all of them focus
on the cultural object, and perform an ideological critique of it, dem-
onstrating how that object is shaped by and reproduces the regimes
The Queen Is Not Dead 125
+++
%
Any number of considerations make the attempt to speak of gay
male culture risky, problematic, even inadvisable. The foremost dan-
Culture and Genre 133
%
One advantage of focusing our inquiry on gay culture, instead of on
gay people, is that it allows us effectively to side-step essentialist ques-
tions. We can avoid becoming entangled in debates about whether
gay people are different from non-gay people, or whether gay cul-
ture applies only, or primarily, to some classes or races or genera-
tions or nationalities, but not to others. The point is not to evade the
136 WHY ARE THE DRAG QUEENS LAUGHING?
%
Lets begin with an observation made forty years ago by the anthro-
pologist Esther Newton. In her 1972 book, Mother Camp, a pathbreak-
ing ethnographic study of female impersonators and drag queens
inChicago and Kansas City, Newton remarks that one of the most
confounding aspects of my interaction with the impersonators was
their tendency to laugh at situations that to me were horrifying or
tragic.13
According to her own admission, Newton was confounded by
a queer violation of the boundary between genres. Situations that
arehorrifying or tragic should not elicit laughter from those who
Culture and Genre 139
confusion and perplexity. After all, she insists, those situations were
horrifying or tragic to me in ways she could not apparently deny.
Bizarre as it might seem, and reluctant as Newton was to believe it,
laughing at tragedy is really what Newtons drag queens appeared to
her to be doing. No wonder Newton was confounded. But, then,
thats why anthropologists do ethnography in the first place. People
who belong to other cultures do strange things, things that mystify
anthropologists, and it is the business of anthropologists to inform us
about them and, if possible, to explain them.
%
Gay male culture, it turns out, actually has a long history of laughing
at situations that to others are horrifying or tragic. One must have a
heart of stone, Oscar Wilde said, to read the death of Little Nell [in
Charles Dickenss novel The Old Curiosity Shop] without laughing.
Straight sentimentalityespecially when its arm-twisting emotional
power seems calculated to mobilize and to enforce a universal con-
sensus, to impose a compulsory moral feelingis just begging for an
ironic response, and gay male culture readily provides it by treating
such sentimentality as a laughable aesthetic failure, thereby resisting
its moral and emotional blackmail.
Similarly, the scenes of sadistic cruelty and abuse in Robert Al-
drichs gothic psycho-thriller, What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?
scenes that shocked American audiences with their brutality and hor-
ror when the film was released in 1962elicit gales of laughter from
gay male audiences, who delight in the melodramatic confrontations
between Bette Davis and Joan Crawford, those ancient Hollywood ri-
vals, both playing once-glamorous and now-fallen stars locked in a
demented battle for supremacy: grotesque, extravagant images of a
monstrous, abject femininity.
Tony Kushners apocalyptic play Angels in America offers a more re-
cent example of this gay male cultural tendency to violate the generic
expectations proper to comedy and tragedy, and to do so once again
by taking a degraded femininity as its comic target. At one particu-
Culture and Genre 141
larly poignant moment in the play, the suffering Prior Walter, ravaged
by AIDS and demoralized by his lovers abandonment of him amid
the misery of his illness, encounters the dowdy Mormon mother of
the clean-cut, square-jawed man his former boyfriend has run off
with. This personage, newly arrived in New York from Utah, asks him
curiously if he is a typical homosexual. Me? Oh Im stereotypical,
he replies grimly and defiantly, making an effort to overcome his pain
and exhaustion. Are you a hairdresser? she pursues. At which point
Prior, breaking down and bursting into tears, exclaims, Well it would
be your lucky day if I was because frankly...14
Priors inspired repartee wittily defuses a potentially hurtful en-
counter by at once embracing and refuting gay stereotypes, contest-
ing their power to pigeonhole, reduce, trivialize, and exotify him. His
biting mockery turns the tables on his clueless tormentor, even as
he stereotypically assertsin the midst of physical and emotional
collapsehis undiminished critical capacity to adjudicate matters of
taste and fashion. The jarring effect produced by such an incongru-
ous, wrenching juxtaposition of the horrifying and the hilarious is
what gives a particularly sharp edge to the emotional intensity of the
scene. Here the audience is actually being provoked, propelledand,
in that sense, instructedby the gay playwright to laugh at a situa-
tion that is both horrifying and tragic, and that remains so even as the
audiences emotional involvement in it is punctured, though by no
means halted or abolished, by the camp put-down of straight imper-
viousness to self-lacerating gay irony, to the doubleness of gay male
speech.
This technique of pivoting from horror to humor and back again
is in fact typical of gay male cultural productionand it is a promi-
nent element in the broader gay male response to HIV/AIDS. The
English playwright Neil Bartlett, in an interview given in the early
1990s, at about the same time that Kushner was finishing Angels in
America, describes a similar moment in a different play that also deals
with mortal illness. The play is by Charles Ludlam, whose Ridiculous
Theatrical Company in New York specialized in pastiche, as well as
142 WHY ARE THE DRAG QUEENS LAUGHING?
I think the blow-job gag in the final act of Camille is the funniest thing
ever performed. Its this absolutely great moment where youre really
cryingits the final act of Camille and shes in bed [dying of consump-
tion] and Armand [her lover] is there. ... [I]ts very moving and youre
going, I am about to be terribly moved, this is really going to get to
me. And she starts coughing, and he [the actor playing Camille] re-
produces precisely Maria Callass cough, and Armand is sitting by the
side of the bed, and she starts coughing and coughs more and more,
and eventually collapses into Armands lap, and everyone thinks that
shes coughing, and then the maid comes in and goes, Oh! Im sorry!
The leap from Camille to this terrible, terrible gag ... And the maid
communicates this delicious sense of, Oh, theyve got back together
again, she cant be too bad, things are looking up. Its heaven! That is
one of the great moments of world theatre.15
%
In order to specify the exact nature of the cultural work performed
by this insistent, and persistent, violation of generic boundariesa
transgressive practice characteristic of gay male culture, which seems
determined to teach us to laugh at situations that are horrifying or
tragicI am going to examine in detail the gay male reception, ap-
propriation, and queering of one classic artifact of American popular
culture. The analysis of that artifact will occupy the central portion
of this book, spanning Parts Three and Four. By taking up this one
example, I will try to describe how gay male culture generates and
elaborates a distinctive way of feeling, and a unique way of relating
to the world, through its practice of reappropriating bits of main-
stream culture and remaking them into vehicles of gay or queer
meaning. Instead of attempting a comprehensive survey of gay male
148 WHY ARE THE DRAG QUEENS LAUGHING?
culture and demonstrating how each and every instance of gay male
cultural appropriation workshow it decodes a mainstream hetero-
sexual cultural object and recodes it with queer valuesI will focus
on the queering of one particular item. I will have everything I can do
simply to account for its gay male appeal and its queer uses and re-
uses. For I will be dealing with the ethos of a genrewith the partic-
ular way a genre makes you feeland, thus, with the content of form
itself. What Ill have to specify, in particular, is not the meaning of a
representation, but the substance of a style.
And Ill have to consider this single instance of gay male cultural
subversion from a number of different angles in order to bring out all
of its dimensions. Its challenge to heteronormative culture is wide-
ranging; its implications are complex and vast.
At the same time, the logic behind gay male cultures selection and
reutilization of this particular item appears more clearly when that
choice can be examined in the light of the highly distinctive gay male
cultural practice that Esther Newton describednamely, the practice
of laughing at situations that are horrifying or tragic.
The reappropriation and queering of this one object, then, will not
only confirm the typicality of that gay male cultural practice. More
important, it will illustrate how gay male culture produces through
that practice a set of crucial and profound transformations in a con-
stellation of mainstream valuesvalues that bear on sex and gender
but that go far beyond them.
184
T H E PA S S I O N O F T H E C R AW F O R D
M ildred Pierce, the film directed by Michael Curtiz for which Joan
Crawford won an Oscar in 1945, is a gay male cult classic. To be sure,
it is only one of many old movies that hold a place of honor in tradi-
tional gay male culture, and it is hardly the most prominent among
them. But it has never entirely lost its appeal. Along with such films as
The Women (1939), Johnny Guitar (1954), What Ever Happened to Baby
Jane? (1962), and Strait-Jacket (1964), Mildred Pierce helped Crawford
achieve her status as a notorious gay icon.
Just how notorious is Joan Crawfords gay cult status? Well, check
out Michael Lehmanns 1989 film Heathers. When in that movie Chris-
tian Slater and Winona Ryder kill two football jocks at their high
school and disguise the murder as a gay double suicide, they establish
the sexual identity of their victims beyond a shadow of a doubt by
planting on them, along with a fake suicide note, a number of telltale
homosexual artifacts, as they call themincluding mascara, a bot-
tle of mineral water, and, most notably, a Joan Crawford postcard.
That joke works because it appeals to homophobic clichsthe
kind of homophobic clichs that dumb football jocks and their dolt-
ish parents are likely to accept as gospel. But the Joan Crawford cult is
not just an outmoded stereotype. Gay boys are still collecting Joan
Crawford postcards. Two decades after Heathers, the spring 2008 issue
of a gay travel magazine called The Out Traveler (a spin-off from Out
150 WHY ARE THE DRAG QUEENS LAUGHING?
The clippings, cigarette cards, rare vintage photos, letters, film reels,
and scrapbooks of 32-year-old San Francisco resident and Crawford
devotee Neil Maciejewskis expansive collection prove just why this
classic Hollywood mommie truly was the dearest. Get a history les-
son and a preview of the wares on his website, then e-mail for a pri-
vate viewing at his Noe Valley home. LegendaryJoanCrawford.com1
Contrast all this with the response of straight film critic David Denby:
Must we hate Joan Crawford?2 Denbys presumptively inclusive
we ignores, and excludes, a lot of gay men.
So what is it about Joan Crawford? And where do we locate the
source of the apparent truth, universally acknowledged, that a young
man in possession of a Joan Crawford postcard must necessarily be
gayor, at least, could not possibly be straight? What produced that
bit of seemingly incontrovertible folk wisdom?
And what, to take another example, is the particular point of fea-
turing Joan Crawford in the opening section of an elegy to the gen-
erations of men lost to AIDS by the Black gay poet Craig G. Harris?
Marc with a c
Steven with a v
and a hyphen in between,
thank you,
hed explain,
and God help you
The Passion of the Crawford 151
analysis. But we can narrow down the topic, and get a manageable
grip on it, by concentrating our attention on Mildred Pierce and by
making use of the framework set up in the previous chapter. To judge
from that one movie, and a number of other Crawford vehicles as
well, Joan Crawford excelled in the portrayal of strong women who
nonetheless fall victim, at least for a while, to the potential horror and
tragedy of normal family life. In the decades following Mildred Pierce,
Crawford tried to capitalize on her success in that film, specializing
insimilar roles and making them her trademark, her own personal
brand, defined by a signature combination of glamour and abjection
(that is, extreme, degrading humiliation).5
Does gay male culture teach us to laugh at Joan Crawford, then?
Itwould be inaccurate to reduce the gay male cultural response to
Crawford, and to the horrifying or tragic domestic situations into
which Hollywood loved to plunge her, to anything quite so simple as
laughterthough laughter clearly does contribute to that response.
At least, there is nothing simple or straightforward about the kind of
laughter that emanates from those audiences whom gay male culture
has trained to respond to horrifying or tragic situations with such in-
congruous, confounding hilarity. In this case, laughter itself, the mere
fact of it, does not register other crucial aspects of the gay male cul-
tural responsesuch as the intensity of the identification with the fe-
male star, or the depth of intoxication with her and her dramatic situ-
ationalthough it may be a sign of them.
%
So lets take a closer look at Mildred Pierce and examine a few details in
it, one at a time. We can begin by considering a single line spoken by
Crawford in a single memorable scene, the most notoriously shock-
ing and celebrated scene in the entire movie.6 Not coincidentally, the
line solicits parody and reperformance from gay menat least, if one
of my former boyfriends is at all typical.
Here is the context. Mildred Pierce is a doting, dutiful, self-
sacrificing, martyred mother, blindly devoted to her selfish, unfeel-
ing,ungrateful, scheming, vicious, hateful, greedy, no-good daughter,
The Passion of the Crawford 153
shot (1) Fade up on veda, reclining on sofa. She takes the check in both
hands and kisses it.
veda: Well, thats that.
veda rights herself. Pan out to reveal mildred standing nearby.
mildred: Im sorry this had to happen. Sorry for the boy. He seemed
very nice.
veda: Oh, Teds all right, really. [laughs] Did you see the look on his
face when we told him he was going to be a father?
mildred: I wish you wouldnt joke about it. [crosses behind sofa]
veda: Mother, youre a scream, really you are. [turns to face mildred,
kneels on sofa] The next thing I know, youll be knitting little gar-
ments.
mildred: I dont see anything so ridiculous about that.
5 Frame capture from Mildred Pierce (Michael Curtiz, 1945). Mildred and Veda struggle over the check.
6 Frame capture from Mildred Pierce (Michael Curtiz, 1945). Veda slaps Mildred.
7 Frame capture from Mildred Pierce (Michael Curtiz, 1945). Mildred collapses against the railing of the
stairway.
8 Frame capture from Mildred Pierce (Michael Curtiz, 1945). Get out before I kill you.
9 Frame capture from Mildred Pierce (Michael Curtiz, 1945). A parting glance.
veda: If I were you, Id save myself the trouble. [rises, crosses room]
mildred [realizing, crosses to veda, puts hands on her shoulders]: Youre
not going to have a baby?
veda [turning away]: At this stage its a matter of opinion, and in my
opinion Im going to have a baby. [puts check into purse] I can always
be mistaken. [closes purse, puts it on table]
mildred: How could you do such a thing? How could you?
veda: I got the money, didnt I?
mildred: Oh, I see.
veda [crosses to stairs]: Ill have to give Wally part of it to keep him
quiet, but theres enough left for me.
156 WHY ARE THE DRAG QUEENS LAUGHING?
mildred: The money. Thats what you live for, isnt it? Youd do any-
thing for money, wouldnt you? Even blackmail.
veda: I can get away from this shack with its cheap furniture, and
this town and its dollar days, and its women that wear uniforms
and its men that wear overalls. [turns back to table, picks up purse]
mildred: Veda, I think Im really seeing you for the first time in my
life, and youre cheap and horrible.
veda: You think just because you made a little money you can get a
new hairdo and some expensive clothes and turn yourself into a
lady.
veda: But you cant. Because youll never be anything but a common
frump,
veda: ... whose father lived over a grocery store and whose mother
took in washing.
veda: With this money I can get away from every rotten stinking
thing that makes me think of this place or you.
shot (10) return to (1). veda turns and runs upstairs with purse.
shot (14) close on mildred. We hear a door slam. Pull in, then fade out.
%
In real life, Joan Crawford adopted five children, the eldest of which
was a girl named Christina. In adulthood, Christina Crawford wrote a
best-selling memoir about Life with Mother, called Mommie Dearest,
in which she recounted Crawfords demented, alcoholic abuse of her
adoptive children.9 The autobiography was made into a film of the
same title in 1981, with Faye Dunaway in the title role.
That movie is an even more notorious gay male cult classic than
Mildred Pierce. It is famous in particular for the scene in which Craw-
ford, in a drunkenly sentimental mood, enters her childrens bedroom
at night and, suddenly appalled at the sight of a wire hanger incon-
gruously suspended amid the delicate, matching upholstered hangers
carefully chosen for her daughters wardrobe, violently beats Chris-
tina with it and trashes her room. In the same issue of The Out Trav-
eler that encouraged its readers to visit The Legendary Joan Craw-
ford Collection in San Francisco, so that they could discover just
why this classic Hollywood mommie truly was the dearest, a sepa-
160 WHY ARE THE DRAG QUEENS LAUGHING?
rate article entitled The Best Gay-Owned Spas in the U.S. noted that
the Mexican-born gay skin care guru Enrique Ramirez was offering
female clients at his Face to Face spa in New York the Mommie Dear-
est Massage to relieve edema and back pain during pregnancy (dont
worry, no wire hangers are used).10
Mommie Dearest contains a number of other scenes that replay, in
their own extravagant way, the mother-daughter conflict so memora-
bly portrayed in Mildred Pierce. Here is one of them, along with the
background you need to understand it. Christina has been caught
making out with a boy at her boarding school; her mother has
beencalled andagainst both her daughters wishes and the advice
of theheadmistresshas indignantly removed her daughter from the
school. Mother and daughter (the one righteous, the other sullen) ar-
rive home, where a reporter from a womens magazine has taken up
residence in order to do an in-depth story about Joan Crawfords pro-
fessional and domestic life (Figures 1016).
joan [turning to tina, with quiet intensity]: All right. Tina, look at me.
Barbara Bennett is here from New York doing a cover story on me
for Redbook. Tina, look at me when Im talking to you.
11 Frame capture from Mommie Dearest (Frank Perry, 1981). Joan checks out the damage.
12 Frame capture from Mommie Dearest (Frank Perry, 1981). Why cant you give me the respect that Im
entitled to?
162 WHY ARE THE DRAG QUEENS LAUGHING?
13 Frame capture from Mommie Dearest (Frank Perry, 1981). Joan loses it.
14 Frame capture from Mommie Dearest (Frank Perry, 1981). Joan strangling Christina.
barbara: Movie star manages to have it all: career, home, and fam-
ily. [stretches out arms]
15 Frame capture from Mommie Dearest (Frank Perry, 1981). Joan and Christina, seen from above amid
the wreckage.
16 Frame capture from Mommie Dearest (Frank Perry, 1981). Joan defiant.
barbara [slight pause, then trying to cover the tension]: Well, how do
you like school?
tina: Very much, thank you.
shot (23) tina and joan proceed through foyer to opposite side, tina in
lead. Pan along through to room opposite. joan slams purse on table,
faces tina.
joan [now raising her voice]: Why do you deliberately defy me?
barbara: Joan.
joan: Leave us alone, Barbara. If you need anything, ask Carol Ann.
[barbara turns and leaves]
joan: What?
tina:Dont you act for me. I wanna know. Why did you adopt me?
joan: I dont ask much from you, girl. WHY CANT YOU GIVE ME
THE RESPECT THAT IM ENTITLED TO? WHY CANT YOU
TREAT ME LIKE I WOULD BE TREATED BY ANY STRANGER
ON THE STREET?
The Passion of the Crawford 167
shot (52) shot of glass-topped end table with lamp. tina falls backward
onto it, joan on top of her, her hands around tinas throat. Table buck-
les, lamp crashes to floor.
tina: Mommie!
shot (55) tina and joan viewed from behind, joan on knees astride
tina.
shot (59) return to (54). barbara and carol ann enter and pull
joan off tina.
carol ann: Joan, get off! Get off, youre gonna kill her!
joan rises, screaming.
168 WHY ARE THE DRAG QUEENS LAUGHING?
shot (60) return to (58). tina manages to kick joan off. joan rises to
her knees, grabs her crotch. barbara and carol ann on their knees in
the background. tina rolling around and choking in foreground.
I once heard an entire movie theater full of gay men (or was it a
video bar?) shout at the screen, in unison with the actress, and in a
single voice, I AM NOT ONE OF YOUR FANS! The better-known
line, however, which some of those gay men also declaimed, is the
one immediately preceding it: WHY CANT YOU GIVE ME THE
RESPECT THAT IM ENTITLED TO?
Once again, the same questions arise. Why these lines? Why this
scene? Why the delectation with which gay male culture affection-
ately rehearses these moments of horror and abuse? And how does
the scene in Mommie Dearest repeat and reinterpret similar dramatic
moments from Mildred Pierce?
Instead of trying to answer those questions right awaywe will
get to them, eventuallylet us consider a third and final cinematic
example.
%
Half a century after the release of Mildred Pierce, John Eppersona
gay male drag performer, better known by his stage name, Lypsinka
restaged the foregoing scene from Mommie Dearest. In a perfor-
mance at the New York drag festival called Wigstock, Epperson com-
bined the scene from Mommie Dearest with other moments from the
same movie, plus the rousing song But Alive from the Broadway
musical Applause! (based on that other gay male cult classic, Joseph L.
Mankiewiczs 1950 film All about Eve), where the song is set in a gay
bar. (Epperson has since gone on to mount entire one-man/woman
shows about Joan Crawford called Lypsinka Is Harriet Craig! and, more
recently, The Passion of the Crawford.)11 The performance was recorded
The Passion of the Crawford 169
17 Frame capture from Wigstock: The Movie (Barry Shils, 1995). Lypsinka: You, you deliberately
embarrass me in front of a reporter.
18 Frame capture from Wigstock: The Movie (Barry Shils, 1995). Lypsinka being fierce.
in a 1995 film called Wigstock: The Movie, directed by Barry Shils, which
includes both performance clips and interviews with the performers.
No transcription can do justice to Eppersons routine (Figures 1718).
Heres the best one I can provide.
shot (1) shot from audience. Musical fanfare. lypsinka removes her black
cloak to reveal a petite, cream-colored dress beneath.
lypsinka: Well, how do I look? [laughs]
170 WHY ARE THE DRAG QUEENS LAUGHING?
shot (3) shot from audience. lypsinka crouches down, runs her hand
over back of a loudspeaker as though checking for dirt, then rises, examin-
ing her hand.
shot (5) shot from audience. lypsinka addresses entourage and audience
alternately.
shot (6) shot from stage right. lypsinka turns from entourage in resig-
nation.
shot (8) shot inside studio, as lypsinka and entourage rehearse this
number out of costume. lypsinka crouches in front of room, examining
hand as before, then rises to address entourage.
lypsinka: How? How could this happen? How could you humiliate
me this way? [lypsinka mimes slapping member of entourage.]
lypsinka: Look at me. Why cant you give
shot (10) shot from stage right. lypsinka crosses stage right. Dancing
The Passion of the Crawford 171
barbara: as Barbara.
lypsinka: Barbara
shot (14) shot of barbara from stage right. barbara mimes pulling
something off of lypsinkas skirt and stomping on it.
lypsinka: The name Lypsinka tells you what youre going to see,
but it also drips with irony, I think, this name, um, and I wanted
the name to evoke also an exotic, one-name fashion model, i.e.,
Verushka, or Dovima, or Wilhelmina: Lypsinka.
172 WHY ARE THE DRAG QUEENS LAUGHING?
shot (23) shot of lypsinka and barbara from upper stage right.
lypsinka: Sooner or later, um, it just sort of became real that, um, I
was used as a female model, and in 91 Thierry Mugler actually had
the nerve to put me on his runway in Paris. And Ive done a lot of
fashion stuff since then.
shot (25) cut back to stage, shot from upper stage right.
shot (26) cut to shot of lypsinka and barbara from rear of stage.
The Passion of the Crawford 173
entourage [sings]: Shes here, shes here, can you believe it?
Shes here, oh, god, I cant believe it!
Shes here, its just too groovy to believe! Woooh!
Pan out to include lypsinka, stage left. lypsinka rolls her eyes, sticks out
tongue at audience.
shot (28) shot from upper stage right. Having put barbara down, en-
tourage dances, arms upraised.
shot (30) shot from audience. lypsinka center stage. Dance. lypsinka,
appearing to grow dizzy, staggers upstage.
shot (31) shot from upstage right. lypsinka crosses upstage to join en-
tourage.
In reading the transcription of this film clip, you will have noticed
how the crowd of mostly gay men watching Lypsinkas performance
cheers wildly at her delivery of the line, Why cant you give me the
respect that Im entitled to? They know that line. They hear it com-
ing. They love it. They respond to it. And they celebrate Lypsinkas
delivery of it.
Not only, then, has Joan Crawford, along with her implication in
these violent scenes of mother-daughter conflict, been taken up by
gay male culture and made the focus of reperformance and parody.
She has also elicited a characteristic response that is both distinctive
and specific to gay male culture. Straight male culture does not re
produce itself by transmitting to each new generation of boys a de-
tailed knowledge of these movies, nor does it teach its members to
learn selected lines from Mommie Dearest by heart, nor does it stage
festivals at which those lines are repeated in front of audiences who
await them with anticipation and greet them with enthusiasm. Les-
bian bars may occasionally show clips from Mommie Dearest, but
themovie is not a staple of heterosexual female cultural institutions,
nor does it enjoy the cult status among women of, say, Thelma and
Louise.
To be sure, not all gay men know these movies, reperform these
lines, or restage these scenes of horror in a comic mode. And the Joan
Crawford cult, though still current, is undoubtedly showing its age.
But the gay male world has created certain enduring social institu-
tions that make it possible for these particular moments from straight,
mainstream culture to be selected, decontextualized, replayed, and
recoded with queer meanings. And the circulation and communal
sharing of these queered cinematic moments appear to play a crucial
The Passion of the Crawford 175
role in the social process by which people, both gay and straight, are
initiated into the culture of male homosexuality, come to recognize it
as such, and gradually forge a sense of personal and cultural iden-
tityif only to the extent of participating in festivals like Wigstock.
This procedure is one crucial element of the cultural practice of male
homosexuality, an important part of the initiatory process by which
gay men as well as many others learn how to be gay.
%
If there were any doubt that straight culture and gay culture, irre-
spective of the sexuality of the individuals who happen to participate
in those cultures, understand the logic of genre differently, and there-
fore respond dissimilarly to the staging of horrifying or tragic situa-
tionsif there were any doubt about any of that, a glance at the next
example would suffice to dispel it.
Consider a few of the 230 comments on the movie version of Mom-
mie Dearest that have been posted to the Amazon.com retail website.
Some of the writers see nothing humorous about the film or about
Faye Dunaways performance. They say things like this (I am quoting
them directly):
I find nothing funny about it. It has the usual jokes now and then, but
truly Ive never even cracked a smile while watching this movie, it was
never meant to be funny. There is nothing funny about child abuse,
alcoholism, or any of the other themes shown in this movie.
Ive always believed that this film has been misunderstood. Admittedly
I can understand why people would laugh at scenes like the one where
Faye Dunaway shouts to her daughter, Tina, bring me the ax! But is
child abuse really funny? I dont think so. I must admit that the scenes
of child abuse, perhaps exploitative, are chilling and realistic.
This movie was downright brutal. How could anyone treat their kids
that way? I mean, she got mad if her daughter used wire hangers. She
only allowed her kid to have one toy for their birthday and Christmas.
If she was my mom I would have to kill myself to be in peace!!!
176 WHY ARE THE DRAG QUEENS LAUGHING?
I didnt laugh or smile at any of this the slightest bit. I guess you peo-
ple are incredibly insensitive to child abuse or something. You just
lowered my opinion of the human race by several notches. Id like
to move to another planet where people dont think this movie is
funny.
If you dont love this movie youre dead. It made me uneasy when I
first saw it as a young teenager. Now its so horrible that it soars on ev
ery level. Its a train wreck, and youll love it.
The Passion of the Crawford 177
I have to say that Im baffled by the people who actually take this
movie seriously and are seemingly offended by those of us who feel it
has well deserved its claim to the titlecampiest movie of all time!
The most awesome movie of all time. Its incredible from beginning
to end. Ive seen it close to 100 times, and can lip synch absolutely ev
ery scene in my sleep. The planets and stars lined up on this one.
Girl, this movie is too much! Miss Dunaway deserved an Oscar for
playing the legendary Joan Crawford, who adopted two blonde brats
who constantly interfered with her career. Tina got a ghetto beating
for using wire hangers and not eating her rare meat for lunch. How
DARE that blonde jezebel wench disrespect Miss Crawford?! I also
liked the part when Joan choked Tina after she made that flip com-
ment Im not one of your FANS! Thatll teach her! All in all, an ex-
cellent movie with fabulous costumes, makeup, set design, and what-
not. You go, Miss Crawford!12
%
At the annual Invasion of the Pinesa drag event that takes place
every Fourth of July in New Yorks gay vacation colony on Fire Is-
landa prominent presence for years was the contingent of Ital
ian widows. These were gay men of Mediterranean descent who
dressed in the black frocks and veils donned by Italian peasant women
upon the death of their husbands.15
In southern Italy and Sicily, the permanent wearing of black sets
these women apart and makes them highly visible figures of mourn-
ing, authority, seniority, and autonomy in traditional village life. The
Fire Island Italian widows could be seen as a mere spoof of that con-
ventional female role and of the potent performative identity of Ital
ian widowhoodan outright parody of straight societys high moral
drama of family values, gender subordination, and sentimental seri-
ousnessif it werent for the fact that the Italian widows at the Pines
were all men who had themselves lost lovers, friends, or members of
their local community to AIDS.
The Fire Island Italian widows were not just performing a mock-
ery of mourning, then. They were also performing the real thing.
Their grief was at once parodic and real. Their annual appearance at
180 WHY ARE THE DRAG QUEENS LAUGHING?
tic of the rural working class: the American equivalent of the peasant
class to which black-clad Italian widows belong. The Quilt took care
not to aspire to the dignity or grandeur of a conventional (heroic,
masculine) funerary monument. Instead, it positively courted an ap-
pearance of unseriousness, even of laughable triviality (albeit on a
vast scale), thereby both anticipating and preempting potential depre-
ciation.
Public expressions of grief for the death of gay lovers tend to come
off as a bad imitation, a spoof, or at most an appropriation of hetero-
sexual pathos, and thus an unintended tribute to it. The Fire Island
Italian widows, occupying as they already did the cultural space of
parodyof the fake, the derivative, the out of place, the disallowed,
the unserioushad only one way to impose their grief publicly, and
that was by embracing the social devaluation of their feelings through
a parodic, exaggerated, melodramatic, self-mocking, grotesque, ex-
plicitly role-playing, stylized performance.
Through drag, in short.
Only by fully embracing the stigma itself can one neutralize the
sting and make it laughable, concludes Esther Newton.17
%
Here, then, is yet another instance in which gay men appear to ex-
press their distinctive subjectivity, and to perform acts of cultural re-
sistance, by channeling flamboyant, hyperbolic, or ludicrous displays
of female suffering. Which raises a disturbing question. It might seem
that gay male culture incites us to laugh not at situations that are hor-
rifying or tragic in general, but at certain situations that feature women,
from Little Nell to Joan Crawford, in particularly horrifying or tragic
circumstancesexposed, insulted, betrayed, humiliated, assaulted,
hysterical, dying, mourning, out of control. Over and over again in
the examples I have cited, it turns out to be a woman whose extrava-
gant, histrionic style of emotional expression gets taken up by gay
male culture, parodied, and appropriated as a vehicle for individual or
collective gay male self-expression. It might also seem to be women,
182 WHY ARE THE DRAG QUEENS LAUGHING?
often lower-class women, whose feelings, and whose pain, gay male
culture finds to be consistently funny.
I shall have much to say about the question of misogyny and gay
male culture in Chapter18. In the meantime, the Fire Island Italian
widows shed a revealing light on this consistent pattern, which is in-
deed pervasive in gay male culture and defines a particular style of
gay male cultural resistance. The Fire Island Italian widows suggest
contrary to the impression we might have gotten from the evident
pleasure gay male culture takes in the delirious scenes of woman-on-
woman abuse in Mildred Pierce and Mommie Dearestthat gay male
culture does not teach us to laugh at the horrifying or tragic situa-
tions of women only. What the example of the Fire Island Italian wid-
ows demonstrates, and what the earlier examples of Tony Kushner,
David McDiarmid, Tom Shearer, Beowulf Thorne, and Isaac Julien
all implied as well, is that it is gay male subjects own suffering which
drives this characteristic form of self-lacerating irony and supplies the
motive and the cue for laughter. It is not women alone whose suf
fering gay male culture represents as funny: gay male culture also and
above all sees itself, its own plight, in the distorted mirror of a deval-
ued femininity.
The appalled and anguished hilarity with which gay male culture
views that spectacle indicates how clearly it perceives the cruel absur-
dity of its own situation reflected in it. The ridiculousness that at-
taches to undignified feminine pain in a society of male privilege
would have resonated particularly with the experience of gay men
during the first fifteen years of the AIDS crisis, from 1981 to 1996, be-
fore the introduction of anti-retroviral therapy, when AIDS was an
invariably fatal condition and straight society routinely dismissed the
reality of gay mens suffering, denying them the sympathy it grudg-
ingly accorded the epidemics innocent victims.18 In that context,
the laughter with which gay male culture greeted its own horrifying
and tragic situation expressed, as so often, a simultaneous identifica
tion with the values and perspectives of both the privileged and the
abject. Inasmuch as gay men are empowered as men, but disempow-
The Passion of the Crawford 183
exempt yourself from the irony with which you view all social identi-
ties, all performances of authorized social roles, is to level social dis-
tinctions. By disclaiming any pretense to be taken seriously and by
forgoing all personal entitlement to sympathy, sentimentality, or def-
erence, you throw a wrench into the machinery of social deprecia-
tion. When you make fun of your own pain, you anticipate and pre-
empt the devaluation of it by others. You also invite others to share in
your renunciation of any automatic claim to social standing, and you
encourage them to join you amid the ranks of people whose suffering
is always subject, at least potentially, to devalorizationand whose
tragic situations are, thus, always susceptible of being laughed at. You
thereby repudiate the hierarchies of social worth according to which
modern individuals are routinely classed. You build a collective un
derstanding and sense of solidarity with those who follow you in your
simultaneous pursuit and defiance of social contempt. And in that
way, you lay the foundation for a wider, more inclusive community.
%
The distinction between the kind of humor that is socially inclusive
and the kind of humor that is socially exclusive is part of a larger cul-
tural poetics. For example, and not coincidentally, that distinction is
also what defines the generic difference between camp and kitsch in
the pragmatics of discourse, according to Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick.
The application of the kitsch designation, Sedgwick argues, entails
a superior, knowing dismissal of someone elses love of a cultural arti-
fact, a judgment that the item is unworthy of love and that the person
who loves it is the unresistant dupe of the cynical manipulation
that produced it. When I label an object kitsch, I treat the apprecia-
tion of it as a fault, as a lapse of taste, as evidence of a debased senti-
mentality that I myself have transcended and that I do not share. I
thereby exempt myself from the contagion of the kitsch object.
In keeping with the social logic that Sedgwick carefully traced and
analyzed under the now-canonical description epistemology of the
Suffering in Quotation Marks 189
%
David Caron makes a similar point about camp. In a brilliant, unpub-
lished lecture (you had to be there, darling), he said, Far from repro-
ducing an exclusionary class structure, camp simultaneously produces
and is produced by a community of equals. In its most outrageous
manifestations it mocks social inequalities by enacting them to an ab-
surd degree. Camp, then, is a mode of being-with-friends. I am talk-
ing of collective, group friendship here, not of a one-on-one relation-
ship. And Caron adds, Collective friendship, [like camp,] exists only
in and through its own enactment. It is decentered and unruly. It goes
nowhere and produces nothing other than itself. It is, therefore, a so-
cial critique at work, in that it flouts the supposedly mature models
of socializationthe couple, the production of childrenand re-
claims an evolutionary stage we were supposed to discard long ago,
along with sexual indeterminacy.6 (It was for similar reasons that
D.A. Miller called the enjoyment of Broadway musicals, even on the
part of adults, kid stuff.)
Carons description of camp as a social critique at work is precise
and well judged. Camp is not criticism, but critique. It does not aim
to correct and improve, but to question, to undermine, and to desta-
bilize. In this, it differs from satire, which would be an appropriate
way of responding to kitsch, since satire functions as a criticism, a put-
down of inferior objects and practices. Whereas camp makes fun of
things not from a position of moral or aesthetic superiority, but from
a position internal to the deplorable condition of having no serious
moral or aesthetic standardsa condition that it lovingly elaborates
Suffering in Quotation Marks 191
In those circles where queerness has been most cultivated, the ground
rule is that one doesnt pretend to be above the indignity of sex. And
although this usually isnt announced as an ethical vision, thats what
it perversely is. In queer circles, you are likely to be teased and abused
until you grasp the idea. ... A relation to others, in these contexts, be-
gins in an acknowledgment of all that is most abject and least reputa-
ble in oneself. Shame is bedrock. Queers can be abusive, insulting, and
vile toward one another, but because abjection is understood to be the
192 WHY ARE THE DRAG QUEENS LAUGHING?
%
Implicit in everything we have seen so far is the assumption, basic to
camp and drag culture, that all identities are roles. That is what Susan
Sontag means when she remarks in her famous 1964 essay, Notes on
Camp, that Camp sees everything in quotation marks. Its not a
lamp, but a lamp; not a woman, but a woman. To perceive Camp
in objects and persons is to understand Being-as-Playing-a-Role. It is
the farthest extension, in sensibility, of the metaphor of life as the-
ater.11 In this passage, Sontag may be overplaying the insincerity of
camp, its alienation and distance from the objects and practices it
takes up, and underplaying its genuine love of them, its passionate
belief in them.12 But she is right to emphasize the fundamental per-
ception of all identities as roles.
Sontag is wrong, however, to insist on that basis that the Camp
sensibility is disengaged, depoliticizedor at least apolitical. After
all, the denaturalizing effect of all those quotation marks can be pro-
found. Sontag derives the apolitical nature of camp from the axiom
that camp emphasizes style and slights content; she speaks of camp
as incarnating a victory of style over content, though it would be
more accurate to say, as Sontag hastens to do, that camp introduces
an attitude which is neutral with respect to content.13 In other writ-
ings of hers from the same period, Sontag inveighs against the kind
of criticism that ignores or trivializes style and that gives primacy
instead to the interpretation of content; she calls for putting the
notion of content in its place.14 When it comes to camp, however, the
victory of style over content that gay male culture achieves makes
Sontag nervous.
Sontag elsewhere tries to advance the cause of style, arguing that
the denigration of style as purely decorative is ultimately political:
it serves to perpetuate certain intellectual aims and vested inter-
194 WHY ARE THE DRAG QUEENS LAUGHING?
Gay men have made certain style professions very much theirs (at
any rate by association, even if not necessarily in terms of the num-
bers of gays actually employed in these professions): hairdressing, in-
terior decoration, dress design, ballet, musicals, revue. These occupa-
tions ... are clearly marked with the camp sensibility: they are style
for styles sake, they dont have serious content (a hairstyle is not
about anything), they dont have a practical use (theyre just nice),
and the actual forms taken accentuate artifice.17
For Sontag, this very tendency of camp to prise the form of some
thing away from its content and thereby to convert the serious into
the trivial is a grave matter.18 And, in a sense, she is quite right. For
Suffering in Quotation Marks 195
that gravity is a sign of exactly how much is at stake when the seri-
ous is dethroned, when it stands to lose its preeminence over the
trivial, when style manages to prevail over content. By taking an
ironic distance on the ethical-political value of seriousness to which
Sontag so earnestly clings, camp poses a fundamental political chal-
lenge to what normally passes for politics. And that is a politic al func-
tion camp can perform only by being apolitical.19
It is camps alienated queer perspective on socially authorized val-
ues that reveals Being to be a performance of being (Being-as-
Playing-a-Role) and that enables us to see identities as compelling
acts of social theater, instead of as essences. That alienated vision per-
forms a vital, indeed a necessary function for stigmatized groups. By
refusing to accept social identities as natural kinds of being, as objec-
tive descriptions of who you are, and by exposing them, instead, as
performative roles, and thus as inauthentic, stigmatized groups achieve
some leverage against the disqualifications attached to those identi-
ties. By putting everything in quotation marks, especially everything
seriousand thereby opening a crucial gap between actor and role,
between identity and essencecamp irony makes it possible to get
some distance on your self, on the self that society has affixed
toyou as your authentic nature, as your very being. Embracing the
stigma of homosexuality becomes possible as a tactic for overcoming
it only when those who embrace it also refuse to recognize it as the
truth of their being, when they decline to see themselves as totally,
definitively, irreprievably described by it.20 Forgoing your claim to dig-
nity is a small price to pay for undoing the seriousness and authentic-
ity of the naturalized identities and hierarchies of value that debase
you. Converting serious social meanings into trivial ones is not only
an anti-social aesthetic practice, then. It is also the foundation of a po
litical strategy of social contestation and defiance.
%
There are in fact many good reasons why the queer perspective on
identity should be alienated. In order to escape persecution in a ho-
196 WHY ARE THE DRAG QUEENS LAUGHING?
tions on it), and what about it so inspires you and causes you to find it
so compelling. You have to do your best to identify the specific erotic
value of each and every fine point of that masculine performance
to capture the exact meaning of that gesture, that walk, that way
of speaking, that set of the shoulders, that shake of the head, that
haircuts neckline, that hang of the sweatpants, that light-hearted
wayof flirting with other men or dismissing an idea considered to be
foolish.
You have to determine (pace Richard Dyer) what a hairstyle is
about.
In short, you have to grasp a social form in all its particularity. In order
to get to the bottom of the mystery of homosexual attraction, you
have to focus your attention on the object of your desire in its most
complete contextual realization, its full social concreteness, its spe
cific social systematicity. You have to understand it not as an idea, or
as a representation of something, or as a figure for something else,
but as the thing itselfa thing that, in itself, is social to its very core.
That is what Proust ultimately discovered, and that is what became
the starting point for his grand literary experiment, In Search of Lost
Time: in order to seize things in their essence, you have to seize them
in their social being. Social forms are things in themselves, whose
meaning lies in nothing other than their style and resides nowhere
except in the formal qualities that define them.
Heterosexual desire is also a mystery, of course, and straight peo-
ple could also engage in a similarly searching inquiry into the rela-
tionbetween their erotic desires and particular social forms. Some of
them surely do: witness Nabokovs Lolita. But the tormented book-
length quest that constitutes that novelHumbert Humberts en-
deavor ... to fix once and for all the perilous magic of nymphets
stems precisely from the perverted nature of the narrators attraction
to prepubescent girls. To the degree that heterosexual desire ap-
proaches the social definition and ideal of normality, it ceases to force
itself on the consciousness of heterosexuals as a mystery in need
of elucidation. The very blatancy, ubiquity, prevalence, obviousness,
Suffering in Quotation Marks 199
%
From a gay male perspective, forged precisely by a lack of exemption
from that imperative, every thing in the social world is also a perfor-
mance. Every thing is a thing. The barest bones of social life acquire
the look of a full-scale costume drama.
So it is easy to understand how the social vicissitudes of gay male
subjectivity inexorably conduce to an expansion and generalization
of the category of drag. For drag, in at least one of its manifestations,
as Newton points out, symbolizes that the visible, social, masculine
clothing is a costume, which in turn symbolizes that the entire sex-
role behavior is a rolean act.25 The result is to universalize the
metaphor of life as theater. Every identity is a role or an act, and no
act is completely authentic, if authenticity is understood to require
the total collapse of any distinction between actor and role. Rather,
every identity is performative: social being is social theater, and vice
versa.
There is no relation of externality for gay male culture between
being and playing a role, between actor and act. They may be distinct,
but they are not separate; rather, they constitute each other.26 That
doubleness, that twofold aspect of social existence, is not an onto
logical split but a single composite nature, an intrinsic property of
things.27 Playing a role is the mode of existing in the social world.
That is what social being is. (The locus classicus of this queer insight is
Genets play The Maids.) Which is also what heterosexual culture re-
presses and cannot acknowledge, since to do so would be to forgo the
privileges that attach to authenticity, to the social status of being a
natural thing, whose existence is nothing but the truth of its essence.
Whereas for gay male culturewhich understands being as play-
ing a role, essence as an effect of performancetaking something seri-
200 WHY ARE THE DRAG QUEENS LAUGHING?
At any given homosexual party, there will be two competing, yet often
complementary people around whom interest and activity swirl: the
most beautiful, most sexually desirable man there, and the campi-
est, most dramatic, most verbally entertaining queen. The comple-
mentary nature of the two roles is made clearest when, as often hap-
pens, the queen is holding the attention of his audience by actually
commenting (by no means always favorably) on the beauty and on
the strategies employed by those who are trying to win the beautys
favors for the night. The good party and the good drag show both ide-
ally will feature beautiful young men and campy queens. In neither is it
likely that the two virtues will be combined in the same person. The camp,
both on and off stage, tends to be a person who is, by group criteria,
less sexually attractive, whether by virtue of advancing age or fewer
physical charms or, frequently, both. Whatever the camps objective
physical appearance, his most successful joke is on himself.4
The Beauty and the Camp 203
%
The categorical split in traditional gay male culture between beauty
and camp, between glamour and humor, turns out to be isomorphic
with a number of other symmetrical and polarized values, which cor-
relate in turn with a basic opposition between masculine and femi-
The Beauty and the Camp 205
%
If gay male culture teaches us (whether we are gay men or not) to
laugh at situations that are horrifying or tragic, that is because it
strives to maintain a tension between egalitarian ethics and hierarchical
The Beauty and the Camp 209
and objects, who ground their identity in their sexuality and define
themselves by their same-sex desire instead of by their queer sensibil-
ity. As D.A. Miller demonstrated, gay culture is at the opposite pole
from the unironic pose of virile stolidness that apes normality, com-
mands respect, and solicits gay mens sexual desire. And, conversely,
sexual desire among gay men carefully avoids trafficking in the cul-
tural subversions of camp, which after all would entail the subversion
of that very desire: the deflation of its butch theatrics, the ruin of its
masculine parade.
%
The polarity between camp and beauty, though strict, is not absolute.
Cracks regularly do appear in the partition. Drag queens and muscle
boys always perform together; each of them requires the presence of
the other. And some gay men do desire feminine men; drag queens
do not lack boyfriends. The opposition between the beauty and the
camp may itself be an element internal to camp culture, a camp pro
jection rather than a natural reality. In practice, the camp and the
beauty often canand docoincide.
And that can make for some novel, unprecedented cultural effects.
In a leather and backroom bar in Mexico City, called Toms, which I
visited in the summer of 2006, gay porn played soundlessly on the
video screens while soprano arias from grand opera blared over the
speaker system. The overall effect was surprisingly sweetat once
very apt, very funny, and even rather hot. Sophisticated gay male cul-
ture actually delights in playing with the opposition between the fem-
inine and the masculine: between camp and beauty, culture and sex,
queer subjectivity and gay male identity. Much contemporary gay
male culture represents a sustained effort to recombine the beauty
and the camp. Substantial skill and ingenuity are required to do so in
the case of men, and the droll task of rising to that challenge affords
gay male culture a multitude of incitements and opportunities to dis-
play its dynamism and inventiveness, as well as to manifest its perpet-
ual capacity to startle and surprise.
The opposition between the beauty and the camp corresponds ex-
The Beauty and the Camp 211
%
The two poles of gay male subjectivity are represented, aptly though
oddly enough, by two classic American novellas, both of them pub-
lished more than a hundred years ago. The generic difference that
grounds this cultural binary, then, has been in existence for quite
some time.
The title character of Willa Cathers Pauls Case (1905) encapsu-
lates in his person the full range and breadth of gay male sensibility.
Cather grotesquely lards her text with every sign and marker of gay-
ness she can think ofexcept homosexual desire.16 Her narrator de-
scribes Paul as follows.
His clothes were a trifle out-g rown and the tan velvet on the collar of
his open overcoat was frayed and worn; but for all that there was
something of the dandy about him, and he wore an opal pin in his
neatly knotted black four-in-hand, and a red carnation in his button-
hole. ... Paul was tall for his age and very thin, with high, cramped
shoulders and a narrow chest. His eyes were remarkable for a cer-
tainhysterical brilliancy, and he continually used them in a conscious,
theatrical sort of way, peculiarly offensive in a boy. The pupils were
abnormally large . . . [and] there was a glassy glitter about them
[etc.,etc.].17
tainly not about same-sex attraction; it is not even about sexual con-
tact. In fact, it is not about erotic desire at all. Homosexuality is about
lounging around by yourself in a luxurious hotel room, wearing silk
underwear and elegant clothes, sprinkling your body with violet wa-
ter, smoking cigarettes, drinking champagne, surrounding yourself
with fresh flowers, enjoying a sense of power, and being exactly the
kind of boy [you] had always wanted to be (130). It is about solitary
queer pleasurewhat D.A. Miller called a homosexuality of one.22
Neil Bartlett, writing about Oscar Wilde, says, Whenever I imag-
ine him posed, it is not naked or against a bare wall. It is not with
other people (other men) but, most characteristically, as a single man
in a room, in an interior.23 Bartletts image of the representative gay
man is not one of human relatedness or sexual communion but of an
individual alone in a room with his things. This is gayness not as per-
verted sexuality but as solitary queer sensibility, which is of an aristo-
cratic rather than a communitarian kind. Pauls Case represents a
brilliant thought-experiment by means of which Cather tries to imag-
ine how Oscar Wilde might have turned out if he had been born into
a lower-middle-class family in Pittsburgh.24 Paul is Wildes American
avatar, as Cather intended him to be. He isnt beautiful. He isnt sexy.
He isnt your idea of a hot date, the boyfriend you always wanted. He
is more queen than trade. His nervousness, hysteria, impulsiveness,
love of glamour, and morbid desire for cool things and soft lights
and fresh flowers (122) are all socially coded as unmanly traits, and
they inscribe his gay sensibility under the signs of neurosis and, spe
cifically, femininity.
%
Herman Melville, by contrast, banishes almost all trace of feminin-
ityfrom the human landscape of Billy Budd (1891). Something of
the feminine in man, to be sure, may still linger dangerously in the
manly heart, but at least there are no fresh flowers in Melvilles depic-
tion of the British Navy.25 Melville portrays a tough all-male world,
lacking even the faintest hint of queer sensibility, but at the same time
The Beauty and the Camp 215
wonder the main characters in the story, Vere and Claggart, are both
in such a hurry to see him dead. Even the ships chaplain exploits
Billys vulnerability the night before his execution in order to kiss his
cheek, but it never so much as occurs to him to think of trying to save
the hunky sailor from annihilation: the worthy man lifted not a fin-
ger to avert the doom of such a martyr to martial discipline (373).
After all, the moral agony to which innocent Billy is subjected by his
court-martial and ensuing condemnation only serves to add a new,
titillating, and troubling dimension of inwardness to what had been
his perfection as a physical object: the rare personal beauty of the
young sailor is spiritualized now through late experiences so poi
gnantly profound (375).
That nascent spiritualization of Billys magnificent flesh offers his
admirers a spectacle far too captivating to interrupt by putting an end
to his suffering. If that werent creepy enough, Billy is also made
tolove, forgive, bless, and even embrace those who murder him, a
kind of medieval ordeal climaxing in a cunningly orchestrated, in-
tensely charged, unseen emotional and physical exchange with Cap-
tain Verean ecstasy of sacrificial cruelty and mutual submission far
more shattering than sex, but the closest thing to sex that this butch
world has to offer. And once dead, Billy can attain immortality as
anobject of endless, elegiac desire. Melville both anticipates and re-
verses Wilde: each man may kill the thing he loves, but each man also
loves the thing he kills. Let that be a warning to partisans of virility, to
those who prefer gay eroticism to gay culture. Murder is precisely
where a total absence of camp will lead you.
This point was made again by Rainer Maria Fassbinder, in his film
adaptation of Jean Genets Querelle, a novel which merely takes the
extra step of transforming Melvilles tale of moral pornography into
gay pornography. And, speaking of gay pornography, the lesson I
have derived from Melville has now been brilliantly if inadvertently
illustrated by Chris Wards 2008 foray into cowboy porn, To the Last
Man, a Western epic in which the story line is dotted with a seriesof
dramatic murderssomething of a novelty in gay pornas if noth-
The Beauty and the Camp 217
ing less could serve to guarantee the virility of the male characters
who have sex with one another on-screen. (Ward has, however, re-
leased a non-violent version of the movie for squeamish or morally
rigorous consumers, who like their gay sex manly but not to the point
of being homicidal.)26
%
The polarity of queer sensibility and sexual desire reminds those who
participate in gay male culture of their inescapable implication in
gendered values, erotic dichotomies, and other social meanings.
Whether it is the epistemology of the closet and its multiple double
binds, the pervasive regime of heteronormativity and homophobia,
the supreme significance of gender, the unarguable allure of mascu-
linity, the unquenchable desire for beauty, or the impossibility of ex-
periencing homosexuality naively and innocently as something
wholly natural, the world gay men inhabit constantly reminds them
of their lack of exemption from the brute realities of sexual stratifi
cation, cultural signification, and social power. The Fire Island Ital
ian widows do not have the possibility, the capability, of choosing
whether or not to accede to a dignified public role that both acknowl-
edges and honors their grief; they cannot determine whether or not
their losses will ever be allowed to rise to the status of tragedy in the
eyes of the world. Their drag performance, their simultaneous act of
fake and real mourning, is a response to social conditions and cultural
codes that they cannot alter, but can only resist.
The politic al function of camp appears clearly in this light. Camp,
as Esther Newton says (borrowing a phrase from Kenneth Burke), is
a strategy for a situation.27 Camp works from a position of disem-
powerment to recode social codes whose cultural power and prestige
prevent them from simply being dismantled or ignored. It is predi-
cated on the fundamental gay male intuition that power is ev
erywhere, that it is impossible to evade power, that no place is outside
of power.28 Camp is a form of resistance to power that is defined by
an awareness of being situated within an inescapable network of rela-
218 WHY ARE THE DRAG QUEENS LAUGHING?
%
Perhaps that is another reason why gay male culture produces so
much aversion in gay men, why it elicits so much denial, and why
contemporary gay men tend to project it onto earlier generations of
archaic, pathetic queensonto anyone but themselves. Traditional
gay male culture is a way of coping with powerlessness, of neutraliz-
The Beauty and the Camp 219
ing pain, of transcending grief. And who nowadays wants to feel pow-
erless, who wants to think of himself as a victim? Who even wants to
admit to vulnerability? Liberalism is over, people! Its no longer fash-
ionable to claim you are oppressed. Our society requires its neoliberal
subjects to butch up, to maintain a cheerful stoicism in the face of
socially arranged suffering. It teaches us not to blame society for our
woes, but to take responsibility for ourselvesto find deep, personal
meaning in our pain, and moral uplift in accepting it.
Gay pride itself is incompatible with an identity defined by failure,
disappointment, or defeat. American manliness, and therefore Ameri-
can gay masculinity, mandate rugged independence, healthy self-con
fidence, high self-esteem: in short, the denial of need, pain, resent-
ment, self-pity, and various other unconsoled relations to want.30
So it is understandable that a set of cultural practices designed to
cope with the reality of suffering, to defy powerlessness, and to carve
out a space of freedom within a social world acknowledged to be hos-
tile and oppressive would not only fail to appeal to many subordi-
nated people nowadays, but would constitute precisely what most of
usincluding women, gay men, and other minoritiesmust reject in
order to accede to a sense of ourselves as dignified, proud, indepen
dent, self-respecting, powerful, and happy in spite of everything.
And in the particular case of gay men, gay culture is what many of
us must disavow in order to achieve gay prideat least, a certain kind
of gay pride. Its not that gay pride reflects a different and less agoniz-
ing social experience of homosexuality. In its own way, gay pride, too,
is a response to continuing stigmatization and marginalization. As
Lauren Berlant writes, no population has ever erased the history of
its social negativity from its ongoing social meaning.31 Rather, gay
pride offers a different solution to the same problem, by aspiring to a
better futurebetter, that is, than the world as we know it.
That is a worthy aspiration. It helps to explain the continuing ap-
peal of utopianism, both in queer theory and in the lesbian and gay
movement as a whole.32 But it indicates, as well, why traditional gay
male culturewhich reckons with the world as it is, with the way
220 WHY ARE THE DRAG QUEENS LAUGHING?
welived and still live now, and which seeks less to change the world
than to resist its inflictions (even at the cost of appearing reactionary,
rather than prog ressive)affords such an important emotional and
political resource, not only to gay men but also to many different
kinds of socially disqualified people, at least to those whose sense of
irredeemable wrongness makes them willing to pay the achingly high
price for it.
PA R T F O U R
+++
Mommie Queerest
1114
G AY F A M I LY R O M A N C E
%
224 MOMMIE QUEEREST
We can pick up where we left off at the end of Chapter10, and inter-
pret the gay appeal of those movies, and of the two previously high-
lighted scenes in them, in the light of our understanding of camp.
The spectacle of the angry mother would function, according to
this interpretation, as a way of reperforming and working through
one of the greatest terrors, or potential terrors, of queer childhood.
If one of the functions of camp humor is to return to a scene of
trauma and to replay that trauma on a ludicrously amplified scale, so
as to drain it of the pain that camp does not deny, then the camp ap-
propriation of these dramas of mother-daughter conflict might be
thought to confront the fear that haunts many a gay boyhood and
that leaves a traumatic residue in the inner lives of many gay adults:
the fear that the adored mother might expressif only unawares, or
despite herselfher unconquerable aversion to her offspring, her dis-
gust at having begotten and raised a deviant child. Even the most lov-
ing mother would be hard-put never to betray to her queer son at
least a modicum of disappointment in him. The possibility that your
mother might turn against you, and reject you, doubtless remains a
perennial nightmare scenario in the minds of many queer kids, a
source of panic never entirely laid to rest, and often exacerbated by
the volatility of the emotional relations between gay boys and their
mothers. It is this volatility that is captured by the dual focus on both
mother and daughter in the scenes from Mildred Pierce and Mommie
Dearest.
The potency of those scenes can be attributed in part to the way
they solicit the spectators identific ation with each character, the way
they invite a simultaneous emotional involvement with the rebellious
child and the indignant parent. Each scene tempts its audience to take
both sides in the quarrel it portrays. And that is only logical. For in its
appeal to the emotions of the adult spectator, each scene replays the
divided loyalty that originally characterized the gay childs (and per-
haps every childs) struggle for love and recognition, his simultaneous
efforts to be the spontaneous object of his mothers attention and to
exercise sufficient power over her to command that attention. In that
Gay Family Romance 225
%
Such a feeling of superiority to boring, normal people has long been
a noted (celebrated or abominated) feature of gay male subjectivity. It
reflects the elitist, aristocratic tendency in gay male culture, also evi-
dent in the gay male cult of beauty and aesthetics. The most striking
and characteristic expression of that sense of superiority is the stub-
born refusal to believe that you are in fact the offspring of the indi-
viduals who claim to be your parents. Four years before Freud ob-
served and described the generic version of this family romance
the childs fantasy that his real parents are not the ones who are
actually raising him and that his true people come from a nobler
ormore glamorous world than that of his ostensible familyWilla
Cather had already diagnosed a gay case of it in Paul.1
Cathers narrator tells us that once Paul had gotten to New York,
and ensconced himself in the Waldorf, he very quickly doubted the
reality of his past.
Had he ever known a place called Cordelia Street, a place where fagged
looking business men boarded the early car? Mere rivets in a machine
they seemed to Paul,sickening men, with combings of childrens
hair always hanging to their coats, and the smell of cooking in their
clothes. Cordelia StreetAh, that belonged to another time and coun-
try! Had he not always been thus, had he not sat here [in the dining-
room of the Waldorf] night after night, from as far back as he could
remember, looking pensively over just such shimmering textures, and
slowly twirling the stem of a glass like this one between his thumb
and middle finger? He rather thought he had. . . . He felt now that
hissurroundings explained him. ... These were his own people, he told
himself.2
%
In his inexhaustible study of Wilde and gay male culture, Neil Bartlett
devotes an entire chapter, called Possessions, to gay mens relation
to their things.5 Like the excessive sentimentality that was the neces-
sary condition of sentiments allowed no real objectsentiments
which the Broadway musical cultivated in its proto-gay fans, accord-
ing to D. A. Millergay mens insistent desire for precious posses-
sions springs, according to Bartlett, from a permanent sense of fun-
damental frustration at the particular unavailability to us of the objects
we most want. Material wealth and sensual pleasure have a very spe
cific function for us, Bartlett explains; they compensate for other
forms of poverty.6 Bartlett carefully left those other forms of poverty
unspecifiedhe clearly had in mind a broad spectrum of social and
politic al deprivationsbut he allowed for the possibility that there
might be a very specific hunger that gapes beneath our quest for
possessions (175).
The true source of that hunger, Bartlett implied, is a lack of erotic
satisfaction of a very general and basic kind. Sexual deprivation is
fundamental, and crucial, to the subjective experiences of gay men,
not because we are all pathetic, sex-starved rejects who never succeed
in finding acceptable partners, but because adult satisfaction cannot
quite make up for a previous history of unfulfillment. (As George
Haggerty says, speaking of the gayness of the pastoral elegy, Alove
that is constituted in loss is a love that yields a longing that can never
be fulfilled.)7
Gay Family Romance 229
%
That may be why there is always something reactionary about the
gay male cult of beauty. Gay male cultures distinctive brand of erotic
aestheticism (or should that be aesthetic eroticism?), and its insistence
on perfection in its erotico-aesthetic objects, tend to produce an abso-
lute privileging of the beautiful. This takes a number of well-known
forms: an elevation of style over content; a championing of the aes-
thetic at the expense of the political; and a consequent, stubborn in-
difference to the social meaning of glamour, to its often retrograde
political content. Dubious as those tendencies may be, gay male aes-
theticism does not flinch from them. Instead, it demands to be recog-
nized for what it isnamely, a radically uncompromising defense of
beauty, a principled refusal to subordinate beauty as a value to any so-
cial or political consideration that claims, however plausibly, to be
more serious or more worthy. Gay male culture does not pretend to
be ambivalent about aesthetic perfection, nor can it claim in all seri-
ousness or sincerity to be deeply critical of it.
The locus classicus for this opposition between the apolitical or even
reactionary aesthetics of gay male culture and an earnest political en-
gagement in struggles for social progress is Manuel Puigs 1976 novel,
Kiss of the Spider Woman. Puig portrays two social outcasts: the first is
232 MOMMIE QUEEREST
a gay man besotted with a female movie star, whose glamorous and
now-dated films, full of adoration for the upper classes, were origi-
nally designed to promote Nazi propaganda; the second is a straight,
austere, ideologically correct Marxist revolutionary, whose political
commitments no less than his heterosexuality initially rule out any
sympathy with either faggotry or aestheticism (especially when the
aestheticism in question is of such a reactionary kind). The two char-
acters, who have both been arrested by the authorities for their men-
ace to the social order, find themselves locked up in the same prison
cell. Their dialectical interaction culminates in a series of exchanges
and a partial blurring of identities, demonstrating that aesthetics and
politics, fantasy and fortitude, faggotry and machismo, gay male cul-
ture and straight male culture actually have a lot to offer each other
at least, in Puigs conception.
What makes Puig interesting to us is his observation that the bits
of mainstream culture selected by gay male culture for its own queer
purposes often do not turn out to be the most politically prog ressive,
experimental, or avant-garde items, butto the surprise of outsiders,
who somehow expect gay men to favor the sorts of artworks that ei-
ther promote prog ressive social change or put into effect disruptive,
subversive programs of formal aesthetic innovationprove in fact to
be the most dated, old-fashioned, reactionary artifacts, including
flamboyantly sexist, racist, classist, and homophobic ones. Mildred
Pierce is a good example.
%
Adapted from James M. Cains highly perverse 1941 novel of the same
title, with its dark suggestions of a mothers latent, incestuous desire
for her own daughter, Mildred Pierce was transformed into a compara-
tively moral tale by Hollywood producer Jerry Wald, screenwriter
Ranald MacDougall, and director Michael Curtiz. Cain himself, de-
spite several pressing invitations, refused to make the changes re-
quested by Wald, and Catherine Turney, the screenwriter who pro-
duced the first and relatively faithful adaptations of the novel,
Gay Family Romance 233
eventually asked that her name be removed from the films credits.
The resulting movie is an edifying, cautionary fable about the evils of
divorce and the mayhem caused by independent women.10
The problems begin when Mildreds husband loses his job in the
Depression and ceases to be able to support his family, ultimately
forcing Mildred to take over the role of breadwinner and to become
by dint of hard, selfless worka successful, commanding, and ulti-
mately very wealthy businesswoman. Mildreds increasing autonomy
and her husbands economic emasculation lead to the breakdown of
their marriage and to Mildreds affair with a dissolute, ethnically am-
biguous scion of an aristocratic but impoverished family, Monte Be-
ragon (played by Zachary Scott, fresh from his memorably sinister
debut as an evil spy in the 1944 film The Mask of Demetrios, based on an
Eric Ambler novel). The first time Mildred sleeps with Monte, her
younger daughter dies of pneumoniatypical Hollywood retribu-
tion for adultery on the part of a mother. By the end of the movie,
Mildred has repented of her independent ways and, having paid the
price, returns to her husband, who in the meantime has found de-
centand manly employment in a defense plant. As he escorts her
from the court house, whose steps are being scrubbed by two self-
abnegating women, the sun rises on their happy future. Whatever the
movies subversive pleasures, which are certainly many, no one could
ever accuse it of being politically prog ressive.
As has often been remarked, Mildred Pierce is not only a classic
Hollywood melodrama, a good example of a womans film, and a
masterpiece of Warner Brothers film noir (at least in its framing epi-
sodes). It is also a story highly suited to the end of the Second World
War, when the demobilization of millions of American men required
the redomestication of women and their reassignment to the home
from the workplace, to which they had been called to fill jobs tempo-
rarily vacated by the men who were now returning to claim them.
Warner Brothers actually delayed the release of the film until Octo-
ber20, 1945, more than two months after the Japanese capitulation, in
order to enhance the storys relevance to the historical moment.11
234 MOMMIE QUEEREST
The title characters rise, through hard work, self-sacrifice, and a love-
less second marriage, to wealth, glamour, and high social position
along with her corresponding frustration, disappointment, corrup-
tion, and victimizationadds up to a highly conservative, moralistic
tale, and the films sexual politics are accordingly retrograde. Al-
though Mildred Pierce titillates its audience with the transgressive
spectacle of female strength, autonomy, feistiness, and powereven
a certain female masculinityit does so on the condition of Mildreds
eventual surrender of her independence and her return to a state
of domestic and sexual subordination. The film is also notable for
Butterfly McQueens uncredited portrayal of Mildreds Black ser-
vant,Lottie, in some ways the most admirable character in the whole
movie, but also the vehicle of persistent, vicious racial stereotyping.
In short, the movies politics of class, race, ethnicity, sex, and gender
are pretty awful.
Those political blemishes do not, however, affect the films aes-
thetic success, especially when the film is viewed with the right dis-
tance and irony. For gay male culture, at least, the movies true poli-
tics lie in its aesthetics: its style exceeds what its ostensible message
conveys. Joan Crawford entirely dominates the visual field, and her
every flicker of emotionindelibly registered by her flawless acting,
by the masterly lighting of her face with its superb complexion, and
by the brilliant camera work and editingis instantly and eloquently
telegraphed to the spectator. In setting aside the explicit content of
the film in favor of its melodramatic power and sumptuous film noir
style, the camp enjoyment of it would seem to vindicate Susan Son-
tags claim about the apolitical character of camp, its preference for
aesthetics over politics, its neutrality with respect to content, and its
way of seeing the world as an aesthetic phenomenon.12
It is this elevation of beauty to a supreme value (not only the
beauty of Joan Crawford but also the beauty of a flawless melodra-
matic and cinematic style), and this comparative indifference to the
political terms in which such aesthetic perfection is materialized, that
have earned gay male culture its bad reputationespecially among
Gay Family Romance 235
%
But gay male culture is unfazed by its detractors and unashamed of
its loves. It uncompromisingly defends the aesthetic autonomy of
each and every cultural artifact it deems worthy of appropriation. It
treats beauty as a fundamental organizing principle of the world. Ac-
cordingly, it insists on viewing each individual object within the ob-
jects own aesthetic frame, as an aesthetic ensemble, as the effect and
expression of an integrated aesthetic system. It does not attempt to
see through the style of the object to its content, to distinguish its
successful aesthetic achievement from its odious political message or
from its implication in a despicable social order. Rather, it discovers a
different content, an alternate meaninga counter-thematicsin an
aesthetic objects very style.
Committed to style, and neutral with respect to [overt, explicit]
content, gay male aestheticism takes each item it valuesbe it a
formica-and-vinyl kitchen table set from the 1950s or a collection of
Fiesta ware from the 1930s, a Madonna video or an Yma Sumac song,
a mid-century American ranch house or a French chateauas a co-
herent, internally consistent stylistic whole, as a manifestation of a
historically and culturally specific system of taste whose incarnation
in the object is so total that this very completeness produces a plea-
surable recognition in itself and affords a satisfaction of its own.13
That willingness to subordinate aesthetic judgment of the individual
object to an appreciation of the totality with which it embodies a sin-
gle, integrated aesthetic or historical system is what led Sontag to
conclude that the way of Camp is not in terms of beauty, but in
terms of the degree of artifice, of stylization.14
In fact, gay male aestheticism tends to blur the distinction between
beauty and stylization, insofar as it locates meaning or content in
236 MOMMIE QUEEREST
form itself, finding value in any object that exhibits perfect confor-
mity to a specific aesthetic order, to a specific style. It rejoices in any
and all examples of complete stylistic coherence. It therefore takes
special delight in neglected artifacts from earlier periods that wholly
embody various outdated, obsolete styles.15
Consider, for example, the following entry, dated to 1945, from the
journal of the British writer Denton Welch, in which he records a
happy discovery he has just made in a junk shop.
Then I walked down the last aisle and saw in the middle what looked
at first like a not very remarkable early-to-mid-Victorian little couch
Rcamier thickened and toughened and having developed turned
stumpy legs instead of delicate out-sweeping Greek ones. But what
really held my glance when I looked nearer was the covering of the
couch, the flat loose cushion and the round tailored sausage one. They
were all of tomato soup red horsehair, dirtied of course, but, remem-
bering its life of eighty, ninety, perhaps nearly a hundred years, really
in wonderful condition. And what a wonderful stuff too, this never
before seen red horsehair, glistening like glass threads, rich and hard
and heartless, built to wear people out, not be worn out by them. The
cushions made so stiffly and truly, everything about the couch show-
ing solid worthiness, as much as any Victorian piece I had seen; and its
ugly, Gothic, sharp parrot smartness simply calling out to be used, sat
upon and loved. Its appeal to me was so strong that excitement leaped
up in me in a gulp.16
%
Good taste and bad taste both play important, if different, roles in gay
male aestheticism. The cultivation of good taste is dialectically op-
posed to camp and its worship of bad taste, its love of aesthetic catas-
trophedialectically opposed, I say, because good taste and bad taste
make necessary reference to each other, each implying the other and
each of them constantly readjusting its own definition in relation to
the other.
Taste itself, whether good or bad, is nonsensical without a scale
and measure of value, without degrees of refinement and distinc-
tion.20 A certain snobbery is built into aestheticism, with its panoply
of standards, criteria, judgments, and perceptions, its efforts to dis-
cern the better from the worse, the fine from the gross, the original
from the imitation, the rare from the vulgar. In short, aestheticism
depends on a notion of hierarchy. However out of place such a no-
tion may be in a democratic or egalitarian ethics, hierarchy does have
238 MOMMIE QUEEREST
somehow into a world of glamour and exclusivity, but you need not
acquire a fortune in order to accede to a more gratifying, more beau-
tiful, more refined existence. You can do it in ways that are essentially
or aspirationally middle class: singing along to recordings of Broad-
way musicals, arranging flowers, collecting things, clubbing, or merely
positioning the furniture just so. (Whence the old joke: How can you tell
if your cockroaches are gay? You come home and all your furniture is
rearranged.) You can also attain a life of glamour by having sex, at
least by enjoying untrammeled sexual pleasure with untold numbers
of desirable people.
All these kinds of luxury make it possible for you to live in a better
world, not necessarily a more expensive one. They represent poten-
tial points of entry into a way of being finally in tune with your vision
of erotic and aesthetic perfection, instead of an existence that requires
you to sacrifice your dreams to the service of realityto the dreary,
dutiful life of Cathers Cordelia Street in Pittsburgh (aptly named af-
ter King Lears modest, unambitious, literal-minded daughter)as
straight society would prefer you to do.25
In that sense, Pauls struggle in Cathers story or Vedas struggle in
Mildred Pierce is the struggle of gay male culture as a whole.26
%
Not only does Veda champion the cause of escape, by means of
money (in her case), from the suffocating world of heterosexual fam-
ily values; she also rebels against biological determinism itself. She
treats her pregnancy as a revisable option, as if it were possible for
herto choose whether or not to be pregnant at any given moment,
whether or not to alter her reproductive situation simply by changing
her mind: Its a matter of opinion. At the moment, my opinion is
Im going to have a baby. I can always be mistaken.
So Vedas revolt against the family is a revolt not merely against its
values, but against the very conditions and norms of heterosexual
femininity. She stakes a claim to an explicitly perverse femininity, one
defined by its exemption from filial duty, from honor, from reputa-
Gay Family Romance 241
events that take place around us. A game, in other words, is not a per-
formanceat least, it is not socially coded as such. When Vaslav Ni-
jinsky imitated the mere look of tennis, as if it were a performance or
a dance show instead of an athletic competition, and used the distinc-
tive movements of tennis players as the basis for his notorious 1913
ballet Jeux, critics were outraged: they complained indignantly that he
seemed to have no understanding of the actual rules of the game or
the point of playing it.7 It is no accident, then, that sports matches
with one or two rare exceptionsare never reenacted, restaged, or
reperformed exactly as they originally transpired. They must be seen
to occur only once, because their very definition demands that they
appear to be unscripted: in order to qualify as an event, they must
consist in a single, spontaneous action that concludes once and for all
when it is over and that cannot be repeated. Their masculine gender-
coding both requires and results from the events unique, historically
specific status. That is what imparts to action its singular prestige.
Of course, in our postmodern society, male sports stars get to cul-
tivate a flamboyant image which they embellish with performative
antics of various sorts. That tendency, which began perhaps with the
boxer Muhammad Ali, has come to be an expected, or at least a toler-
ated, feature of the mass-mediated sports world, just as it is now a
feature of straight masculinity. We see it in the little dances that foot-
ball players do in end zones as well as in the jewelry, tattoos, and hair-
styles of professional basketball players like Dennis Rodman (though
Rodman claimed he never fit into the mold of the NBA man).8 And
that doesnt even begin to account for the meteoric career of David
Beckham, who has devoted himself to appearing at least as much as
he has to doing.9 Professional sports are becoming more and more
liketheater, a vast and endless melodrama continually played out on
cable channels like ESPN and in the sports pages of newspapers and
magazines. Sporting events themselves, however, still retain a gender-
coding distinct from that of staged performance.
By contrast with sports stars, those entertainers whose job it is not
to win a contest but to perform a scenario on a stagewhether in se-
246 MOMMIE QUEEREST
%
It is in this context of gender panic surrounding the forbidden fan-
tasy of male theatrical exhibition, and the consequently dubious sta
tus of the male performer, that the mother, according to D.A. Miller,
reveals her true significanceas both the source and validation of her
Men Act, Women Appear 247
Yet why should he brave such stigma at all if he hadnt been enlisted
under the powermore ancient and tenaciousof a solicitation? For
if he now finds himself putting up with a theatre whose clientele
throws fruit at him, it is because his desire to perform was first exer-
cised elsewhere, through a so much more heartening modeling of the-
atrical identities and relations that, in effect, he still hasnt left this ear-
lier stage, where, just as he had taken his first steps, or uttered his first
words there, he would sing and dance for a woman who called him to
performance, and acclaimed him with applause even before he was
through, prompting him if he faltered with some song or dance of
herown, almost as though she were coaching him to be her under-
study in a role that either generosity, or timidity, or some other thing
kept herfrom playing herself. In short, contending against the estab-
lished musical-theatrical regime that feminizes access to the perform-
ing space, a Mother Stage has universalized the desire to play there.
(8081)
%
It is tempting to make a corresponding argument about the gay ap-
peal of the climactic confrontation between mother and daughter in
Mildred Pierce. At the least, it is tempting to speculate that the camp
value of that melodramatic episode may lie in its invitation to gay
men to return harmlessly to the scene of a similar trauma (real or
fantasized): the trauma of being exiled from the mothers presence
and from the limelight of her indulgence, permission, and social vali-
dation. It is by appropriating Mildred Pierces hyperbolic reenactment
of the scene of maternal rejection, and Mommie Dearests even more
histrionic version of it, that gay male culture can, on this interpreta-
tion, restage in an exaggerated, ludic, and reparative mode the horror
Men Act, Women Appear 249
of the mothers savage withdrawal of the warrant she once gave her
queer child to perform, the warrant that licensed his very existence as
a subject.
And some such socio-symbolic dynamic may be operative in the
gay male response to Mildred Pierce and Mommie Dearest. It may well
explain the specificity of the emotional impact of those two scenes
on a gay male audience. But we should note that what makes such a
hypothesis compelling in the case of Gypsy is its strict connection
with Millers close reading of the musical itself, a reading that gener-
ates the hypothesis in the first place. Miller does not depend on vague
psychological generalities of the sort I have been trafficking in
throughout the preceding paragraph. His reading does not demand
to be applied to other musicals, let alone to other cultural forms, and
it loses its point when it is generalized. Miller is not articulating a gen-
eral truth: he is describing the specific meaning of a specific social
form. At this juncture in the development of queer cultural analysis,
each vehicle of gay male identificationeach line, each scene, each movie or
musical, each divaneeds to be studied in all its particularity, so as to dis-
close the meaning of the unique formal structure that constitutes it.
In the present case, it is enough to observe that Mildred Pierce is in-
deed about performance, specifically about the performance of ma-
ternal abjection. But it is not about the stage, nor does it represent the
mother as a figure who provides her child with a precious point of
entry to the performance of a socially valorized identity. (On the con-
trary: Mildred marries Monte in order to offer Veda a chance to es-
cape the degrading necessity of performing musical numbers before
a male audience on a cabaret stage.) No doubt the scene of violent
confrontation between mother and daughter in Mildred Pierce offers
the gay spectator a camp opportunity to work through the traumatic
possibility of maternal rejection and, hence, social deauthorization.
Nonetheless, Millers reading does not apply directly to Mildred Pierce
with the same degree of plausibility or rigor as it does to Gypsy. Mil
lers usefulness to us is of a more general nature.
The virtue of Millers analysis is to locate the meaning of maternal
250 MOMMIE QUEEREST
%
The spectacle that magnetizes the audiences attention in both scenes
from Mildred Pierce and Mommie Dearest is the spectacle of women
losing it, of women who pass beyond the breaking point and go out
of control. That spectacle of raw emotion, of free-flowing, unob-
structed passion finally bursting through the decorum of social life, is
one long associated with the female subject. From Ovids Metamor-
phoses to Madame Bovary, women are the traditional vehicle in Euro-
pean culture for the expression of erotic subjectivity, and of emo-
tional excess. At least until the time of Rousseau and Goethe, when
men began to take the business of erotic subjectivity over from
women, and to write about male sexual sensibilities in their own per-
sons or in the persons of male characters, women were the preferred
medium for the representation of passionate emotion. Female char-
acters were useful to male authors. They allowed such authors to pen
scenes of passion and to voice hyperbolic emotion without having to
Men Act, Women Appear 251
%
There are other possible interpretations of this moment when social
barriers fall before the onrush of unstoppable emotion. Something
about the exhilaration of an affect that triumphs over social inhibition
suggests the euphoria inchoate in any heroic refusal to live a lie. The
emotional keynote in these scenes, according to such a view, would
be not excess but honesty. If we read the two scenes straight as mo-
ments of truth, we may find in them an echo-effect of the experience
(actual or imagined) of coming out of the closet. On this account, the
appeal of these scenes to gay men derives from gay mens personal
recognition of the giddy, intense boldness of that vertiginous resolve
when you finally decide to say what youve been bottling up inside
for so long. On this (typically post-Stonewall) reading, the crucial
threshold is crossed when Veda says to Mildred, with mingled men-
ace, provocation, aggression, insinuation, and seductiveness, Are you
sure you want to know? [Mildred: Yes.] Then Ill tell you. Vedas
subsequent avowal is met with an equal candor on Mildreds part,
inher wonderfully camp reply (suitable for repetition and reperfor-
mance on any number of occasions): Veda, I think Im really seeing
you for the first time in my life, and youre cheap and horrible.
%
All of the interpretations rehearsed in both this chapter and the previ-
ous one touch on important aspects of the scene from Mildred Pierce.
We will return to elements of them. But some of them depend too
Men Act, Women Appear 255
with her.14 No one, of course, could miss the butch theatrics of Joan
Crawfords performance in Johnny Guitar, or deny that Mommie Dear-
est is premised on the uncanny pleasures of female impersonation (if
only Faye Dunaways impersonation of Joan Crawford). But the prob
lem with these literal interpretations is that by appearing to be so
knowing, so certain about what is at stake for gay male culture in the
iconic figure of Joan Crawford (whether that be butch display or hy-
perfeminine performance), such interpretations hasten to close down
the interpretive issues before us, pretending to a more complete un
derstanding of gay male cultures relation to femininity than they can
deliver. Instead of identifying the specific elements that actually elicit
the subjective involvement of gay male spectators, they offer a truism
masquerading as the truth of gay identific ation. In this way, they pre-
sume the answer they should be looking for, and they effectively block
further inquiry into the logic behind the gay male responseas if a
passing glance at those shoulder pads were enough to settle the whole
matter once and for all.
Also, the two interpretations tend to cancel each other out. It is
hard to see how Joan Crawford can be both a butch woman and a
drag queen at the same time, both lacking in femininity and hyper-
performing femininity. Or, ratherand this is perhaps the point of
each interpretationit is hard to see how both claims could be true
unless the point of each of them is that Joan Crawford isnt really a
woman at all, that she represents gay male identity and is, appear-
ances to the contrary notwithstanding, a gay man in drag.
But that conclusion is inaccurate. It denies Crawfords famous and
formidable feminine glamour, which admittedly depends on a strate-
gic mingling of masculine and feminine features, and it resists ac-
knowledging what we have learned to call female masculinity, the
many sorts of masculinity that women, as women, can perform.15 It is
unfair to Crawford, insofar as it refuses to recognize or attend to her
carefully cultivatedand shiftingstyle of female embodiment, as
well as her complex negotiation of feminine identity. It is unflatter-
ing, in different ways, both to women and to gay men, because it ig-
Men Act, Women Appear 257
nores what makes them different from each other and it fails to credit
them with their subjective specificities, which after all are what lay
the basis for the possibility of cross-identification. And so it misunder-
stands how a proxy identity produced by such cross-identification ac
tually worksthat is, how exactly Joan Crawford functions as a proxy
identity for some gay men.
%
In any case, it is critically important not to reduce gay identification
to gay identity. For such a reduction would remove the very problem
it had set out to solve, erasing what it proposes to explainnamely,
the meaning of gay male cultures feminine identifications. If Joan
Crawford, or other feminine figures with whom gay men have identi
fied, were not really women, if they were somehow disguised ver-
sions of gay men all along, then one could not properly speak of gay
mens relations to them as identifications. Gay male cultures fixation
on those figures would simply represent a reflection of gay male iden-
tity itself. There would be no process of decoding and recoding to
study, and gay mens cultural practices would tell us nothing in par-
ticular about gay male subjectivity beyond some common and obvi-
ous psychological commonplaces. Instead of inquiring into the logic
underlying gay male cultures refashioning of heterosexual culture,
we would be observing gay cultures identity-consolidating recogni-
tion of gay meanings already present in heterosexual culture. That is
not to interpret the phenomenon, but to abolish itby collapsing
identification into identity, by reducing desire to identity. It is to deny
the very existence of gay cultureto abolish male homosexuality as a
specifically cultural practice.
If Mildred Pierce and the Broadway musical were simply encoded
representations of gay identity, we would expect that the open, ex-
plicitly gay, out-and-proud, identity-based culture of the post-
Stonewall period would have put them out of business long ago, since
nowadays gay men have access to the real thing, to uncensored and
direct representations of themselves: they no longer have to settle for
258 MOMMIE QUEEREST
L et us return to the two scenes from Mildred Pierce and Mommie Dear-
est. Now that we are able to situate their gay appeal in the larger con-
text of the sexual politics of cultural form, we can begin to discern a
central element in the gay response to those scenes that we have been
neglecting. The key to understanding the logic behind gay cultures
appropriation of the two scenes, it turns out, can be found in a single,
simple, and basicif paradoxicalfact: the entire drama of mother-
daughter conflict is one from which, by definition, men are absent.1
The quickest and easiest way to grasp the full significance of that
absence is to consider how different the effect of the two scenes, their
meaning, and their reception would be if they featured not a mother
and a daughter, but a father and a son.
Once you ask yourself that question, you dont need to reflect on it
for very long. The differences are decisive, and their consequences ap-
parent.
A story about a father who throws his son out of the house or dis-
owns him, or about a father who plots against his son or plans his
death; an incident in which a son strikes his father; a story about a son
who tries to kill his father: the mere mention of such scenarios is suf
ficient to evoke the familiar masterplots of European literature and
cultureto say nothing of Freudian psychoanalysis. We are immedi-
The Sexual Politics of Genre 261
ately transported to the world of the Bible, to the story of Joseph and
his brothers, or the tale of the prodigal son. We are reminded of the
epic generational quarrel between Achilles and Agamemnon in Ho
mers Iliad, or the theater of dynastic/domestic turmoil that reaches
all the way from the Oedipus Rex of Sophocles to the plays of Eugene
ONeill and Arthur Miller.
Such generational struggles between father and son are very seri-
ous business. Indeed, they are the stuff of high tragedy.
A generational conflict between women, by contrast, even at its
most serious or passionate, cannot rise above the level of melo-
drama.
That is not, of course, a statement of my personal feelings about
the matter. I am not endorsing this cultural attitude, or the social
meaning of gender that it expresses; Im simply reporting it. It is a
cultural fact that in Western society a generational conflict between
women cannot help appearing, at least in the eyes of a socially autho-
rized (i.e., male) spectator, as vaguely disreputabletending to the
excessive, the hysterical, the hyperbolic, or the grotesqueand, in
any case, less than fully serious.
Can you think of a single example of a generational conflict be-
tween women in Western literature that can claim the same tragic
grandeur as the male generational struggles of the Iliad or Oedipus
Rex? Conflicts between mothers and sons are genuine contenders for
that lofty status (consider Hamlet or the Oresteia, just for starters), but
struggles between women belonging to different generations are sim-
ply not the stuff of tragedy. Sophocless Electra comes closest, but ulti-
mately what gives that drama its seriousness is its proximate, ancil-
lary relation to the dynastic preoccupations of male culture: paternal
inheritance, royal succession, the transmission of property from fa-
ther to son, and the continuation of the male line. Electra steps into a
patriarchal function (and thus into a tragic dignity), because the male
heroes are absent from the scene for most of the play and no one but
Electra is willing to take the place of the male heir. Electra alone vol-
262 MOMMIE QUEEREST
unteers to fill that essential role and to oppose the ascendancy of her
mother. Sophocles is careful, nonetheless, to stop the action cold, just
as Electra, Joan Crawfordlike, reaches for the axe. It is at that critical
juncture that male heroes suddenly appear on the scene, take over
from Electra, and complete the dramatic action, making sure it re-
mains fully serious and dignified. Sophocles thereby preserves the
sublime beauty of his tragedy from the melodramatic bathos of Mom-
mie Dearest.
The reaction of a heterosexual male friend of mine to Jules Das-
sins 1978 film ADream of Passiona brilliant interrogation of the pos-
sible contemporary uses of Euripidess Medea for feminist politics
exemplifies and enacts the cultural logic at work here. A Dream of
Passion features Dassins famous wife, Melina Mercouri, playing an
iconic Greek actress, one rather like herself, who returns to Greece
from political exile, after the fall of the military junta in 1973, to per-
form the role of Medea. Her male director, who in the plot of the
movie is also her former husband, judging that her interpretation of
the role is too political, too feminist, and not sufficiently passionate,
arranges for her to meet a young American woman (played by Ellen
Burstyn), who happens to be serving a life sentence in Athens for the
crime of killing her children: knowing nothing of classical literature,
or feminism, she seems to have unwittingly reincarnated the person-
age of Medea when her Greek husband, like Jason in the plot of the
original story, abandoned his foreign spouse on his native soil for a
Greek wife. The encounter between the two women changes the ac-
tresss understanding of herself, of her identity as a woman, of the
history and politics of her relations with men; and ultimately it alters
her interpretation of the dramatic role, though whether it does so for
better or for worse is diffic ult to say. The result is a contemporary
feminist (or perhaps a counter-feminist) version of Euripidess cele-
brated tragedy.
The movie is a determined attempt to revive a tragic mode of feel-
ing, to reanimate the true spirit of tragedy in a modern context by
drawing on an ancient source, and to figure out whether such a thing
The Sexual Politics of Genre 263
%
Mommie Dearest offers a particularly clear and instructive demonstra-
tion of the relations between gender and genre. It enables us to dis-
cern the sexual politics that electrify the protective cordon surround-
ing the privileged domain of tragedy. For Mommie Dearests solemn
portrayal of emotional and physical violence is a stellar example of
failed seriousnessthe very quality that Susan Sontag correctly iden
tified as a defining feature of camp.2 But why does the movies effort
to represent a situation that is both tragic and horrifying fall through,
or fall short of the requirements for true seriousness, and become
laughable?
There are plenty of reasons you could cite: the two-dimensional,
kabuki-like character portrayals; the overacting; the extended scenes
of outrageous emotional excess; the earnestness and sententiousness
of the storygreat thumping plot points, as one of our Amazon
reviewers aptly put it, to which subtlety and sensitivity take a back
seat. The visual editing also contributes an important element, espe-
cially the alienating deployment of raised and distant camera angles
at the end of the scene (see, for example, Figure15), which encour-
264 MOMMIE QUEEREST
%
Gay men, for all their cultural differences from straight men, are still
men, and their relation to the melodramatic scene of maternal con
flict is therefore bound to be different in at least one crucial respect
from the emotional involvement of those female spectators who
were the prime targets of classic Joan Crawford movies and who
were, in any case, her biggest fans. However rapturously or deliri-
ously gay male spectators may identify with the characters in the
movie, their identification is mediated by their gender difference. It
has to be more oblique than the identific ation of women, who could
see themselves in Crawford on the basis of a shared social position-
ing, of common experiences, struggles, and aspirationson the basis,
that is, of some degree of identity.
Gay men can certainly identify with Mildred Pierce, but, being
men, they cannot do it straightforwardly or unironically. Their identi
fication, however headlong and intoxicated, requires a certain amount
of imaginative work. It is necessarily accompanied by a significant de-
gree of dis-identification and distance, and it is inevitably filtered by
irony. But irony doesnt spell rejection, and dis-identification here is
precisely not the opposite of identification: it is not a refusal or a
repudiation of identific ation. What we are dealing with, once again,
is a complex play of identity and difference, an oscillating ironic dou-
blenessthe very kind of ironic doubleness that is essential to camp
sensibility. This simultaneous coincidence of passionate investment
and alienated bemusement, so typical of gay male culture, is what
structures the gay male response to the scene.
I do not mean to imply, of course, that women cannot also have an
ironic or distanced perspective on Mildred Pierce. I do not suppose for
a moment that their relation to the film is destined to be and to re-
main one of unqualified earnestness, of uncritical, literal identifica
266 MOMMIE QUEEREST
%
The gay male spectator, positioned eccentrically with respect to the
canonical form of the nuclear family, is also more likely than either
straight women or straight men to nourish an ironic perspective on
the drama of familial conflict itself. Within the miniature world of
the family, however, there is nothing ironic about performances of
either love or hate. Family dramas are compulsively overacted, in-
flated out of all proportion to the apparent stakes in them, and thus
ineluctably histrionic. What gets expressed in family conflicts tends
almost inevitably to exceed what is actually felt. In fact, the only way
that what is felt can be expressed seems to be through an insistently
hyperbolic acting-out of it.
Do you feel that your daughters, or your lovers, behavior to you
implies a certain lack of deference to your sensibilities? Dont just say
so. Scream at them. Ask them, in aggrieved, self-pitying, and grandi-
ose tones, Why cant you give me the respect that Im entitled to?
The Sexual Politics of Genre 267
who is at once involved with it and disengaged from itin this case,
the specific relation to female melodrama of a gay male spectator
may be the best, perhaps the only possible defense against the suffo-
cating emotional claustrophobia of family life. For what irony allows,
in keeping with the pragmatics of camp, is the possibility of viewing
the histrionics of family life as both horrifying and hilarious at the
same time, without assimilating either dimension of those histrionics
to the other. It offers an alienated outlook on intense emotion that
unlike the withering judgment of my straight friend on ADream of
Passionis neither skeptical nor reductive.
Mildred Pierce and Mommie Dearest, when they are viewed from that
alienated (though still emotionally engaged) perspective, teach gay
menand anyone else who subscribes to gay male culturehow to
survive the woes of the family unit. For they teach them the practical
uses of irony. Or perhaps the converse is true: the pleasure that gay
male culture takes in appropriating those films reflects the ironic atti-
tude gay men had long cultivated in order to distance and thereby to
insulate themselves from the hurtful histrionics of family lifewith-
out, however, denying the deadly earnestness of those histrionics,
their power to inflict real injury and pain. In any case, irony provides
an effective and handy weapon against an inescapable social form
whose ideological functioning requires, in order to prevail, both an
uncritical belief in it and the violent assertion of its authenticity.
%
Gay male cultures hard-won ironic vision of the falseness and perfor-
mative character of family sentiments also registers something more
general and more profound about emotional expression. It reflects
the very structure of the social life of feeling. In particular, it testifies to
the inevitable gap between what is felt and what in any specific con-
text is capable of being expressed.
A certain effort of will is usually required in order to render the
expression of a feeling adequate to the nature of the feeling itselfas
The Sexual Politics of Genre 269
only kind of restitution that they can ever expect to obtain for what
is, after all, an irreparable and irremediable loss.
That is also what Achilles eventually discovers for himself, once he
kills Hector in a vain attempt to expiate his own fatal mistakes. It is
only then that he comes to realize the emotional futility of that he-
roic deedits inability to compensate him for the loss of Patroclus or
to assuage his own sense of responsibility for the death of his beloved
companion.4
According to the Iliad, human sociality depends on the viability of
purely symbolic transactions. It requires surrendering all hope of ever
finding in the world an adequate objective correlative of what we feel
and a satisfactory means of expressing it.5 Unless social mediations
are understood from the start to be necessarily (and merely) symbolic,
not expressive, they will be found to be grossly insuffic ient. In which
case we are likely to reject them, as Achilles does. And so they will
lose all efficacy and cease to function: they will no longer be able to
do the job of knitting people together in a web of social exchange,
both now and in the future. Then all human communication and so-
ciality will break down and the fabric of human relationality will un-
ravelas it does for a while in the bleak latter portion of the Iliad.
Achilles reconciles himself to the incommensurable gap between
feeling and its expression only in his final meeting with Priam, who
sets him an example of how to live by ithow to occupy that very gap.
Renouncing any attempt to express outwardly what he really feels
about Achilles, Priam, in his selfless determination to ransom from
Achilles the corpse of his son, Hector, kisses the hands of the man
who has killed his children.
That celebrated and pathetic gesture does not translate Priams
grief and anger into a meaningful public form. Far from expressing
what Priam feels, it expresses the utter impossibility of his ever ex-
pressing it.
And so it attests to the need for public, social gestures that do not
express emotion but stand in for itthat represent it without aspiring
to express itand that convey it by means of a set of generic, agreed-
272 MOMMIE QUEEREST
%
In this context, the gap between feeling and expression is tragic, be-
cause it is the manifestation of a basic existential catastrophea fatal,
irreparable, inescapable void in human meaning. The understandable
human impulse to close it, to find a way of literally expressing what
we truly feel, is not only foredoomed but destructive: it threatens the
symbolic mediations that hold the entire social world together. Not
only will our stubborn impulse to close that gap not succeed, but
itwill damage our social existence even further, by discrediting the
symbolic forms through which we represent what we feel and by
means of which we maintain our social relations with one another.
To insist on expressing fully what we feel will result in endless,
pointless violence. It will also endanger the only channel by which we
can actually communicate. For language itself is a realm of symbols
to which we resort when, at the end of infancy, we discover that we
have no direct means of expressing our longings, and no hope of ob-
taining what we want on our own. Only by substituting words (that
is, symbols) for what they designate can we achieve a limited com-
merce with the world outside ourselves.
So the passionate human drive to find a proper form for the out-
ward expression of our feelingsa form that would be adequate to
those feelings and fully commensurate with their magnitude or in-
tensityis ultimately misdirected, destructive, and doomed to fail-
ure. We have to learn to resist it. Tragic wisdom consists in renounc-
ing it. Not because giving it up will make us happy, but because
refusing to compromise our desire for the real thing will accomplish
nothing and will make us even unhappier and more miserable: it will
lead to the loss of the few things of value in the world that we ac
tually possess, and it will cause us to destroy the very beings whom
we most cherish.
The Sexual Politics of Genre 273
%
For what tragedy cannot survive is the merest hint that it might, just
possibly, be a trifle overwrought. It cannot recover from the percep-
tion, or suspicion, that its intense bursts of emotional expression may
have been inflated beyond the strict requirements of the extreme situ-
ations it depicts, of the mortal agonies which provided the motive
and the cue for all that passion. Social and emotional inauthenticity
may be at the core of tragedys vision of the world, but it is fatal to
tragedy as a form. Should tragic suffering ever be perceived as a mere
performance or impersonation of suffering, should archetypal tragic
destinies come off as histrionic roles, then tragedy will necessarily in-
cur a loss of authentication, of social credit, and will forfeit its author-
ity as a vehicle of existential truth. If the audience ever suspects that
tragedys dramatic extravagances are not wholly justified, that they
are even the teeniest bit excessive, that the high pitch of emotion
which distinguishes tragic feeling, which elevates it to the heights of
sublimity, is less than fully motivatedin short, that passion is not be-
ing felt so much as it is being faked or performedthen tragedy ceases
to produce a properly tragic effect and lapses into melodrama.
Melodrama, for its part, is all about the staging of extreme feel-
ing,and it places a premium on performance. Melodrama is tragedys
bourgeois inheritor. It was created to please and entertain the sorts of
peoplechiefly the middle classes, and especially womenwho did
not enjoy the benefits of an elite classical education, who could not
read Greek or Latin, and who therefore had little access (before the
heyday of cheap and plentiful classical translations) to the refined aes-
thetic experience of ancient tragedy, just as they did not possess the
cultivated sensibilities necessary either to appreciate the classical Eu-
ropean drama that claimed to be its modern successor or to savor the
stiff formality of the verse in which it was composed.
The Sexual Politics of Genre 275
For the members of the bourgeoisie, who did not see their own
lives, their own world, and their own values reflected in classical trag-
edy, ancient or modern, a new and more popular genre had to be in-
vented: a genre of middle-class family drama, spoken in prose, closer
in its subject matter to their daily experience and better attuned in
its sentimental register to their emotional needsbut, despite all
those concessions, not reducible to comedy. For if middle-class family
drama, or melodrama, had been reducible to comedy, if it had treated
bourgeois family misfortunes as trivial or laughable, it would simply
have been demeaning and cheapening bourgeois life. And so it would
not have fit the purposes for which it was designed.
Thatat the risk of a gross oversimplificationis the genealogy
of melodrama. Melodrama transplanted the heroics, the strife, and
the pathos of classical tragedy to the comparatively humdrum world
of bourgeois existence. Classical tragedy had often taken place within
a familya royal family, to be sure, but still a familyand melodrama
could preserve its focus on the family and its setting within the house-
hold, thereby endowing the social and emotional situations of bour-
geois domestic life with a new sense of grandeur, urgency, and inten-
sity. Melodrama gave the middle classes an experience of high drama
that they could call their own, that they could understand in their
own terms and in their own language. Melodrama took their social,
financial, and matrimonial preoccupations as a point of departure for
the staging of emotions as extreme as those of classical tragedy. It
was tragedy for the middle classes.
But that democratization came at a certain social cost. For women
are obviously less serious than men, and the middle classes are less
dignified than the elite. The kind of tragedy to which melodrama
gave new form and life was therefore a degraded, second-class brand
of tragedy, suitable for depicting the lives of those who were ineligi-
ble for the authentic tragic stage because, as housewives or as bankers
or as clergymen, they didnt exactly qualify as classical heroes. In
itsvery striving to elevate the bourgeoisie, melodrama risked debas
ing the tragic genre itself. It could not, despite all its extravagant ef-
276 MOMMIE QUEEREST
%
If melodrama now becomes a pejorative term, that is because the
evident sympathy that melodrama brings to the fate of ordinary peo-
ple appears, at least from a privileged perspective, to be misplaced
and unjustified, to be a form of pandering, to be motivated exclu-
sively by an unworthy, groundless, partisan, sentimental attachment to
otherwise unexceptional characters. In fact, the sentimentality with
which melodrama is often taxed, and which is considered one of its
hallmarks, is ultimately nothing more than the tendency to lavish
tenderness, dignity, and esteem on the sorts of low-ranking people
who do not deserve (in the eyes of the elite) such a large dose of seri-
ous consideration, and who get it from melodrama only because
melodrama reflects its audiences close identification with such folks
and the intensity of that audiences emotional involvement in their
lives.
The high pitch of emotional intensity that melodrama brings to
the vicissitudes of ordinary people, which would be appropriate for
the elite subjects of tragedy but becomes ludicrous when it is worked
The Sexual Politics of Genre 277
%
By its very definition, then, melodrama is failed tragedy. It may be
earnest, but it is not serious. And yet melodrama stubbornly refuses
to admit it. Although when measured against the aristocratic stan-
dard of classical tragedy, melodrama cannot help falling short of the
dignity that tragedy enjoys, it does not recognize its failure. Thats
what makes melodramawhen it is viewed from a condescending
perspective, as if from a position of social privilege or superiority
come off as camp. At least, melodrama would seem a perfect fit for
Sontags definition of camp as a seriousness that fails. (Of course,
not all seriousness that fails can be redeemed as Camp, Sontag has-
tens to add. Only that which has the proper mixture of the exagger-
ated, the fantastic, the passionate, and the nave.)8
To appreciate and to savor melodrama as camp is to save it from
total abjection. Camp, as we have seen, is not criticism but critique. It
does not take melodrama literally or unironically, but it does not criti-
The Sexual Politics of Genre 279
%
That, of course, is what we find displayed so prominently in Mildred
Pierce (to say nothing of Mommie Dearest). It was her performance, af-
ter all, that earned Joan Crawford the Oscar. And it is her perfor-
mance, as Ethan Mordden noted, that has been both the envy and the
despair of gay men. Joan Crawfords performance in Mildred Pierce is
apparently a performance that anyone with a taste for melodrama
that is to say, anyone who cannot claim, who does not desire, or who
cannot aspire to the grandeur and prestige of tragic sublimitycan-
not resist imitating, or reperforming.
The Sexual Politics of Genre 281
%
The uphill path gay men must climb to attain acceptance and equality
is steepest where it passes through the terrain of erotic feeling and
romantic love. For in a homophobic society, any expression of a senti-
284 MOMMIE QUEEREST
capable destiny. Plus fort que moi (Stronger than I am, or I cant help
it): that is romantic loves motto. Its effect is to deprive the lover of
any sense of being in control of his emotions or his actions, and
thereby to exempt him from any responsibility for his feelings.
Gay men may be particularly susceptible to the myth of romance,
and therefore particularly in need of the ironic perspective on love
that gay male culture supplies. Like gay identity, romantic lovees-
pecially when it presents itself as the truth of our deepest feelings, as
a kind of emotional bedrockprovides an alibi and a cover for the
shameful details of gay sexuality. It offers us a way to represent our
desires in public without displaying too much queerness, and it re-
packages gay eroticism in an honorable, dignified, socially accredited
form. Instead of saying, Please sit downtheres something Ive
been meaning to tell you, we get to say, Mom, Dad, Id like you
tomeet Lance. Romance redeems homosexuality. It transcends the
sickness of perversion and dissipates the pathological taint of gayness
in the glory of the happy couple.
But there are other reasons gay men may be especially susceptible
to romance. Romance allows us to escape any awareness of the social
oddness and incongruity of homosexuality; it returns us to the inno-
cent spontaneity of the natural. It allows us to feel profoundly right.
When were in love, we arent pervertswere just doing what comes
naturally. We are yielding to the laws of our nature, expressing our
real selves, testifying to the profound truth of our feelings, achieving
and manifesting our authenticity. Natural instinct is deeper, stronger,
and truer than any social arrangement or moral prejudice; it trumps
any judgment on gay love that reason can make. It defeats all criti-
cism. Romantic love grants us an imaginary exemption from social
hostility, it allows us to celebrate ourselves and our feelings without
viewing them through the lens of other peoples disapproval. It makes
us newly indifferent to how we are regarded. And it gives us access to
a source of personal meaning with which to make sense of our lives.
That is exactly whats so dangerous about romantic love. It incites
us to make the personal into the real. Since we lack any social incen-
286 MOMMIE QUEEREST
tive to fall in love, and since we also lack any standard, outward, pub-
lic form of our own by which to define and represent our conjugal re
lations, we have to personalize existing social forms in order to make
them ours. We borrow heterosexual models of relationality and adapt
them to our purposes, while looking to the realm of the personal and
the private in order to endow them with special, distinctive signifi
canceto generate the meanings and the rituals that give shape, con-
sistency, and validity to our feelings.4 The more personal or private
such modes of valorization and legitimation are, the less distance we
have on them, the less ironic is our perspective on them, and the more
mythic those social forms and rituals become.
%
Such self-authorized, self-generated, self-validated forms and rituals
may be particularly tyrannical toward those who produce them. They
have nothing of the conventional or the artificial about them that
generally attaches to accepted or enforced social roles, and that al-
lows the social actor some distance from them, hence some leverage
in relation to them.5 When you generate a role yourself, you dont
have an easily detached perspective on it. It becomes your role. Which
is to say, it becomes who you are.
And once it becomes who you are, youre stuck with it. You cant
get out of itat least, not very easily. How, after all, can you get rid of
your authentic self ?
When you have stripped a social form of its formulaic, symbolic,
conventional, widely accepted meaning, and endowed it with a deeply
or purely personal, private significance, you have effectively rendered
it authentic. (Thats another way of saying it becomes who you are.)
Which also means that you have deprived yourself of a ready-made
procedure for escaping from itfor dismantling, designifying, de-
sacralizing, and jettisoning it. You become the prisoner of your own
authenticity. Contemporary gay identityserious, official, oppres-
sive, inescapableoffers a dire lesson in the consequences of too
much authenticity. No wonder so many gay people cant bear it.
Tragedy into Melodrama 287
%
Conventional romantic love already has a defiant, antinomian charac-
ter, as Michael Warner has pointed out. The social function of ro-
mantic love is to be anti-social, to represent a private, spontaneous,
anarchic rebellion against the order of society. Love is the one socially
conventional emotion that is conventionally defined as being opposed
to social conventions. Falling in love is thus the most conformist
method of being an individual. Conversely, falling in love is the most
original and spontaneous way to conform, perhaps the only way of
conforming to social demands that will never make you look like a
conformist. It is the one way that you can behave like everyone else
and still claim, at the same time, that you did it your way.6
Gay romantic love may feel even more like something socially re-
bellious rather than like something socially scripted, and gay people
may therefore tend to ascribe to their love affairs a dangerous and ex-
cessive degree of emotional truth, of personal authenticity.7 Which
risks imparting to those relationships an intensity and an inelasticity
that can be suffocating, while you are in them, and that later makes
them very difficult to escape. Similarly, the social opprobrium at-
tached to such relationships may make gay people feel particular pres-
sure to champion their naturalness, which is to say their involun
tariness. And that may make gay love relations seem even more
inescapable.
288 MOMMIE QUEEREST
%
What started out looking like a particular obsession on the part of
gay men with the figure of the mother turns out to have more to do
with gay mens fraught relation to the dangerously seductive, oppres-
sive, inescapable, helpless, would-be tragic role of the romantic lover.
To say this is not to turn Mildred Pierce into a gay man or to reduce
gay mens identification with her to mere identityto a mirroring, a
self-recognition, a consolidation of the gay ego. It is to understand
her, rather, as offering a proxy identity to gay men. Joan Crawford as
Mildred Pierce figures and makes available to gay men an emotional
situation that they can explore, so as to gain a perspective on aspects
of their own predicament. She enables them to try on, to try out, to
compare, and to criticize certain ways of being and feeling.
For the mother is both a literal and a figurative character. In her,
those two orders of meaning are not separate or independent. The
mother is at once a person and a function. She is simultaneously real
and symbolic. She is always both herself and a representation, a
mother and an emblem or expression of motherhood, a symbol of
the maternala figure, that is, for a particular social and emotional
situation.
As such, the mother has long functioned as a camp alter ego for
gay men. Witness the old habit among gay men of referring to them-
selves in the first person not as I but as Your mother. Thus, Your
mother is very tired todayyou will have to be nice to her. Or, Your
mother cant help herselfshe loves you too much. W. H. Auden
managed to demolish forever the most celebrated line of poetry Ste-
phen Spender wrote by means of precisely such a camp subversion. I
think continually of those who were truly great becomes impossible
to take seriously, once the lines first-person pronoun is robbed of its
grandeur and pathos by being turned into a domestic diva. Your
Tragedy into Melodrama 291
%
Melodrama, we know, is a category that normally applies to the suf
fering of other people. It disqualifies other peoples suffering as being
unworthy of our full sympathy, and it demeans their emotional lives
as lacking in high seriousness. If the term melodramatic is dispar-
aging of other peoples feelings, if it subverts the authenticity of their
feelings and denies those people the standing necessary for social ac-
creditation and, thus, for serious consideration, that is because it
refuses to accord their sufferings the aristocratic and masculine dig-
nity of tragedy. Instead, the label melodramatic identifies their
sufferings as merely pathetic. And once qualified by that label, their
sufferings become as unseriousand, ultimately, as potentially laugh-
ableas the women and the middle-class folks whose sufferings the
debased genre of melodrama, in its misplaced sentimentality, takes
seriously. But when gay men speak of themselves in the first person
as Your mother, or when they represent their grief through the de-
liberate theatrics and histrionics of a drag performancethrough an
ironic impersonation of Italian widows, saythey embrace that very
dclassement and situate their own feelings in the category of melo-
drama.
The application of the melodrama label, then, does not always
produce an effect of social exclusion and symbolic violence. It does
not always participate in the kitsch logic of denigration. It is not al-
ways a put-down of other people. When the label is applied to yourself,
it can also exemplify the camp practice of inclusivenessa communal
practice that consists in refusing to exempt yourself from the univer-
sal deflation of other peoples pretensions to authenticity and serious-
ness, yet without forgoing all claims to be treated decently yourself.
Many years ago I asked a friend of mine in Boston, who had been
living with the same boyfriend for a very long time, if it had ever oc-
292 MOMMIE QUEEREST
curred to them to want to get married. Oh, no, he said with a laugh,
wed have terrible fights over who got to wear the wedding dress.
That witticism, if it had been directed against someone other than
oneself, or against someone other than the person one loved, would
have registered as merely demeaning in its implicit demotion of a man
from the noble rank of male dignity to the lower rank of female trivi-
ality. And it would be doubly demeaning in the context of gay male
love: since male homosexuality sees in masculinity an essential erotic
value, to portray oneself or ones partner as characterized by a femi-
nine identific ation, and to expose that feminine identification to pub-
lic mockery, would be to depreciate oneself or ones boyfriend as a
sexual object and as a vehicle of sexual fantasy.
Hence, Proust thought that the only way gay men could ever get
beyond desiring straight men, and could succeed in desiring one an-
other, would be to fool each other, to impersonate the real men they
had so catastrophically failed to be themselves, and to maintain the
charade for the longest time possible (though they could never suc-
ceed at keeping up the pretense for very long).9
That was in the Bad Old Days, of course, before gay liberation,
when the gay world was still polarized by the division between queens
and trade. But even (or especially) after Stonewall, the foredoomed
tactic of butching up in order to be desirable did not exactly die out.
Leo Bersani conveys powerfully the sense of gay chagrin at the in-
eluctable failure of gay masculinity by citing the classic put-down:
the butch number swaggering into a bar in a leather get-up opens his
mouth and sounds like a pansy, takes you home where the first thing
you notice is the complete works of Jane Austen, gets you into bed,
andwell, you know the rest.10
Or in the unlikely event that, even after getting you into bed, hestill
managed to keep up butch appearances, all your remaining illusions
would be shatteredaccording to the lead character in Armistead
Maupins Tales of the City (1978)when you eventually excused your-
self to use his bathroom and discovered his supply of personal cos-
metics.
Tragedy into Melodrama 293
I meet some person ... male-type ... at a bar or the baths, and he
seems really ... what I want. A nice mustache, Levis, a starched khaki
army shirt ... strong ... Somebody you could take back to Orlando
and theyd never know the difference. Then you go home with him to
his house on Upper Market, and you try like hell not to go to the bath-
room, because the bathroom is the giveaway, the fantasy-killer. ... Its
the bathroom cabinet. ... Face creams and shampoos for days. And on
the top of the toilet tank theyve all always got one of those goddamn
little gold pedestals full of colored soap balls!11
%
To live ones love life as melodrama, to do so knowingly and deliber-
ately, is not of course to refuse to take it seriouslyas any gay Joan
Crawford fan, and certainly any opera queen, can tell you. But it is to
accept the inauthenticity at the core of romantic love, to understand
romantic love as a social institution, an ideology, a role, a perfor-
mance, and a social genre, while still, self-consciously and undeceiv-
edly, succumbing to it.
In short, it is to do what is otherwise culturally impossibleim-
possible for normal folks, that is: to combine passion with irony.13
Gay male culture has in fact elaborated a distinctive, dissident per-
spective on romantic love, a camp perspective, which straight people
often regard as cynical, precisely because its ironywhich empha-
sizes the performativity of romantic rolesseems to them to under-
mine the seriousness and sincerity of love, and thereby to demean it.
But to demean love is also to desublimate it, to break the romantic
monopoly on it, to make it more widely available, to put it to a vari
ety of social uses, and to end the antagonism between love and soci-
Tragedy into Melodrama 295
ety, between love and friendship, between the happy couple and the
community. Gay male cultures vision of love is not a cynical one.
Rather, just as a camp perspective on family conflicts provides for an
attitude toward intense emotion that is alienated without being either
skeptical or reductive, so the effect of living ones love life knowingly
as melodrama is to cultivate an outlook on love that is disabused, but
not disenchanted.
Far from being fatal to love, a camp sensibility is the result and ex-
pression of loves self-knowledge. It indicates that the fusion of gay
desire and gay sisterhood, of the beauty and the camp, though never
easy, is possible, and can happen.
There is, in sum, an erotics of melodrama. At their wisest, gay
mens love relationships exemplify and embody it. And one of gay
male cultures jobs is to enshrine that erotics, to preserve it, to com-
municate it, and to transmit it.
%
But if melodrama has an erotics, it also has a politics. If you wanted
any additional confirmation of that, look no further than the stories
about the drag queen who started the Stonewall rebellion by hit-
tingthat police officer with her handbag, as if to saylike Faye Dun-
away playing Joan Crawford playing an outraged, martyred mother
Why cant you give me the respect that Im entitled to?
Or consider the following story about the funeral of Vito Russo,
gay militant, leading member of ACTUP New York, and author of
The Celluloid Closet (a study of the portrayal of gay men in Hollywood
movies). The first speaker at the funeral, in December 1990, was Da-
vid Dinkins, then mayor of New York; he quoted, without apparent
irony, a remark that Vito Russo had made to him a few days before,
when Dinkins had visited the dying mans bedside: In 1776, Edmund
Burke of the British Parliament said about the slavery clause, Apoliti-
cian owes the people not only his industry but his judgment, and if he
sacrifices his judgment to their opinions, he betrays them. Although
Dinkins may not have realized it at the time, Russo was hardly prais-
296 MOMMIE QUEEREST
ing him. He was upbraiding Dinkins for betraying his gay constitu
ents by appointing a homophobic health commissioner, by canceling
New Yorks pilot needle-exchange program, and by failing to defend
homeless people with HIV or to combat the rising tide of anti-gay vi-
olence. When the mayor left, the following speaker at Russos funeral
pointed out that Russos dying reproach to Dinkins did not derive
from Russos encyclopedic knowledge of eighteenth-century political
oratory. It was cribbed from a moviespecifically, the movie version
of a Broadway musical about the American Revolution, 1776.14
Douglas Crimp, who recounts this incident and provides the back-
ground I have just summarized, does so in the course of making a
passionate and powerful plea for basing a prog ressive politics not on
identity but on identific ation. Such an emphasis, he argues, will be
able to avoid producing the sorts of misunderstandings and tensions
that led to political conflicts among the various groups affected by
HIV/AIDS in the United States in the early 1990s. Crimps model for
an identificatory, coalition-based queer politicsa politics that can
reach across the divides of gender, race, class, sexuality, and other so-
cial differencesis summed up in the title of his essay: Right On,
Girlfriend! That melodramatic exhortation does not express a seri-
ous vision of solidarity between gay men and their lesbian and femi-
nist allies so much as it evokes a form of camp solidarity among gay
men themselves, a form of solidarity that can acknowledgeand can
mobilize the political energies ofgay mens feminine identifications,
including the feminine identifications of movie queens and Judy Gar-
land fans like Vito Russo. Right on, girlfriend! is exactly how Vito
Russos friends might have responded to him when, with virtually his
dying breath, he somehow summoned the strength to rebuke Mayor
Dinkins.
It is precisely because such identifications depend on the queerness
of the gay men who make them, not on the actual gender or sexual
identity of the women with whom those gay men identifyand it is
precisely because such queer identifications do not therefore presume
a relation of identity with the lesbians and feminists with whom some
Tragedy into Melodrama 297
%
That is the point I would like to make about the politic al uses of Joan
Crawford, and of womens melodrama more generally, by gay men.
The work of all gay male cultural politics can be summed up in a sin-
gle, simple formula: to turn tragedy into melodrama. The historical func-
tion of gay male culture has beenand its ongoing political task
remainsto forge an ironic perspective on scenes of compulsory, so-
cially validated and enforced performance, to decommission suppos-
edly authentic social identities and return them to their status as will-
fully or witlessly iterated roles.
Hegel once said, in a parenthetical remark, that womankind (die
Weiblichkeit) is the eternal irony of the community (die ewige Ironie des
Gemeinwesens).17 Coming from him, that was not exactly a compli-
ment. But he was making an important political point.
Hegel was talking not about melodrama but about tragedyabout
Sophocless Antigone. He was highlighting Antigones ironic relation
to the world of masculine power, a relation typical of women who,
Hegel said, pervert the universal purpose of government to private
purpose through intrigue. It was just such an ironic relation to mas-
culine authority, Hegel implied, that informed Antigones resistance
to the law and enabled her to justify, without needing to invoke any gen-
eral principle, her defiance of the state.
Judy Garland is not Antigone. But if, on the night of Judy Garlands
funeral on Friday, June27, 1969, Hegel had been among the queens
who gathered outside the Stonewall Inn during the police raid on it,
298 MOMMIE QUEEREST
+++
Bitch Baskets
1154
G AY F E M I N I N I T Y
%
That gay men have qualities or characteristics generally possessed by
girls and women is also the conclusion drawn by Will Fellows from
his own study of gay mens cultural practices.2 In particular, he finds
that gay men are a prominent and highly talented presence, even an
apparently disproportionate presence, in many female-dominated
fields that revolve around creating, restoring, and preserving beauty,
order, and continuity (x)specifically, those activities whose pur-
pose is to conserve material cultures from the past. Such activities in-
clude historic preservation, antiquarianism, architectural restoration,
interior design, fashion and style. Fellows devotes a lengthy, eloquent,
richly documented book, APassion to Preserve (2004), to gay men as
keepers of culture.
Like me, Fellows wants to explore the various ways in which gay
men differ from straight men, ways thatlike the love of Broadway
musicalsgo well beyond sexual behavior and often manifest them-
selves in early childhood, years before sexual orientation finds ex
pression in the specific form of sexual activity. In the course of doing
research for an earlier book, Farm Boys, about gay men from rural
backgrounds,3 Fellows noted that gender-role nonconformity was
prominent in many of the life stories he collected, especially in the
early chapters of them.4
As boys, most of the men I spoke with had been especially drawn to
doing things that lay outside the range of activities approved for males.
Gay Femininity 303
%
One can easily imagine the shock and outrage of the Stonewall gen-
eration at this return of the repressed in the field of gay male self-
definition. Could it be that all those horrible pundits have been right,
and homosexuals are indeed the third sex? Edmund White asked
incredulously, as early as 1969.11 Many gay men today may have simi-
lar reactions.
Indeed, we have witnessed a number of them. A sense of outrage
was already palpable in the protest against my class by John from An-
napolis: no, he had insisted, gay men are not fashion-savvy or design-
savvy, as some would have us believe, nor do they have a penchant for
dressing like women. We have seen examples of similar defensiveness
and disavowal in David Daniels and Anthony Tommasini, not to men-
tion D.A. Millers scandalized love-object, who hastily dried the tears
sent coursing down his cheeks by Some Enchanted Evening. And
we are used to hearing the constant, insistent assertionrepeated
endlessly for decades now, and in the teeth of all the evidence to the
contrarythat gay male effeminacy is a thing of the past, that polar-
ized sex roles are antiquated, homophobic notions, that the queen is
dead, that there is no difference between gay people and straight
people, that there is no such thing as gay male culture beyond a series
of hostile stereotypes. Gay men who want to style themselves as vir-
ile, non-queer, post-gay, or simply as ordinary, regular guys whose
sexual preference does not mark them as different from normal folk,
recoil instinctively from any aspect of male homosexuality that might
seem to express or signify effeminacy. That is why they tend to dis-
claim any participation in gay culture or even any knowledge of its
existence, despite their active involvement at times in the life of gay
communities.
What exactly are all these people afraid of ? That the carefully
erected faade of gay masculinity, hard won through individual and
306 BITCH BASKETS
%
Fellows poses a useful challenge to the standard post-Stonewall view.
If I have decided to begin this chapter by discussing his account of
gay mens cultural practices and outlining my disagreements with it,
that is because I admire his work and I take his challenge seriously.
The notion that gayness comprises much more than sexual partners
and practices, that some of the distinctive dimensions of gay male
lives [extend] beyond sexuality per se, that what makes gay men dif-
ferent from straight people lies in the non-sexual dimensions of gay
mens natures, and that male homosexuality can therefore be under-
stood as a specifically cultural practice, not just a sexual one, repre-
sents a key insight. It is the basis on which I have built this entire book.
And there is no denying that many of the cultural practices associated
with male homosexuality comprise activities that are coded by our
society as feminine. Each of those two points is important; instead of
being evaded, they merit serious and sustained reflection. Gay men
should not flinch from them. The challenge for queer studies is to ac-
count for them through social analysis, instead of ascribing them to
the natural order of things.
For cultural practices are not likely to be rooted in nature, and any
attempt to locate their origins in gay mens natures will only put them
off-limits to further critical inquiry, by implying that there is nothing
to explain beyond the natural facts of the matter, beyond the way
things just naturally are. That tendency is being ominously reinforced
these days by the current vogue for locating sexuality and gender
Gay Femininity 309
%
When it comes to gender orientation, to gay mens allegedly fe-
malecharacteristics, or (as Fellows emphasizes, somewhat more cau-
tiously) gay mens combination of masculine and feminine attributes,
there is substantial disagreement about the matter on the part of the
Gay Femininity 311
subjects themselves. Gay men do not all see themselves as sexual in-
termediates. Some of them even take strong exception to the view
that they have qualities or characteristics generally possessed by girls
and women. Fellowss antithesis can be found in Jack Malebranche,
author of AndrophiliaAManifesto: Rejecting the Gay Identity, Reclaim-
ing Masculinity (2007), who denies gay mens essential, innate feminin-
ity and has little use for the female-dominated fields in which gay
men, according to Fellows, excel.16
Malebranche willingly admits that gayness is about more than sex-
uality. That, in his opinion, is exactly what is wrong with it.
The word gay has never described mere homosexuality. Gay is a sub-
culture, a slur, a set of gestures, a slang, a look, a posture, a parade, a
rainbow flag, a film genre, a taste in music, a hairstyle, a marketing
demog raphic, a bumper sticker, a political agenda and philosophical
viewpoint. Gay is a pre-packaged, superficial personaa lifestyle. Its
a sexual identity that has almost nothing to do with sexuality. ... The
gay sensibility is a near-oblivious embrace of a castrating slur, the non-
stop celebration of an age-old, emasculating stigma applied to men
who engaged in homosexual acts. Gays and radical queers imagine
that they challenge the status quo, but in appropriating the stigma of
effeminacy, they merely conform to and confirm long-established ex-
pectations.17
Malebranche (that, of course, is not his real name) seems to have his
finger on the pulse of the times.18 His book has received accolades
from online reviewers, and his fellow travelers are legion.
Or so we can gather from the following statement. Masculinity is
a trait to be honored, respected & treated with dignity. Such a view
is[,] sadly, a far cry from the moral turpitude that has swallowed the
gay male-community & now stands as its spokesperson. No, that is
not a homophobic jeremiad from the Christian Right: it is an online
promotion for the g0y identity, ANew Identity in Male Sexuality.
And no, g0y is not Yiddish for Gentile: its gay, or guy, with a
zero in place of the middle letter.
G0y refers to masculine guys who like other masculine guys,
312 BITCH BASKETS
who value masculinity and cherish intimacy with other men, who re-
ject effeminacy, and who consider anal intercourse completely de-
grading & repulsive to masculinity.19 Here is how their homepage
puts it:
fringe group. Gay rodeos are extremely popular events all over
America, John Clum observes, adding, I wish I heard more irony
from the folks who attend them.22 Irony, however, is the last thing
you can expect from the Brokeback Mountain crowd. What remains so
awkward for Fellows, in any case, is that the virile, gender-normative
style taken up and promoted by advocates of the g0y identity clearly
strikes a chord with a considerable number of guys who, like it or
not, fall into the category of gay, even according to Fellowss own
definition of it, but who disavow any and all gender-atypicality. When
I last accessed the g0y website, on June 23, 2011, it had had nearly
700,000 hits.
%
This little skirmish over essentialism and its critical liabilities was un-
doubtedly predictable, if not a bit stale, and in any case the issues are
well known and familiar by now. Still, the main reason for dispatching
the whole topic as quickly and economically as possible is that it
doesnt address the most important and interesting questions raised
by the femininity of gay male cultural practicesnamely, what is fem-
ininity, and whose femininity are we talking about anyway? Third-sex the-
ories do not, unfortunately, provide adequate answers to those ques-
tions. Instead, they tend to evade them by naturalizing the social.
That is, they accept at face value the standard social definitions of
gender and go on to treat them, unaltered, as transparent reflections
of natural facts. They take various practices that are conventionally
marked as feminine or masculinebut that may have nothing to do
with maleness or femalenessand affirm their gender codings, with
the result that anyone of the other sex who takes up those practices
appears to reveal by that gender-atypical choice a natural, underly-
ing condition of sexual intermediacy. In this way, third-sex theories
collapse the distinction between sex and gender, and rewrite the so-
cial as the natural.
The gender dispensation under which most of us live is a radically
polarized one, and it tends to enforce a dichotomous model of male
314 BITCH BASKETS
and female as opposite sexes. Social practices that are not coded as
conventionally masculinesuch as flower-arranging or dancingare
quickly and unreflectively coded by our societies and by ourselves as
feminine (although the details may vary from one society to another:
for example, baking is coded as feminine in the United States and as
masculine in France). But not everything that fails to qualify as prop-
erly masculine, according to the stringent social criteria designed to
safeguard the purity of that rare and precious essence, is necessarily
feminine. The ecstatic worship of divas from the world of opera or
popular music may not be terribly butch, but that doesnt mean it
isfemininein the sense that women as a group consume Maria Cal-
las or Judy Garland tracks at the same pace that Rufus Wainwright
does, or flock to the opera as they do to makeup counters, or collect
Cher or Madonna videos for fear of being thought unwomanly.
When a mans passionate interest in historic preservation or period
restoration is taken to mean that he has the psychologic character
of women (to borrow Edward Carpenters phrase), the social lan-
guage of gender is hastily translated into the natural reality of sex. I
completely agree with Fellows that there is often some truth in ste-
reotypesHowever trite they may seem, Fellows says, gay stereo-
types are useful in examining gay mens natures (246)but in
converting such stereotypes into archetypes (x, 247), and into the
truths of our nature, Fellows places too much faith in clichs, in so-
cial fantasies about masculinity and femininity that seem obvious and
right to us only because they conform to widespread, generally ac-
cepted notions about sex and gender, notions that start to look thor-
oughly incoherent as soon as we examine them up close.
The reason its a good idea to resist falling into conventional ways
of thinking about gender, ways that the gender ideology of our soci-
ety constantly promotes, is that otherwise we will be inclined to ac-
cept, without considering them properly, a lot of bogus ideas about
women and men that we would find utterly implausible if they didnt
happen to agree with the polarized concepts of gender that gender-
stereotyping reinforces by representing them as mere common sense.
Gay Femininity 315
%
So how can we describe gay male cultures particular, non-standard
formation of gender and sexuality? What is the cultural logic behind
it? What kind of social and emotional work do gay mens so-called
feminine identific ations do? What, in fact, is the gay male relation
to femininity?
In order to begin to answer that question, we need to understand
gay male femininity, or what passes for femininity in gay male
culture, as its own phenomenon, or range of phenomenaas something
quite distinct from the various kinds of femininity exhibited or per-
formed by women. Which is precisely why some writers prefer terms
like gender-role non-conformity and gender atypicality to de-
scribe gay male practices of gender: those terms indicate, by their
very neutrality, a certain suspension of judgment about what the ex-
act meaning of gay male gender dissidence really is, a refusal to de
fine any and all departures from canonical masculinity automatically,
unreflectively, and uncritically as feminine. So much the better. But
318 BITCH BASKETS
%
One of my reasons for selecting the figure of Joan Crawford in the
first place and for choosing to study the mesmerizing spectacle she
offers of mingled glamour and abjection, both in Mildred Pierce and in
its descendants, is that her gay appeal forces us to confront two noto-
rious aspects of gay male subjectivity that make gay men nowadays
particularly squeamishand therefore particularly loath to explore
them: namely, identific ation with women and attachment to the
mother.26
Those two themes are both central and taboo in contemporary
gay male culture. They are very far from being extinctas anyone
can testify who has been to a drag show or seen Pedro Almodvars
1999 film All about My Mother, which condenses an entire tradition of
cultural reflection on the part of gay men about their relations to
femininity and to the figure of the mother.27 But no self-respecting
gay man wants to address those topics nowadays, except in the form
of a joke or a put-down. Once upon a time, gay men had a reputation
for being able to talk about nothing but their mothers. Now they re-
fuse to go near the subject.
320 BITCH BASKETS
for. Instead of running from the specter of gay male gender deviance,
being ashamed of it, greeting it with stubborn and stolid silence or
denial, and consigning it to homosexualitys newly built closet, we
need to continuein a spirit of unprejudiced and panic-free inquiry
to inquire into the meaning of gay male femininity, without fearing
that any investigation of it will necessarily return us to homophobic
clichs about our abnormal psychology.
Most of all, we shouldnt be so sure before we start that we already
know what gay femininity is, how it functions, or what it means.
1164
G E N D E R A N D G E N R E
%
Social life reaches down very deep into the subjectivity of the indi-
vidual. It shapes what appear to us to be our profound, abiding intu-
itions about the world and about ourselves. We have already surveyed
some instances of basic intuitions or subjective truths that, though
deeply felt, reflect not our biological natures or our psychological vi-
cissitudes but the social order of our world and the values associated
with it. For example, people in our society perceive generational
struggles between men as tragic, at least potentially, whereas they
feel that generational struggles between women do not qualify for
equally serious, or completely serious, consideration. Conflicts be-
tween women are excessive, histrionic, overwroughtin any case,
they are less than fully dignified. Authority is masculine, since it is-
326 BITCH BASKETS
%
My second premise is that working models of gay male subjectivity
should not attempt to cordon off gender orientation from sexual-
ity.Because gay male cultural practices often manifest themselves in
childhood, long before the start of sexual activity, and because they
seem largely unrelated to sexual activity of any kind, it is tempting to
see them as representing a phenomenon entirely independent from
erotic life. Furthermore, because many of those practices take the
form of certain pursuits that are associated with girls and women,
they can be interpreted as expressing a deep, underlying, congenital,
originary, non-standard (feminine) gender orientation instead of a
(gay) sexual orientation. That general outlook does have a certain ap-
peal. And it may be an entirely appropriate way to understand some
transgender individuals as well as transgender culture. In the case of
gay men, however, the trick is not only to distinguish gay male cul-
tural practices from gay male sexual practices, but, having done so, to
figure out how they are related. What is the logical or emotional con-
nection between a liking for Judy Garland and a liking for sex with
328 BITCH BASKETS
and silver and cut glass and woodwork and all those aesthetic satisfac-
tions that seem to have nothing to do with sexual pleasure. And, in-
deed, much of gay male culture delights in activities thatunlike gay
sex, which is socially condemned as abnormal and unnaturalinspire
widespread admiration on the part of straight society, insofar as they
involve making the world beautiful. It is understandable that what
some gay men would prize and cherish in those activities is precisely
their merciful exemption from sexuality and, thus, from punitive
judgment, whether other peoples or gay mens own. Instead of a
physical, animal act that can be experienced as undignified, filthy,
shameful, and perverse (at least, if youre doing it right), architectural
restoration or musical performance or art-collecting is not only so-
cially respectable, public-spirited, and praiseworthy; it also, just like
modernist abstraction in this one respect, affords a redemptive oppor-
tunity to transcend the body and its functionsto escape from the
tainted identity of being a (homo)sexual subject and from all the
stigma that attaches to it. Just think of Liberace (who was also a house
restorer on the side): only by constructing for himself an elaborately
artificial identity as a classy and glamorous artist, as a purveyor of
high musical culture, could he neutralize the contempt he otherwise
would have incurred for being such a queen.6
No doubt a certain part of the appeal of queer cultural practices to
gay men lies precisely in their remove from overt sexuality: they make
available to gay men forms of queer expression other than the strictly sex-
ual. Furthermore, cultural practices offer gay men outlets for their
passions that belong to a supposedly higher order than sexual activity
and that may even partake of the ascetic, the spiritual, or the selfless.
Fellows captures beautifully the kind of unironic, religious devotion
characteristic of certain gay male cultural practicesa devotion that
is neither explicitly campy nor implicitly sexual, that makes no refer-
ence to gayness, and that has rather to do with a total, serious, spiri-
tual absorption in the aesthetic object, which is venerated both as
anabsolute value in itself and as an escape from ones own self, in-
cluding ones sexual subjectivity. In complete, selfless immersion in
Gender and Genre 331
%
Let us consider a very simple and obvious fact. In a heterosexual and
heteronormative societythat is, in the sort of society in which most
332 BITCH BASKETS
%
It might seem misguided, in any approach to gay male subjectivity, to
ignore psychic factors and to place so much emphasis on social semi-
otics, on the codes of sex and gender, treating them as determinative
of the vicissitudes of gay male subject-formation. It might seem as if
I were limiting my conceptual model to superficial phenomena, to
labels or signs or categories or ideologies, avoiding the deep, internal
Gender and Genre 335
%
Gender identity is formed very early in the life of the individual. And
how is it formed, after all, if not in relation to preexisting social mod-
els of gender and sexuality, embodied both by a childs earliest care
givers and by the gender values belonging to the cultural forms that
those careg ivers make available to the childand that have shaped
their own styles of conduct and emotional expression? The differen-
tial gender-mapping of cultural forms produces the (heteronorma-
tive) social-semiotic system in which a childs careg ivers participate, a
system that has already contributed to forming their own subjectivi-
ties and determining their personal styles of feeling and behavior.
Gay (or proto-gay) subjects may well find those styles of expression,
along with the entire conventional social-semiotic system of gender
and sexuality that subtends them, to be uncongenial, if not down-
right alien. Under those conditions, it is hardly surprising that many
gay (or proto-gay) subjects resist interpellation by traditional codes of
masculinity and femininity, or that they find scant personal meaning
in the cultural forms and activities that such codes inflect as tradition-
ally masculine or feminine. In which case, they may adopt certain
evasive strategies that enable them to dodge the social summons to
experience the world in heterosexual and heteronormative ways.
Those standard, straight ways of experiencing the world include
ways of feeling as well as ways of responding to cultural objects and
activities already coded for gender and sexuality, ways of orienting
oneself in relation to all the constellations of interconnected values
responsible for inflecting persons, behaviors, and genres of discourse
with the dense social meanings that they bear, meanings that also re-
ferhowever obliquelyto gender and sexuality. The central portion
of this book has been dedicated to tracing the logical connections
Gender and Genre 337
%
Let us consider a representative, indeed a notorious example. It dis-
plays one gay subjects dissident relations to the mainstream gender
coding of standard cultural values. I am referring to a poem by Frank
OHara, a gay poet who played a central role in the formation of the
so-called New York School of poets, painters, and musicians. The
poem appeared in his 1964 collection Lunch Poems.13
%
Melodrama and tragedy refer not only to different genres of
drama, then, but also to different pragmatic genres of discourse, dif-
Gender and Genre 343
I dont think so, I said. The book says she right there.
But its not! she insisted.
I was sure of my argument. How do you know its a boy bear?
Because hes got pants on!
Surely she had fallen into my trap. But youre wearing pants, I ex-
plained. In fact, youre wearing the same kind of Oshkosh overalls
that Corduroy [the bear] is wearing. And youre a little girl, arent
you?
But Daddy, declared my three-year-old in a voice of utmost dis-
dain at my failure to recognize the self-evident, thats a book!
%
enre shapes the sensibilities of young people from their very first
G
encounters with others, from their initial experiences of sociality, and
so it forms their subjectivities. Most children grow up in heterosexual
environments, where they are introduced to standard genres of dis-
course, feeling, expression, and behaviorincluding the conventions
of emotional expression that their parents spontaneous manifesta-
tions of feeling often mirror and reproduce. Even children raised by
lesbian or gay male parents are initially exposed, at least to some de-
gree, to mainstream cultural genres and styles of expression.
The fact that popular culture nowadays routinely includes gay and
(considerably less often) lesbian characters in the diegetic register of
their stories does not change the generic design of those stories them-
selves (that is, it doesnt change whether or not they are comedies or
melodramas), nor does it alter the modes of feeling that are codified
by traditional generic conventions and that adults take up in their in-
teractions with others. Will and Grace is still a situation comedy; La
Cage aux Folles and Rent are still Broadway musicals; All about My
Mother and Bad Education are still melodramasand none of them is
likely to be part of early childhood education anyway. Whereas books
about queer families that are designed specifically for elementary-
school-age children, like Heather Has Two Mommies, Jenny Lives with
Eric and Martin, or And Tango Makes Three, though they may well con
tribute to the destigmatization of homosexuality and conduce to
greater social tolerance, hardly break down the heteronormative mo-
nopoly on forms of expression held by the major popular genres.
346 BITCH BASKETS
%
The formative, subjectivating effects of genre provide the solution to
a persistent puzzle about how kids can get initiated so early into the
cultural practice of homosexuality. Gay male identity, after all, seems
to be a relatively late formation, reaching back no further than ado-
lescence. And gay male culture, as it is collectively practiced and
transmitted, is largely an artifact of gay male urban communities,
which are composed of grown-ups. Membership in gay male cul-
tureboth for gay men and for those women and straight men who
enroll in itis something acquired in the course of later life, through
a process of adult socialization. So how can such a process of adult
socialization account for what clearly look, at least in retrospect, to
have been the gay cultural practices precociously embraced early in
their lives by many boys who later turn out to be gay? How do we
explain why gay or proto-gay subjects take up the cultural practice of
male homosexuality while they are still children, and why certain het-
erosexual subjects, who will later discover in themselves a deep affin-
ity with gay male culture, sometimes experience a strong and unerr-
ing attraction to its cultural forms from an early age, without being
aware of such an attraction, at least not under that description?
Furthermore, what sense does it make to speak of culture without
reference to processes of socialization or acculturation? Or, rather,
how can there be a culture of male homosexuality if there is no evi-
dence of or even possibility for the existence of a process of primary
socialization, the kind of socialization that takes place in infancy?
The very notion of culture, especially in its classic, nineteenth-
century, anthropological formulation, presumes a central, even a
foundational role for language. Cultural groups are conventionally
identified by reference to linguistic communities. Language-use de
fines the boundaries of a culture: a culture, at the very least, is com-
348 BITCH BASKETS
posed of individuals who all speak the same language. To learn a hu-
man language is the beginning of acculturation and socialization.
Language provides a point of entry into culture.
But gay men, despite some distinctive and characteristic uses of
language that differentiate them from other language-users, do not
form a separate linguistic group.18 So if they are to qualify as mem-
bers of a culture, gay men would need to be constituted as a group
through some primary process of socialization akin to language ac-
quisition. Watching Joan Crawford movies with a bunch of your gay
friends, at the age of thirty-five, hardly fills the bill.
Language is just one example, albeit a privileged one, of what de
fines a culture. In fact, culture is usually assumed to consist in various
arbitrary but systematic patterns of thought and behavior that have
been deeply ingrained in the perception and habits of those who be-
long to specific human living-g roups. Like language, which serves
as a model for other processes of acculturation, those patterns of
thought and behavior are impressed on children from an early age,
whether they are deliberately taught to them or whether they are
simply absorbed by children from the people who raise them.
In any case, acculturation refers to a routine process of socializa-
tion that takes place identically, or nearly so, throughout a particular
group or population. It goes on within all the families that constitute
a single society or cultural unit, such that all the members of a par-
ticular human living-g roup spontaneously end up being, for example,
native speakers of a single languageeven though they learned it in
different settings and in slightly different versions.
Real cultural patterns, according to this standard notion of culture,
are like linguistic structures. They shape human subjects in specific,
profound ways. Because they are impressed on the individual so early,
at such a formative age, they are stubborn, enduring, and constitutive
of the self. Culture is preserved by regular, long-standing processes of
social reproduction that transmit particular patterns of thought and
behavior from one generation to the next and consolidate the collec-
tive identity of the group. By reproducing itself with each new gen-
Gender and Genre 349
think of themselves as gay (or straight), and came into contact with
any of the formal or informal institutions of gay sociability. And those
who make gay male cultural identific ations often describe those iden
tifications as instinctive, natural, unshaped by social attitudes or prej-
udices, and as a persistent, enduring aspect of their personhood,
deeply anchored in their subjectivity.
Will Fellows assembles a multitude of eloquent personal testimo-
nials to that effect, documenting both the strength and the ubiquity
of such perceptions, with specific reference to historic preservation
and architectural restoration: Even as a child growing up in a nonde-
script farmhouse, I had an eye for the more interesting and attractive
buildings(29); Gay men are very sensitive to beauty. Its perhaps a
hackneyed stereotype, but I believe in itI simply know it(30); Ive
been in love with old buildings and the stories of the people behind
them since I was a kid(51); As a child I had a great interest in build-
ings and architecture(61); I think Im genetically predisposed to be
a collector(70); Mother said I brought home my first treasure when
I was seven(99); Even as a kid I was always wanting to fix things
up(111); From my earliest memories I was always fascinated with
houses and what happened inside them(118); From the time I was
three years old, I knew that I was going to be an artist(131); Is it a
compulsion or an obsession? I dont know(210).
Recall, in this connection, Barry Adams explanation for the vis-
ceral appeal of opera and the Broadway musical to some gay boys:
Musical theater is one of a number of possibilities that speak to the
sense of difference, desire to escape, and will to imagine alternatives
that seems a widespread childhood experience of many pregay boys.
The very same thing could also be said about historic preservation.
Adam concedes that there may be no single universal pregay experi-
ence, but he suggests that all these cultural activities, and the power-
ful draw they exert, nevertheless indicate a range of core experiences
with broad resonance among gay and potentially gay men that ex-
ceed the notion of gay as just a social construction or discursive
effect.21
Gender and Genre 351
get a lot out of thembut they are thoroughly exposed to the styles
of personal expression defined by those forms, since such styles of
expression shape ordinary emotional life and construct the various
pragmatic ways that childrens careg ivers speak, express themselves,
and relate to children.
In other words, a process of socialization into gay male cultural
practices can begin at an early age, long before the start of an active
sex life or the beginning of adult participation in a gay community,
because already at that age proto-gay subjects begin forging, or per-
haps merely finding, a non-standard relation to the sexed and gen-
dered values attached both to mainstream genres of discourse, feel-
ing, behavior, and personal expression and to the cultural forms
(musicals, tragedies, melodramas, historic preservation, various aes-
thetic practices and pursuits), and their correlate emotional forms in
individual behavior, that embody, disseminate, routinize, reinforce,
and consolidate those genres. And proto-gay subjects respond to the
queer solicitation of certain features or elements in those mainstream
forms that speak to these kids sense of difference, desire to escape,
and will to imagine alternatives, as Barry Adam puts it.
%
What I have just proposed here is not, obviously, a theory of what
causes male homosexuality. Instead, I have offered an admittedly
speculative account of how some individuals (both gay and straight)
acquire a gay male cultural orientation, whose coordinates extend to
the fields of both sexuality and gender. My account has been abstract,
highly schematic, and undoubtedly simplistic, but at least it is sup-
ported by a certain amount of empirical evidencenamely, the evi-
dence provided by a critical analysis of gay male cultural practices
and the larger cultural poetics on which they are based. Such an anal-
ysis has occupied the major portion of this book. So I can claim to
have put forward a conceptual model for understanding the social
process of acculturation by which a gay male cultural sensibility is
formed.
Gender and Genre 353
cult to explain the logic behind our tastes than we would expect.
What is it, exactly, that I abhor in a certain style of interior decora-
tion, a certain model of car, the color or pattern of a tie? Why do I
shudder at the very thought of acquiring a little gold pedestal full of
colored soap balls, or a garden gnome?
This mysterious state of affairs is itself mysterious. Its not just that
those questions are perplexing in themselves. Whats more perplex-
ing is our inability to answer them or even to understand the grounds
of our diffic ulty in answering them. Theres already something mildly
odd about the fact that cultural objects and activities and artifacts
have meanings that implicate gender and sexuality. But given that
such artifacts are, transparently, obviously, undeniably coded for gen-
der and sexualityand given that their sexual and gendered mean-
ings are clear enough to us that we have no difficulty acting on our
recognition of them, expressing our visceral responses, our attrac-
tions and repulsionsits even odder that we have such a hard time
specifying those meanings. Why cant we do it?
In most cases, we have no concepts and no language adequate to
the task of describing the sexual and gendered meanings which such
objects encode, which means we cant fully explain, in a sequential
and logical way, our immediate, often vehement reactions to partic-
ular objects on the basis of their sexual and gender coding. But the
problem is not just one of finding the right category or the right vo-
cabulary to articulate our perceptions. It is a matter of representation
and representability. We dont have a ready way to specify the sort of
meaning that is expressed not by a representation of something but
by the thing itself.
This inability is baffling. We are not dealing with the mysteries of
the universe or the wonders of nature, after all; we are dealing with
human cultural productions and their significations, with our own so-
cial world. Each object or activity has been manufactured and de-
signed with careful intent and laborious deliberation by people like
ourselves. It has been specifically intended to produce the specific ef-
fect on us that it does in fact produce. So why cant we specify what
The Meaning of Style 359
19 Frame capture from Mildred Pierce (Michael Curtiz, 1945). Mildred, having pulled herself
together and made a decision, sets out to make a telephone call.
20 Frame capture from Mildred Pierce (Michael Curtiz, 1945). Mildred in shadow.
21 Frame capture from Mildred Pierce (Michael Curtiz, 1945). Mildred approaches the telephone.
22 Frame capture from Mildred Pierce (Michael Curtiz, 1945). Mildred at the telephone.
The exact effect that the shot, the lighting of the face, and the face
itself all produce exceeds what the technical analysis of visual rheto-
ric in cinema allows us to capture, because visual analysis cannot get
at the contextual, social dimension of the image. It can get at the
form, but not at the content of the form. It can describe the style, but
not the meaning of that style.
Style does have content. It has to have content, in fact, to be style. It
must mean something. Otherwise it would not even constitute a for-
362 BITCH BASKETS
the plot. The passing shadow of the blinds on Crawfords face and
body contributes to the drama of the scene. It conveys a sense of dark
foreboding. It builds a palpable tension, suggesting that a climax is
not far off and that the spectator should be prepared for an accelerat-
ing pace and an impending action. It is both tender and scary, imply-
ing that Mildred is being forced to act within the limits of certain
narrowing constraintsand, possibly, rising dangersof which the
spectator is now suddenly aware, more aware than Mildred herself
appears to be. The shot also communicates a heightened determina-
tion on Mildreds part, a new resolve, as well as a gathering of Joan
Crawfords dramatic powers. It says to the spectator something like,
Get ready for Joan. Shes a-coming. Shes on her way. Watch out
here we go!5
So style can be analyzed: it can be made to speak, to say something
in its own termsit can be made not to refer to something else, but
to say what it itself means. In the case of this sequence from Mildred
Pierce, what we would need in order to complete the analysis, to spec-
ify the exact value of each particular stylistic element within the con-
text of its system, is a deep technical knowledge of the production
values and working principles of the individuals who composed the
shot. Its value was understood clearly enough at the time the film
was made; after all, someone designed the shot and set it up with
great care and deliberatenesspresumably for the purpose of con-
veying the particular effect that it still so powerfully and heart-
stoppingly conveys. They knew what they were doing. They might
not have had a critical language, or meta-language, in which to de-
scribe what they were doing; nor in all likelihood would they have
formulated their rationale in the terms formalist critics would under-
stand: they were artists and were operating according to a thoroughly
internalized aesthetic logic. They may not even have had a conscious
consciousness of the meaning they were making. But if they had
been asked at the time what they were doing, why they were making
those choices, and what effect they were trying to achieve, they surely
could have said something, if only within the language of the style in
364 BITCH BASKETS
%
The project of attempting to specify the meaning of style is not new.
Art historians have been writing about the history and function of
style for centuries. In 1979 Dick Hebdige wrote a celebrated book
concerned entirely with the meaning of style, which he took to be
the key to understanding the identity of a minority subculture.7
And already in 1964, Susan Sontag inveighed against interpreta-
tion, against the kind of art criticism that preferred content to style,
that seemed addicted to meaning and consistently determined to find
more of it, always more meaning. Interpretation, according to her
polemical critique, reduced the work of art to its content and then
interpreted that content in order to extract meaning from it.8 Sontag
vehemently opposed psychology, as well as the hegemony in liberal
circles of psychological humanism. Instead of a hermeneutics of in-
terpretation, a quest to discover what a work of art deeply, truly
means, she urged us to take up an erotics of art, an appreciation of
surfaces, a description of aesthetic values, of style and its effects. She
promoted the pure, untranslatable, sensuous immediacy of art and
our experience of it.9
In making such a stark opposition between the hermeneutics of
depths and the erotics of surfaces, however, Sontag missed what ex-
actly it is about surfaces that makes their sensuous immediacy so ap-
pealing: their incarnate meaning. And so she missed, or dismissed,
something that is integral to aesthetics and the study of aesthetics,
something that is identical to neither content nor style, that is nei-
ther deep meaning nor superficial beautyand therefore neither
masculine nor femininenamely, style as its own thematics, or counter-
thematics. Although Sontag did call for the description and analysis
The Meaning of Style 365
%
I have already contrasted the different gendered positions in which
sports and the performing arts, respectively, place male performers.
Insofar as sports and the performing arts both qualify as mass leisure
occupations and as public spectacles, they might seem to solicit largely
identical responses from their audiences. Both of them consist of ac-
tivities that showcase the talents of ordinary people, people like our-
selves, who nonetheless do extraordinary thingsthings that almost
everyone can do to some degree, like catching a ball or singing, and
that everyone can therefore understand, but that very few people can
do with such exceptional skill and virtuosity. Both sports and the per-
forming arts produce spectacles for the pleasure of large audiences,
live as well as remote. Both kinds of spectacle involve displays of con-
siderable daring. And they are both highly dramatic.
The player who receives a pass when he is in a position to score,
368 BITCH BASKETS
the batter who faces a decisive pitch, the singer who at a moment of
total scenic and auditory exposure takes a breath before hitting the
long-awaited high note: all of them in their way are action heroes,
who have to perform under pressure, for high stakes, visibly, in pub-
lic, on once-and-only occasions, at great risk of personal disgrace.
The cultural organization of play in our society arranges for such per-
formers what might be thought of as lyrical momentsvery brief,
transient moments of crucial intensity, a fraction of a second in which
everything hangs in the balance. It is to occasions like these that the
players are summoned to rise, to exhibit all their dexterity, and to
magnetize the spectators with dazzling displays of quick thinking,
agility, technical and tactical prowess. The dramatic spectacle pro-
vided by the public performance of rare and difficult feats, carried out
in the instant with maximum exposure and under immense pressure,
constitutes the main source of the thrills for which the audiences
of both sports and the performing arts willingly pay great sums of
money.14
And yet, the two activities have radically different class and gender
codings. The class implications are less difficult to figure out than the
gendered ones. Any kid can kick an object aroundit doesnt even
have to be a balland practice his athletic skills anywhere in the
world. He doesnt need money, connections, encouragement by
sports figures, or a privileged cultural background, although all of
those things come in handy, especially if he wants to rise in the pro-
fession of sports or become an Olympic athlete. But at the outset, at
least, all he needs is talent, good health, and good luckthings that
are not limited to the upper classes, even if the material living condi-
tions of the upper classes favor the cultivation of all three. So it is easy
to see why sports should have a democratic dimension and why they
should seem to represent a form of excellence to which anyone can
aspirea form of excellence that is open to, and that can be appreci-
ated by, the common man. Opera, which requires complex collabora-
tions among singers, musicians, writers, composers, stage designers,
directors, choreographers, and language coaches, would seem to be
The Meaning of Style 369
closed, with respect to both its audience and its performers, to all but
members of the social elite.
But is this actually the case? During the 1980s, I used to work out at
a mostly gay gym in my mostly gay neighborhood in Boston. The
gym had various organized activities in which I did not participate,
such as team sports, including volleyball. I remember opening my
locker one day to see a notice that had been taped to the inside of the
metal door by the staff, announcing that a team composed of the best
volleyball players from the gym would be competing against rival
teams in a volleyball tournament in another city. Wishing them luck
and success, the announcement ended, Ritorna vincitor!
Thats Italian for Come back a conqueror! or Return victori-
ous! And just in case you didnt get it, the reference is to the great
soprano aria in the first act of Verdis 1871 opera, Aida. Indeed, in or-
der to get that reference, you would need to have come from a highly
privileged background, or to have grown up in an Italian or artistic
household, listening and going to the operaor you would have had
to undergo an initiation into gay male culture which, though it may
present itself as an aristocracy of taste and though it may identify
with a social elite, with the sort of people who go to the opera, is
hardly limited in its participants to members of the upper classes.
Membership in my gym was expensive, in other words, but it wasnt
that expensive.
Such an initiation into gay male culture would have had to be per-
formed not only on the person who wrote the notice that I found on
the inside of my locker door, but also on those who, like me, opened
their lockers and read it. If that allusion to Aida was to be meaningful
to its intended audience, in its social context, a significant amount of
preliminary cultural work would already have had to be carried out
by many participants in the local gay community. The members of
my former gym could not exactly be described, on the whole, as ex-
ceptionally cultivated peoplepeople who could necessarily be ex-
pected to be familiar with the arts in general and classical music in
particular, let alone with the complete libretti of Verdi operas in the
370 BITCH BASKETS
%
What is the gay male appeal of Ritorna vincitor!? The answer takes
us away from the class associations of opera and a step closer to ap-
preciating how the style of the utterance is coded for gender and sex-
uality. We already know why sports are socially marked as masculine
whereas the performing arts are socially marked as feminine: it all
hasto do with the specific social coding of doing versus appearing,
combat versus performance, unscripted versus scripted activity, ac-
tion versus role-playingand, in particular, with the conventional,
polarized gender values and meanings assigned to those dichotomies
according to a strict, binary opposition between masculinity and fem-
ininity. In the case of this soprano aria, theres a bit more to add, a few
extra considerations that may help to explain why heads of state do
not typically appeal to Ritorna vincitor! in order to send off their
national teams to the Olympics or to cheer for them in sports stadi-
ums (even if the triumphal military march from Aida does get played
and even sung at European soccer matches).
In fact, the social pragmatics of genre make it socially and cultur-
ally impossible for a national leader to wish an athlete representing
his country success by exclaiming Ritorna vincitor! The tacit ge-
neric conventions of public heterosexual culture prohibit it, and vio-
lations of those conventions get social actors into real trouble. When
one of the American soldiers in Iraq who arrested Saddam Hussein
borrowed a line from Tosca, the eponymous heroine of Giacomo
Puccinis opera, and remarked, Eavanti a lui tremava tutta Baghdad
The Meaning of Style 371
love, between family and husband, between duty and desire, and call-
ing on the gods to pity her in her perilous and abject (if undeniably
glamorous) condition.
So the phrase Ritorna vincitor! already bears a heavy burden of
dramatic irony in the text of Verdis opera, and the ironies multiply
when the phrase is cited and reused by gay men more than a century
later in the context of a local sporting event. The citation implies,
first, a cross-gender identific ation on the part of gay men, a cultural
relation to femininitythis much is suggested both by the feminine
coding of the operatic form itself and by the female subject of the ut-
terance that the author of the notice inside the locker, as well as its
reader, quote and ventriloquize. But that is not all. The gay usage also
interpellates the speaker of the utterance (in this case, both the man
who wrote the notice and the man who is intended to read it) as a
royal woman, as a Black woman, as a slave woman, and as a woman
who is destined to be destroyed by love. Once again, we witness the
multiplication of glamorous and abject roles, as well as an acknowl-
edged delight in the melodramatic form itself.
%
But if what we rediscover here is the homosexual love of melodrama,
we also cannot fail to notice the valorization of melodrama as a vehi-
cle for the expression of homosexual love, for the adoration of a male
love-object. The gay male appropriation of Ritorna vincitor! im-
plies not only cross-gender identific ation but also same-sex erotic de-
sire, not only a feminine subject position but a homosexual and melo-
dramatic one as wella posture of desperate, forbidden desire for a
heroic warrior. And so, in the context of the volleyball tournament,
the gay appropriation of that line injects an implicitly sexual element
into the relation between the team and the club that supports it.
Evoking the standard division between queens and trade, it teases
themembers of the gym, inviting them to identify with the female
speaker of the line, and thus to position themselves as queens, while
aligning the sporting heroes who make up the volleyball team with
her butch military love-object, and so representing them as trade. By
The Meaning of Style 373
%
This instance of gay male feminine identification, then, actually ex-
presses neither an underlying female nature nor a masculine one, nor
something in between. Rather, it expresses something elsesome
thing specifically gay. It actually helps to constitute a gay identity that
does not equate straightforwardly with any existing gender position,
but that is defined instead by its dissonance, by its departure from the
conventional gender map of masculinity and femininity.
The Meaning of Style 375
fine it, to invert the values associated with it, to take an ironic distance
from them, to challenge them, and to turn them against themselves.
For example, gay male culture applies the label melodramatic to it-
self, not just to those it laughs at, thereby throwing a wrench into the
machinery of social depreciation. For to forgo any claim to social dig-
nity is also to preempt others efforts to demean you, and it is to strike
an ironic attitude toward your own suffering. It is to refuse the cul-
tural dichotomy that treats the suffering of others as either tragic or
(merely) pathetic, according to their degree of social prestige. It is to
know ones own hurt to be laughable, without ceasing to feel itand
to embrace inauthenticity as an ironic means of contesting other peo-
ples claims to seriousness, thereby challenging the underlying logic
of social devaluation that trivializes the pain of unserious people.
Such ironic reuses of melodrama do not contest elite societys pu-
nitive judgments against that disreputable subgenre, but knowingly
embrace them, calling down on the necessarily flamboyant perfor-
mance of feelings judged to be pathetic the social contempt that such
performances also defy. Gay male cultures self-consciously melodra-
matic ethos explains the high value it sets on artificiality, performance,
inauthenticity, camp humor, and a disabused (but not disenchanted)
perspective on love.
By taking up, while ironically redefining, the social roles and mean-
ings traditionally assigned to women, gay male culture performs a
unique, immanent social critique and effects a characteristic but rec-
ognizable form of political resistance.
%
Gay male cultures simultaneous embrace and ironic reversal of the
abject social positioning of women may help to explain certain peren-
nial misunderstandings between gay men and feminists, as well as the
reputation for misogyny that gay male culture has acquired. Far from
attempting to elevate the position of women, to re-present them as
dignified, serious, heroic, authoritative, capable, talented, loving, pro-
Irony and Misogyny 379
%
If gay male culture embraces the disqualification of femininity, then,
it does so in order to challenge and to interrupt some of the most
noxious consequences of that disqualific ation, for gay men if not for
women. Its strategy is to reappropriate an already degraded feminin-
ity and to redefine that degraded status ironically, so as to contest the
nexus of values responsible for its degradation, to dismantle others
claims to dignity, and thus to level the social playing field. Feminists
recognize this, of course, but many of them tend to be unpersuaded
by it, unconvinced of the wisdom of the camp strategy of accepting,
appropriating, citing, and recoding hateful representations. With the
notable exceptions of Esther Newton, Judith Butler, and their fol
lowers, many feministsespecially straight feministstend to regard
irony as a poor alibi for the recirculation and perpetuation of demean-
ing stereotypes. Irony, on their view, cannot excuse the sin of com-
pounding the original social insult.
But gay male cultures strategic, ironic reappropriation of a deval-
orized femininity neither implies nor produces a continued insult to
women. For gay femininity, though it necessarily refers to women, is
not necessarily about women, as we have seen. Just as gay femininity
often consists in cultural practices (diva-worship or architectural res-
toration) that are socially marked as feminine but have nothing to do
with femininity as it is embodied by women themselves, so gay male
cultures delight in grotesque versions of femininity does not imply
acontempt for or a hostility to actual women. Many gay male cul-
tural practices that feature female figures, that refer to women or that
mobilize aspects of femininity, have in fact nothing at all to do with
women.
In most versions of camp humor, for example, it is not actual
women who are objects of mirth (or envy, or admiration) but con-
temporary cultural constructions of the femininefemininity in its
382 BITCH BASKETS
not tell us what effects it has on actual women or how positive those
effects are.
Furthermore, even though gay cultures parodies of femininity
may denaturalize that conventional and socially devalued gender role,
undercut its status as a natural essence, and treat it instead as a social
performanceand even though gay cultures grotesque caricatures
of femininity may sometimes be designed to achieve that very end
many women may feel that the target of all this gender parody is not
femininity alone, but femaleness as such. They may feel that gay male
aggression is being directed against the very condition of being a
woman.
Convenient as it would be to maintainfor the purposes of fram-
ing a political apology for gay male culturean absolutely airtight
distinction between femininity as a gender role or performance and
femaleness as a sexed or biological condition, the boundary between
them often turns out to be less sharp or hermetic than one might
wish, especially since some gay male cultural practices themselves
tend to fudge it. And the distinction I have tried to draw between
femininity and femaleness may be a distinction without a difference
for many women, who often find the two categories difficult, if not
impossible, to separate in their daily experiences of gender and gen-
der identity. They may not be wrong to feel personally targeted, to
feel attacked in their very being as women, by gay male cultures exu-
berant portrayals of extravagant, flamboyant, hysterical, suffering,
debased, or abject femininity.
Let us reconsider the Fire Island Italian widows from this perspec-
tive. Their act, I argued, is not misogynist: it does not express hatred
for women, so much as envy of some womens ability to carry off a
public spectacle of private pain. By putting on Italian-widow drag,
they attempted to appropriate for themselves, however ironically, a
feminine role that they would ordinarily be denied. Their demonstra-
tion of the performativity of Italian widowhood aimed to make the
status of widow transferable to themselves, so they could claim the
Irony and Misogyny 385
%
In 1990 Sonic Youth, the classic punk/grunge/indie rock band, cre-
ators of Confusion Is Sex (their first album, issued in 1983), included a
song, or screamin any case, a trackcalled Mildred Pierce on
their cross-over Goo CD, their first release for Geffen Records. The
song is actually one of Sonic Youths earliest compositions. Its initial
Irony and Misogyny 387
title was Blowjob. The original nine-minute demo tape of that track
can be heard on the 2005 deluxe reissue of Goo.7
The nature of the connection between oral sex and Joan Craw-
fords cinematic alter ego may not be immediately evident. The evil
genius responsible for the association turns out to be Raymond Petti-
bon, a graphic artist much beloved of Sonic Youths bass player Kim
Gordon and widely popular in the Los Angeles punk scene (Pettibons
older brother founded the legendary band Black Flag).8 According to
Stevie Chick, The title [of the track] ... was taken from a T-shirt
owned by Thurston [Moore, the groups lead singer and guitarist],
featuring a Raymond Pettibon illustration of Hollywood diva Joan
Crawford in her role as the titular heroine of classic noir Mildred
Pierce, with the word Blowjob? scrawled underneath.9 Blowjob
was initially intended to be the title of both the track and the entire
Geffen RecordsCD, with Pettibons image of Crawford reproduced
on its sleeve, but when David Geffen overruled that idea, the song
was edited down to two minutes and retitled Mildred Pierce, the
CD was renamed Goo, and a different Pettibon image was chosen for
the cover.10
Sonic Youth are perfectly queer-friendly. Their cultural references
include many gay artists and works. And in 1994 the band achieved
gay immortality with Androgynous Mind (on Experimental Jet
Set, Trash and No Star) whichperhaps by way of tribute to their
newly deceased protg and fan Kurt Cobainreclaimed God for gay
identity:
God may be gay, but Sonic Youth are not. Thurston Moore and Kim
Gordon got married in 1984 and stayed married, to each other, for
twenty-seven years.
Sonic Youths take on Joan Crawford is not easy to gauge from
Mildred Pierce. The track itself is largely instrumental, and the lyr-
ics are pretty rudimentary:
Mildred Pierce
MILDRED!!!!!!
MILDRED PIERCE!!!!!
MILDRED PIERCE!!!!!
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOH!!!!!!!!!!
MILDRED PIERCE!!!!!
MILDRED PIERCE!!!!!
WHYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY!!!?!!!!
MILDRED PIERCE!!!!!
WHAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!12
23 Frame capture from the music video Mildred Pierce (Dave Markey, 1990). Sophia Coppola as
Faye Dunaway as Joan Crawford, complete with wire hanger.
24 Frame capture from the music video Mildred Pierce (Dave Markey, 1990). The ordeal of lipstick.
With her pouting, bloated, painted lips (to which she applies lipstick
in one sequence; see Figure 24), her thick, darkened eyebrows, her
bulging eyes lined with black mascara, and her 1960s outfit, Coppola
could just as easily be doing a Maria Callas imitation. She tilts her
head back, so as to display the whites of her eyes; she looks wildly
about, her mouth held in a wide grimace; she impulsively raises her
hands to smooth her hair, thrusts them pleadingly and defensively in
Irony and Misogyny 391
25 Frame capture from the music video Mildred Pierce (Dave Markey, 1990). Gasping for breath.
26 Frame capture from the music video Mildred Pierce (Dave Markey, 1990). The scream.
front of her, or runs them down either side of her neck, as if gasping
for breath. The ultimate effect is one of hysterical excess, rather in
keeping with Moores screaming.
The image of Joan Crawford that Coppola projects is grotesque,
even mildly censorious. Her Crawford is narcissistic, maniacally ob-
sessed with her appearance, though unable to restrain her movements
or to control the seething anxieties that burst through her elegant,
well-coiffed, carefully put-together persona. Coppolas performance
392 BITCH BASKETS
%
The SY video seeks to acquire a certain hip credibility by impressing
its audience with its suave deployment of some obscure, wacky, dated
cultural references. It uses the disturbing twistedness of the arcane
material it has unearthed to consolidate a group identity around that
bit of dark insider knowledge, thereby setting its social world and its
audience apart from the unhip, the normals. Joan Crawford, or her
commodified image, provides a means of registering difference and
dissent from mainstream American culture.
Hence, Coppolas performance is intended to be camp.18 She cant
afford to be taken straight. She tries to look like a drag queen, and her
act directly appeals to the precedent of drag performance, already un-
derstood to be at one remove from the involuntary impersonation
of authorized gender modelsfrom the everyday normative perfor-
mance of genderthat is femininity itself.19 She delivers an imitation
of an imitation of an imitation, and our hip understanding of that
if, indeed, we are hip enough to get itis registered by the irony and
knowingness with which we view Coppolas performance. The video
encourages us to take up a stance of mingled detachment and superi-
Irony and Misogyny 393
%
Straight hipster culture actually thrives on the artificial appropria-
tion of different styles from different eras, according to a scathing
cover story about hipsters in the hipster magazine Adbusters; it loves
to play with symbols and icons of marginalized or oppressed
groups, once those symbols and icons have been appropriated by
hipsterdom and drained of meaning.20 In another, now-notorious at-
tack on hipsters, Christian Lorentzen goes even further. Under the
guise of irony, he complains, hipsterism fetishizes the authentic
and regurgitates it with a winking inauthenticity.21
Lorentzen was anticipated by queer playwright Charles Ludlam,
founder and director of the Ridiculous Theatrical Company in New
York. Ludlam did not live long enough to know and to despise hip-
sters, but he had already come across what he termed heterosexual
camp, for which he had very little esteem: The thing thats really
horrible is heterosexual camp, a kind of winking at you saying, I
dont really mean it.22 By contrast, the kind of irony that defines gay
male camp does not express distance or disavowal. As we have seen, it
is fully compatible with passion, pain, and belief.23
Although hipsterisms habit of ironic citationfetishizing the au-
thentic and regurgitating it with a winking inauthenticity, as Lo
rentzen puts itcertainly resembles camp, and although the SY video
engages in a subcultural practice that is arguably analogous to camp,
there is in fact a clear distinction to be drawn between the two. The
SY video fetishizes camp itself and grounds its own cultural identity,
or anti-identity, by looking to camp for authenticity, by invoking it as
Irony and Misogyny 395
%
The point is effectively underscored and exemplified by a line in an
ironic article on irony, dated February3, 2008, posted to the website
called Stuff White People Like, and now published in a best-selling
book of the same title. Written by clander (Christian Lander), the
founder of the site, the article expresses a hipsterish take on White
hipstersmeaning, actually, straight, upper-middle-class White hip-
sters. Lander, a Canadian and a self-described PhD dropout who
now lives in Los Angeles, has a number of interesting and amusing
things to say about ironys appeal to such people, about why irony fig
ures so prominently among the stuff White people like. His most tell-
ing and self-aware observation seems to be the following: But the
reason that white people love irony is that it lets them have some fun
and feel better about themselves.26
That kind of irony allows cool straight prosperous White people,
including Lander, to deal with the shame of being privileged and
Irony and Misogyny 397
%
Despite its frank delight in absurd and outlandish sexist representa-
tions, gay male cultures ironic appropriation of femininity does not
express a lack of personal implication in those representations or a
sense of invulnerability to the symbolic violence of reductive stereo-
types. On the contrary, it indicates a willingness to see oneself re
flected in such sexist representations. It demonstrates an exhilaration
in identifying with the lowest of the low, and it signals a resistance to
the cultural technology by which social exclusion is brought about. It
therefore implies a greater degree of solidarity with women, or at
least a greater investment in struggles against sexism, than does the
straight exploitation of camp style, which distances itself from the fe-
male figures whose demented flamboyance it takes such pleasure in
staging.
Camp means a lot at a gathering of queers, wrote Richard Dyer
in 1977, especially when it is used defiantly by queers against straight-
ness: but it is very easily taken up by straight society and used against
us. The straight media appreciate the wit, but they dont see why it
is necessary. They pick up the undertow of self-oppression without
ever latching on to the elements of criticism and defiance of straight-
ness. Which is to say, The context of camp is important too. ... So
much depends on what you feel about men and women, about sex,
about being gay.27
PA R T S I X
+++
I could produce. But that has not made me less determined to find at
least some answers.
If my course How To Be Gay had not caused a scandal, and if it
had not done so repeatedly, I probably would not have made myself
write this book. I simply would have taught the course, using the class
discussions to explore the central questions about gay male subjectiv-
ity that puzzled me, coming up with various ideas, hypotheses, and
solutions, working through them with a generation of students, and
publishing occasional essays on the topic, as moments of enlighten-
ment offered themselves to me. But once the course became notori-
ous, it was clear that I would need to do more to justify the entire
projectto address the topic in some sustained, if partial, fashion,
and to arrive at some real answers.
As I tried to answer the unanswerable questions I had set myself, I
came to have a lot of admiration for earlier writers on the topic who
did manage to produce distinguished answers, convincing interpreta-
tions of male homosexuality as a cultural practice. I see my own ef-
forts as supplementing theirs, not superseding them. From Jean-Paul
Sartre to Susan Sontag, from Esther Newton to Neil Bartlett, from
D.A. Miller to Richard Dyer, a number of previous thinkers and re-
searchers have puzzled over the issues, and I have tried to take advan-
tage of their insights and to pay tribute to their achievements. But I
have not attempted to summarize their ideas, to synthesize them, or
to systematize them and consolidate them into a kind of summa.
When I started out on this adventure, I was more ambitious. I
wanted to explain all of gay culture. I intended to integrate every
thing into a single, comprehensive theory. I even had my own hypoth-
eses about the reasons for the gay male appeal of Judy Garland. (But
because Richard Dyer had already accounted for it so well, I did not
feel the need to add further speculations of my own, even though I
think that Dyer did miss a few things here and there and that more
remains to be said.) I ultimately realized, however, that even if I could
lay everything out, explain and justify my methods, anticipate and
preempt all conceivable objections to my project, review and criticize
the work of my predecessors, and build a single, coherent, cumula-
Judy Garland versus Identity Art 403
%
We also have the necessary distance at this point to ask a number of
other questions. How would my account of gay male culture have
had to change if it had revolved around a different figure? Some an-
Judy Garland versus Identity Art 405
That is why a friend of mine tries to find out whether the latest
guy hes dating has a liking for Bette Davis or Joan Crawford. Such
preferences do not simply reflect different tastes in movies, or matters
of aesthetic partisanship in general. They tell my friend a lot about
the kind of guy hes dating, the nature of the relation he is destined to
have with himin particular, what the sex is going to be like ... in
the long run.
A model of gay male subjectivity based on an understanding of
the peculiar gay appeal of Bette Davis might well differ, then, from
the limited and partial model of gay male subjectivity that I have
sketched out here and that I extracted from one line of Joan Craw-
fords. The two models would not be totally dissimilar, to be sure: I
imagineand I am not about to anticipate the outcome of a sepa-
rateresearch project that I hope someone will undertake, so I dont
want to presumebut I imagine that both models of gay subjectivity
would likely make some reference to melodrama, camp, diva-worship,
and gay male femininity, for example. The differences between them
might well be significant, however. And the resulting picture of gay
male culture and subjectivity might be even more different if it took
as its starting point a practice like gardening or window-dressing or
home decoration, not to mention diving or heavy-metal music or reli-
gious mysticism.4
Those differences would confirm us, nonetheless, in our basic ap-
proach to the topic. Far from returning us to a psychological model
of gay male subjectivity, they would highlight the sexual politics of
cultural form, the meaning of style, the far-reaching aesthetic, gen-
dered, and sexual consequences of formal or stylistic differences, the
constitutive effects of the pragmatics of genrethe cultural poetics,
in short, of human subjectivity.
%
Though gay male culture may no longer be preoccupied with either
Joan Crawford or Bette Davis, it continues to reserve a large share of
its attention for Hollywood stars, divas, pop icons, and various con-
temporary feminine figures incarnating different combinations of
408 WHAT IS GAY CULTURE?
When Time Out New Yorks queer staffers sat down to figure out what
would go into a feature about gay culture, we quickly realized it
would be no easy task. Did we want to tackle it in the classic, universal
senseas in Judy Garland, campy drag shows and Stone Butch Blues?
Did we want to talk about new queer indie films, and why they are of-
ten low-budget and unimpressive? Or about the hottest, freshest tal-
ents around, and how theyre shaking up media ranging from music
and downtown theater to edgy lit and trans burlesque? (16)
Similarly, its hard to see how Stone Butch Blues, Leslie Feinbergs
powerful transgender working-class novel published in 1993, nearly a
quarter-century after the Stonewall riots, could qualify as classic in
quite the same way as Judy Garland. The problem is not one of rela-
tive merit or importance. Feinbergs novel is a classic, and it has had a
major impact on readers all over the world. But its a classic in part
because of how clearly and explicitly it articulates an experience of
queer identity that had rarely been described before in such lucid,
moving language. (Perhaps Beth Greenfield wanted to replace that
classic cri de coeur of lesbian/transgender misery, Radclyffe Halls 1928
novel The Well of Loneliness, with a less politic ally obnoxious, more
up-to-date version.) Judy Garland, by contrast, became the focus of a
gay male cult in the years before Stonewall because, far from finding
new words to describe queer experience, she somehow gave voice
to gay mens unspeakable longings without ever enunciating them.
She thereby served as an effective vehicle of gay male identification.
She was a figure gay men could identify with, notlike Feinbergs
novela champion of queer identity itself.
%
Some of these confusions may be generational. John Clum, growing
up in the 1950s, did not suffer from any such confusion. For many of
us, he writes, there was something called gay culture and it in-
volved camp as a discourse and musical theater as an object of adora-
tion.5 But that was a long time ago. TONYs queer staffers themselves
point out that much uncertainty about what gay culture is today may
arise from what they call the ever-present generation gap, which
can seem particularly wide in our community. That gap, in their
understanding of it, divides, predictably, folks over thirtywho are
likely to be found catching the latest Paul Rudnick play or ducking
into a lively piano bar for the eveningfrom queers in their twen-
ties and younger [who] may have less of a need to belong to anything
other than society at large. They came out in their teens, after all, and
find themselves more or less accepted everywhere they go (16).
It is always hard to tell whether assertions like thiswhich are by
410 WHAT IS GAY CULTURE?
now so familiar to us, and which insist that gay culture is out of date,
a thing of the past, irrelevant to the younger generation, and no
longer necessary in a world where lesbians and gay men can now get
married or be elected heads of state (at least in Iceland)it is always
hard to tell whether such assertions are statements of fact or expres-
sions of desire, startled discoveries of unanticipated good news or ar-
ticulations of a wish that gay culture would simply disappear. In any
case, we have already had occasion to take stock of many similar
claims. Young queers fit easily into youth culture, we are told; they
dont like to be labeled, they dont feel the need for a separate, distinct
social world, and they dont identify with gay culture.6
And a good thing, too, I might add, because the social costs of in-
sisting on your differences from normal people are exorbitant when
you have no choice but to integrate yourself into heterosexual societybe-
cause substantive gay alternatives to the straight world no longer ex-
ist, now that the urban infrastructures of gay life have been largely
dismantled. And if you want your straight friends to accept you as
one of them, despite your being queer, you would be wise to deny
that you wish to belong to anything other than society at large.
What, after all, does such a denial indicate, if not that straight soci-
etyat large is actually a good deal less accommodating of queer kids,
especially queer kids who want to proclaim their difference from
straight kids, than we are sometimes led to believe?
Witness John Clum, to take only the example nearest to hand.
Clum reported in the late 1990s that gay fraternity boys on a les-
bigay e-mail list at Duke University spoke of how it was all right
tobe openly gay in a fraternity as long as you played by the rules of
gender appropriate behavior. No sissies or queens, please.7 Reacting
sharply to this trend, gay legal scholar Kenji Yoshino has issued an el-
oquent critique of covering, the tendency on the part of stigma-
tized groups to acknowledge their differences but to minimize the
significance and the visibility of those differences, so as to be accept-
able to society at large. Gay people may now come out of the closet,
but they get ahead in the world only if they make sure that their non-
Judy Garland versus Identity Art 411
ture, and all those older queens who are fanatically attached to it. A
particularly witty and trenchant, but otherwise quite typical, instance
of this contrast can be found in the central, programmatic conversa-
tion between Nick (played by Steve Buscemi) and Peter (Adam Na-
than) in Bill Sherwoods 1986 film of contemporary gay life in New
York, Parting Glancesone of those low-budget, independent queer
films that TONYs staffers would probably find unimpressive, but
that I happen to think highly of. In that scene, the cute gay twen
tysomething club kid with patriotic sentiments, romantic longings,
and Republican politics boasts of his normality to a thirtysomething
punk rocker with AIDS, only to end up begging his older acquain-
tance, nostalgically, Show me the Village. And that was already al-
most three decades ago; the cute Reaganite club kid, if he survived,
would be past fifty by now. Which is old for a teenager.
If all these perennial claims of generational difference turned out
to be accurate, and still current, then it would seem that the folks
over thirty who haunt the piano bars today were, just a short time
ago, the new generation who came out in their teens and felt no per-
sonal connection with gay identity, gay culture, or gay community.
Between feeling no need to belong to anything and feeling an irresist-
ible urge to walk through the beckoning doorway of your local pi-
anobar, there is not some unbridgeable chasm between the genera-
tions, it turns out, but merely a slender border zone no wider than a
decade.
%
The persistent denial that gay culture exists or that it is relevant to the
younger generation is part of a larger pattern. Gay people seem to be
constantly discovering, and then rediscoveringalways with the same
shock of surprise, the same unanticipated astonishmentwhat a triv-
ial thing their gayness is, how little it matters to them, how insignifi
cant it is in the larger scheme of things, how little they identify with
it, how little they need to belong to a culture built around it. They
continually assert, with the same hollow insistence, that being gay
Judy Garland versus Identity Art 413
does not define them. And perhaps it doesnt. But being gay still
seems to be the only thing they ever talk about. They talk about it
endlessly. The more they talk about it, the more they feel an obliga-
tion to proclaim how unimportant it is. On a list of the ten most sig
nificant things about me, they always say, being gay comes in at num-
ber ten.
Even the folks who are actually in charge of the gay media, whose
job it is to produce and maintain a public gay culture, feel duty-bound
to take the same loyalty oaths to the insignificance and irrelevance of
being gay. Oscar Raymundo, twenty-five, could be considered a pro-
fessional gay, aptly observes Scott James in the annual Gay Pride
state-of-the-gay report for the New York Times. He writes a gay blog,
and edits for the Web site Queerty. But he said being gay is not as im
portant as other aspects of his lifehe has faced more discrimination
for being Latino, he said.9 When the topic of what it means to you to
be gay comes up, the thing to do is to shift it to some more politically
respectable identity, even though being gay is how you make your
living.
The fact that you have to say, over and over again, how unimpor
tant to you being gay is, in order to retain some kind of social or cul-
tural credibility, is an eloquent sign of the times we live in. For it ac
tually indicates just how important being gay truly isif only to the
extent that it dramatizes how much pressure you evidently feel to
proclaim that being gay is unimportant. If it were really so unimpor
tant, why would you have to keep saying so?
I, for one, can say Im really not proud to be gay, proudly writes
Bre DeGrant in Salon.com, penning the compulsory gay-disavowal
article for the annual Gay Pride issue. Im not proud to be in a gay
community. Im more proud that I survived abuse as a child, that Im
on the Deans List, and that Im on track for my nursing degree after
years of indecision. Basically, Im proud of the things Ive accom-
plished. I dont want to be known as the gay girl. I want to be known
for all of the things I am instead of just one of the things I happen to
be. My entire personality doesnt revolve around being a lesbian. Ex-
414 WHAT IS GAY CULTURE?
cept, that is, when writing an article for the Gay Pride issue of Salon,
an article that revolves around nothing else but being a lesbian.
I understand that oppressed minorities need a community to feel
acceptance until they become integrated into the rest of society, De-
Grant concedes. But as we grow more and more accepted, as we
evolve from a psychiatric case to just another person, do we still need
to actively disassociate ourselves from mainstream society and our
straight counterparts? Will we still need gathering places when the
rest of our peers accept us in nongay bars, nongay community cen-
ters, and nongay houses of worship?10 Well, unless we truly relish
the dismal prospect of spending the rest of our lives hanging out in
nongay houses of worship, the answer to that question is surely going
to be a resounding yes.
Corresponding to the perennial disavowal of the importance of
gay identity is the constant denial, especially on the part of gay men,
of the importance of gay sex. Scott James fastens upon a twenty-
three-year-old Stanford graduate with a Masters degree in computer
science, who lived in a gay dorm at Stanford and moved to the Castro
neighborhood in San Francisco immediately upon graduating; the
more his social life revolves around being gay, the more he insists on
the unimportance of being gay, just as coming out at the age of six-
teen was a complete non-event. Socially, he is seeking a relation-
ship, not casual liaisons, meeting men mostly through friends of
friends. ... Im inspired by the gay couples I know who want to get
married, he said. And James goes on to remark, with apparent satis-
faction, Others in [his] generation also appear to have less of an ob-
session with sex, which is reflected in some social media. Grindr, a
smartphone application that connects gay men by GPS proximity, has
more than 25,000 San Francisco users. Though some exploit the tech-
nology for pursuing sex, 67 percent in a recent customer survey said
they use the app primarily to make friends.11
What amazing news! Gay men are no longer interested in sex.
Theyre interested in relationships. They want to get married. Have
you ever heard anything like that before? Well, perhaps youve heard
Judy Garland versus Identity Art 415
something rather like it every year during Gay Pride for the past thirty
years, or at any moment when some incident produces a passing
curiosity in the straight media about the current state of gay life in
the United States. And no doubt youre always astounded by the
news, which is why people keep telling it to us. We are regaled non-
stop with reports about the new gay teenager, the divisions in the
gay community, the generational conflicts, the changing modes of
gay life, the disappearance of gay politics, of gay dance parties, of gay
sex, of gay culture. Gay kids these days dont feel a political urge to
manifest their sexuality. They feel comfortable in their sexuality. They
find themselves more or less accepted everywhere they go.
So why do they keep killing themselves when they get outed?
The report by Scott James is actually quite informative. To be sure,
it doesnt tell you much about what it is that more than 25,000 gay
boys in San Francisco are actually doing on Grindr. (If, as one Grindr
user told another reporter, youre using Grindr primarily to make
friends, if youre simply networking, if youre just there to meet
people in a nonsexual context, why arent you wearing a shirt in your
picture?)12 But it does say a lot about the social pressure that two-
thirds of those boys feel to deny that theyre using Grindr for sexual
hook-ups. So its not especially surprising that the young man in
terviewed by James says he is looking for a relationship. Everyone
islooking for a relationship. Why, even I am looking for a relation-
shipI just have to have sex with thousands of men to find the one I
really want.
%
To be sure, the social and political conditions of gay life have been
changing very rapidly over the past fifty years, and gay culture has
been changing along with them. Even practices that appear to be
continuous over the course of many years may be less stable than
they look. The irony with which we regard Joan Crawford movies
now is surely very different from the irony with which gay men
watched Mildred Pierce in the 50s and 60s, when the melodrama, so-
416 WHAT IS GAY CULTURE?
cial setting, and gender styles seemed less far-fetched and therefore
less emotionally alien than they do today (which is why no universal-
izing, psychoanalytically phrased theory of gay spectatorship can ac-
count for gay viewing practices in all their specificity). Gay mens
identification with the female stars in classic Hollywood movies
would have been more immediate and intense in the old days, when
ironic distance from the characters they played took more of an effort
to achieve. It is entirely to be expected that every half-generation of
gay men would feel disconnected from the cultural objects and the
ways of relating to them that had been so meaningful to the half-
generation before them. And the volatile interactions between gay
male culture and its heteronormative context have constantly evolved.
That in turn has altered the nature, the methods, and the goals of gay
cultural borrowing, appropriation, and reuse.
When Todd Haynes, once an architect of the new queer cinema
of the early 1990s, remade Mildred Pierce for HBO in 2011, his slow-
paced, six-hour, comparatively faithful adaptation of the James M.
Cain novel never lost an opportunity to remind its viewers, by means
of its rich social realism and insistent period detail, how far away in
world and time they were from the family drama Cain had depicted.
Haynes made distance and irony into the very conditions of specta-
torship, effectively alienating his audience from the spectacle and de-
priving it of the need to balance passionate absorption with a coun-
tervailing irony in order to bring itself into a meaningful relation with
the scenario. Which is one reason his version is so much less gripping
than the original movie, despite the visual beauty of the cinematog-
raphy and the enhanced plausibility of the story. No wonder it did
not evoke an equivalent response from gay male viewers. Kate Wins-
lets earnest portrayal of the title characterinexperienced, ordinary,
downtrodden, pitiable, and often pathetic, more victim than indepen
dent womanhas nothing of the fierceness, elegance, and authority
with which Joan Crawford embodied an aristocratic model of middle-
class femininity.
So I dont want to imply that the TONY writers are simply in denial
Judy Garland versus Identity Art 417
%
It is altogether too easy to be snide at the expense of TONY, I ad-
mit,and my goal is certainly not to be snidethats just a catty, self-
indulgent detour on the way to my main point. Which is a simple
one. The fundamental hesitation about what gay culture is that the
writers responsible for this feature article seem to feel arises from a
basic and characteristic uncertainty: Does gay culture refer to queer
artifacts produced by queers themselves or to works of mainstream
culture produced by heterosexuals, which queers then appropriate
for their own uses, queering them in the process?
The TONY feature foregrounds this dilemma by including a poll,
addressed to its readers, called Which Is Gayer? It pairs instances
of explicit, identity-based, out-and-proud, post-Stonewall gay culture
with bits of the surrounding culture that lend themselves to queer ap-
propriation. In that way, direct, unencrypted representations of gay-
ness are opposed to coded, figural representations of gayness, and
readers are asked to choose the ones they prefer, to vote for the repre-
sentations that answer more satisfyingly to their ideas of gay culture
or to their desires for what they would like it to be. As the TONY lead-
in puts it, You dont have to be openly gay to be really queer. So
which is gayer, the magazine asks, Brokeback Mountain or Sex and the
City? Truman Capote or Herman Melville?13
In other words, do you prefer the kind of gay culture that is rooted
in gay identity or the kind that is rooted in gay identification? Would
you rather listen to Rufus Wainwright or Judy Garland? TONY solves
that problem by giving first place in its list of Top ten moments in
NYC gay culture not to the Stonewall riotsthey come in at num-
ber twobut to Rufus Does Judy, the 2006 performance at Carne-
418 WHAT IS GAY CULTURE?
%
The point of this analysis is not to ridicule the TONY staffers, but to
bring out the kinds of conflicts and denials around gay culture that
gay people constantly display. The contributors to TONY provide a
typical example. They represent a symptom of our larger malaise.
In the end, Beth Greenfields answer to the question What is gay
culture? is a generous one. It includes images of gay people as well
as straight icons with whom they identify, a culture of gay identity as
well as a culture of gay identification, youth as well as age, gay people
as well as straight people. Her evocation of the scene at the first of
the Gay Pride parades in the New York summer season, the one in
Jackson Heights on June1, is intended to span all those oppositions:
Queens Pride08 remains one of the citys most vibrant, least com-
mercialized and most ethnically diverse festivals. Check it out and
420 WHAT IS GAY CULTURE?
the Vietnam War, gay liberation, and the onset of the HIV/AIDS epi-
demic. Jamie ONeill reclaims Irish Republican history for gay libera-
tion and for gay male love in his novel AtSwim, Two Boys (2001), whose
very title invokes an earlier, classic, non-gay novel by Flann OBrien.1
And Michael Cunninghams most successful work, The Hours (1998),
seems gayest not when it tries to represent gay male characters but
when its author tries to write likeor, indeed, to beVirginia Woolf,
rather like Rufus channeling Judy.
The list of original works by gay men that take straight society or
mainstream culture as their point of departure could be almost infi-
nitely extended. Nonetheless, there is a distinction to be drawn be-
tween the kind of gay culture that consists in new work by (in this
case) gay men who for the first time in history reflect directly and
openly and explicitly on gay male experience as it is being lived, or as
it might be lived (or might have been lived), and the kind of gay cul-
ture that is parasitic on mainstream culture. The latter finds in the
non-gay world queer representations that can be made to express gay
male subjectivity or feelingwith a little tweaking, if necessaryand
that afford gay men an imaginative point of entry into a queer uto-
pia,somewhere over the rainbow, which is not entirely of their own
making.
The difference between these two versions of gay male culture can
be understood in terms of a broader distinction (though, once again,
not an airtight one) between culture and subculture. Gay writers, art-
ists, performers, and musicians have been creating an original culture
for well over a century now, even if many of them have had to oper-
ate under the cover of heterosexual subject matter and only a few,
such as Walt Whitman, Andr Gide, Thomas Mann, Marcel Proust,
Radclyffe Hall, Jean Genet, and James Baldwin, were able to treat gay
themes explicitly. By contrast, drag, camp, and various cultural ap
propriations and identifications are all, properly speaking, subcultural
practices, insofar as they are in a dependent, secondary relation to
thepreexisting non-gay cultural forms to which they respond and to
which they owe their very existencesuch as social norms of mascu-
Culture versus Subculture 423
%
In any case, this book has had little to say about gay male culture of
the original kind, the sort of gay cultural production that is predi-
cated on the existence of gay identity and on the ability of representa-
tional practices to convey it; it has been preoccupied almost exclu-
424 WHAT IS GAY CULTURE?
sively with gay male culture of the subcultural variety. In fact, it has
largely taken for granted the notion that male homosexuality as a cul-
tural practice consists in a series of subcultural responses to main-
stream culturenamely, the appropriation and resignification of het-
erosexual forms and artifacts.
But I hardly wish to deny the existence of a gay-authored gay cul-
ture or to undervalue it. Much original gay male culture is grounded
not in identific ation with non-gay figures or with non-gay social and
cultural forms, but in gay male identity itself and in the effort to ex-
plore it. Gay men still look for representations of themselves and re
flections of their existence in cultural productions, and they are inter-
ested in finding out about other gay men past and present, how gay
men have managed their lives, their loves, their struggles for freedom
and dignity. To those ends, gay men have created a vibrant, wide-
ranging, explicit body of writing, film, and music, a distinguished ac-
cumulation of scholarship and criticism, as well as institutional spaces
for further study and reflection and discovery.
Moreover, there is a vast popular literature devoted to disseminat-
ing useful knowledge about gay men to gay men, from grooming ad-
vice to gay history to what to expect from a gay love-affair.2 The origi-
nal edition of The Joy of Gay Sex, published in 1977, contains not only
illustrated articles describing different sexual positions, but also expla-
nations of what discos are, why gay men go to them, and how one
should behave in them, as well as entries about the particular impor-
tance of friendships in the lives of gay men or about how to cope
with jealousy and still have a happy relationship that is not sexually
exclusive. Although the title of that manual promises that it will be
about gay sex, the book was actually designed to be an all-purpose
users guide to gay male life.
Some gay men do venerate their historical forebears, as Bartletts
book on Wilde testifies. They make lists of gay male heroes and role
models.3 And they keep an eye out for traces of their own history.
There has long existed a clandestine knowledge that circulates among
gay men about the submerged life and work of earlier gay figures
whose homosexuality, though well known, is usually relegated to
Culture versus Subculture 425
obert Baker, Gary Indiana, Randall Kenan, David Leavitt, and many
R
others.
By contrast, I have been slow to appreciate and to enjoy the divas
and the camp perspectives that the subcultural practice of male ho
mosexuality held out to me, and I have retained an ambivalent atti-
tude toward them. Which is why writing this book has gone against
the grain of my own instincts some of the timethough it has also
taught me a lot about how to be gay, and it has made me gayer as a
result.
If for the purposes of this study I have wanted to turn my back on
gay male culture proper, and to investigate the nature and the work-
ings of gay male subculture instead, that is because the latter is mys-
terious in ways that the former is not. It is abundantly obvious why
gay men produce and consume a culture that consists in representa-
tions of gay men and of gay male experience. And it would even be
easy to understand why, in an era before such an open, explicit gay
male culture was possible, gay mens cultural expression took the
form of the subcultural practice of appropriating and resignifying se-
lect items from the surrounding heterosexual culture. What is less
expected is that the emergence of an open, explicit gay male culture
should not have put an end to those subcultural practices or extin-
guished the appeal of reading heteronormative artifacts queerly
against the grain. Gay men still engage in the reappropriation and re-
coding of straight culture.
Even the panel of local LGBT culture makers, assembled by
Time Out New York in order to answer the what-is-gay-culture? ques-
tion, acknowledge that much, however grudgingly. Here is what they
say in response to the query, Have you seen Gypsy?
%
So, then, have I written a reactionary book? Have I, by insisting on the
continuing relevance, power, and indeed wisdom of much traditional
gay male subculture, betrayed the revolutionary achievements of gay
liberation, rejected the new gay identity it produced, and turned my
back on its goals of social and individual transformation, along with
its original cultural creations?
If I have often cast a withering glance on post-Stonewall gay iden-
428 WHAT IS GAY CULTURE?
tity, and on the politics, literature, music, and sexuality that derive
from it, I have done so less out of personal conviction than out of
an experimental attitude, one that consists in testing what initially
seemed to me to be a counter-intuitive hypothesis: that the Golden
Girls might still matter to us a lot more than Edmund White, that
Desperate Housewives might prove queerer than Queer as Folk.
But I have also been motivated by the shock and disappointment
of seeing a revolutionary movement of sexual liberation and political
insurgency settle down into a complacent, essentially conservative
form of identity politics that seeks less to change the world than to
claim a bigger piece of it. Many gay people nowadays seem deter-
mined to imitate and to reproduce the most trite, regressive social
values of heteronormative culture: family, religion, patriotism, nor-
mative gender rolesthat venerable trinity of Kinder, Kche, Kirche.
They have also taken up the heterosexual ethic of erotic impoverish-
ment, which lobbies for the benefits of renouncing sexual pleasure.
The less sex you have, so this ethic goes, the more meaningful it will
be, and what you should want above all in your sexual life is not plea
sure but meaning, meaning at the expense of pleasure, or meaning to
the exclusion of pleasure. That is the ethic against which gay libera-
tion once led a world-historical rebellion.
Much of the openly gay-themed culture that has emerged since
Stonewall continues to share the revolutionary goals of gay libera-
tion. Its originality, artistic experimentation, and sheer brilliance are
very far removed from the standard gay identity politics of the main-
stream gay movement. But that genuinely inventive gay culture has
suffered the same fate as the identity-based culture that emerged in
the same period, insofar as both seem to arouse in gay audiences a
similar sense of tedium. It is as if contemporary gay people have a
hard time distinguishing truly original, innovative queer work from
the comparatively trite, politically earnest, in-g roup cultural produc-
tions that you find on the Logo Channel.
My intention has been not to depreciate post-Stonewall gay cul-
ture but to champion the forms of social resistance to heteronorma-
tivity that much of pre-Stonewall gay culture represented and contin-
Culture versus Subculture 429
ues to represent, while exploring the reasons why so many gay men
seem to find the offic ial, parochial, rainbow-flag-draped gay identity-
based culture that has replaced it so unsatisfying and deficient. I have
wanted to discover the source of so much gay discontent.
%
That discontent is real, and sometimes the political complaint I have
just articulated merely serves as an alibi for gay homophobia. Gay
men are highly critical, if not contemptuous, of their artists, writers,
and filmmakers, just as they are disdainful of their political leaders.
That is why gay male cultural production (to say nothing of gay male
politics) is such a thankless affair. Gay men may claim they want to
see representations of themselves and their lives, but they often dont
like the representations of gay men that gay men produce, or they fail
to stay interested in them.
And you can understand their lack of enthusiasm. Gay men dont
excite gay men. Gay men have female iconsdivas, fashion models,
Hollywood stars, and nowadays even female politiciansto identify
with. And they have straight male iconssports heroes, photospread
models, stars of the big and small screens, men in uniformto desire.
Either way, they dont need gay men. And they dont need to read
novels, watch movies, take classes, see exhibitions, or go to cultural
festivals that focus on gay men.
In 1978 the Canadian sociologist Barry D. Adam, whom I have al-
ready had occasion to cite, published his doctoral dissertation (which
became the first of his many books), called The Survival of Domina-
tion: Inferiorization and Everyday Life. A comparative study of Blacks,
Jews, lesbians, gay men, concentration camp prisoners, children, and
other inmates of total institutions, it was an early classic of lesbian/
gay/queer studies, and it remains worth reading today. Among the
coping mechanisms for dealing with social domination that Adam
found to be common to the various oppressed groups he studied
were what he called the flight from identity and in-g roup hos
tility.6
Those phrases referred to social and individual strategies by which
430 WHAT IS GAY CULTURE?
A nd when gay liberation has done its work, what then? Will gay
male culture, of the subcultural variety I have described here, wither
away? Will it lose its appeal? Will gay men of the future be unable to
understand, except in a kind of pitying, embarrassed way, why their
forebears who lived in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries found
so much meaning, so much delight in heterosexual cultural forms
that excluded them, at least insofar as such forms contained no ex-
plicit representations of gay men or gay male life?
Is the gay male culture, or subculture, that I have described here
the product of homophobia? If it is not itself necessarily homopho-
bic, is it nonetheless the result of oppressive social conditions? Is it
rooted in social hostility and rejection? And so when homophobia is
finally overcome, when it is a thing of the past, when gay liberation
triumphs, when gay people achieve equal rights, social recognition,
and acceptance, when we are fully integrated into straight society,
when the difference between homosexuality and heterosexuality has
no greater social significance than the difference between righthand-
edness and lefthandedness does nowwhen all that comes to pass,
will it spell the end of gay culture, or gay subculture, as we know it?
That is indeed what Daniel Harris and Andrew Sullivan have
claimed. I have disputed their assertions that gay male culture, or sub-
culture, is a thing of the past, that it is obsolete and out of date. But
Queer Forever 433
%
Gay cultures apparent decline actually stems from structural causes
that have little to do with the growing social acceptance of homosex
uality. There has been a massive transformation in the material base
of gay life in the United States, and other metropolitan centers, dur-
ing the past three decades. That transformation has had a profound
impact on the shape of gay life and gay culture. It is the result of three
large-scale developments: the recapitalization of the inner city and
the resulting gentrification of urban neighborhoods; the epidemic of
HIV/AIDS; and the invention of the Internet.
In order to appreciate the nature of the change and its decisive, far-
434 WHAT IS GAY CULTURE?
thrill of discovering other lesbians and gay men in all their beautiful,
dreary, fabulous, sleazy variety.2 As if that were not enough, the
newgay public culture virtually guaranteed that people who moved
to a gay enclave would encounter a lot of old-timers who were
moreexperienced at being gay and more sophisticated about it than
they were.
Moreover, those veterans of urban gay life often held shockingly
militant, uncompromising, anti-homophobic, anti-heterosexist, anti-
mainstream political views. People who had already been living in
gay ghettos for years had had time and opportunity to be liberated:
to be deprogrammed, to get rid of their stupid, heterosexual preju-
dices, to achieve a politicized consciousness as well as a pride in their
gay identity. By encountering those people, with their greater daring
and sophistication and confid ence, the new arrivals from the prov-
inces often found their assumptions, values, and pictures of the right
way to live, of how to be gay, seriously challenged. Their old attitudes
were liable to be shaken up.
The sheer mix of people in the new gay social worlds favored a
radicalization of gay male life. It lent weight and authority to the
more evolved, sophisticated, experienced, and radical members of
the local community. And so it tended to align the coming-out pro
cess with a gradual detachment from traditional, heterosexual, con-
servative, mainstream notions about the proper way to live. Although
guys who looked like regular guys, who displayed an old-fashioned,
standard masculinity, were often prized as erotic objects, many of the
new recruits to the gay ghettos found themselves gradually argued
out of their old-fashioned, rustic, parochial, unenlightened views
their hang-ups and their unliberated attitudesincluding their
adherence to rigid gender styles, inappropriate romantic fantasies, re-
strictive sexual morality, political conservatism, prudery, and other
small-town values. Psychic decolonization was the order of the day:
gay men needed to identify, and to jettison, the alien, unsuitable no-
tions that the ambient culture of heterosexuality had implanted in
their minds.
Queer Forever 437
Many gay men rejected the radical ideology of gay male life, to be
sure, and many people formed their own subgroups within gay com-
munities according to their sexual tastes, gender styles, identifications
with a particular social class, political sympathies, morals, values, in-
terests, and habits. There was a great variety of outlooks and ways of
life. But most of the new inhabitants of the gay ghettos shared the
experience of taking part in a new, exhilarating, and unprecedented
social experiment: the formation of a community around homosex
ual desire, gay sex, and gay identity.3
%
That social experiment proved to be short-lived. For during the same
period, the recapitalization of American cities, along with its neces-
sary basis in urban planning and renewal, was already starting to
change the urban landscape of the United States. A massive inflow of
capital drove vast urban redevelopment schemes, gradually removing
the cheap, fringe urban zones on the border of former industrial or
mixed-use areas where gay businesses, residences, and sex clubs had
flourished, and replacing them with highways, high-rises, sports com-
plexes, convention centers, and warehouse stores. In San Francisco,
the planning process began in the 1950s. By the 1960s, it was well un-
der way, though its implementation was delayed by a decade of polit
ical conflict during the 1970s.
The AIDS epidemic facilitated the ultimate triumph of urban rede-
velopment by removing or weakening a number of social actors
both individuals and communitiesopposed to the developers plans
to rezone, reconfigure, raze, and rebuild entire neighborhoods. In the
end, the malign coincidence of the HIV/AIDS epidemic with a surge
of urbanism, property development, gentrification, and a correspond-
ing rise in real estate prices in the 1980s destroyed the gay ghettos that
had formerly been centers of gay life and gay culture in the late 1960s,
1970s, and early 1980s. That destruction has had vast consequences for
gay communities, especially for radical sexual subcultures. Ultimately,
it has come to affect how all gay people live.4
438 WHAT IS GAY CULTURE?
they lived. The gay press had also provided a focus for cultural life, for
the promotion of new plays, musicals, art shows, and performances
targeted at small-scale gay audiences. Similarly, gay newspapers and
bookstores had publicized emerging work in gay history and queer
theory, interpreting its breakthroughs to the community in a lan-
guage that interested readers could understand.
The dispersal of gay populations and the decline of gay neighbor-
hoods meant the disappearance of the material and economic base of
the gay press. Local gay newspapers were now replaced by national,
highly capitalized glossy magazines aimed at a niche market defined
by a delocalized gay identity. The new gay glossies were not about to
cover political debates of purely local interest, much less critique the
market category of gay identity on which their business depended. In
an effort to appeal to everyone, to a national public of prosperous gay
individuals who could afford the products advertised in their pages
(which paid the costs of staff salaries, printing, and distribution), these
publications became increasingly uncontroversial, commercial, and
lightweight, eventually turning into the gay equivalent of in-flight
magazines.
%
This loss of a queer public sphere was redeemed by the rise of the
Internet and the production of virtual communities. Face-to-face
contact in gay neighborhoods, which had already been on the wane,
now became increasingly dispensable.10 You could find gay people on-
line. You didnt have to live in a gay neighborhood, which was no
longer very gay and which you couldnt afford anyway. In fact, you
didnt even have to move to a big city. You didnt have to live among
gay people at all. You never had to leave your bedroom. Gay life be-
came a paradise for agoraphobes.
The Internet has completed the destruction of the non-virtual gay
commercial infrastructure. In 2007, Entrepreneur magazine put gay
bars on its list of businesses facing extinction, along with record stores
and pay phones, June Thomas observes. And its not just that gays
440 WHAT IS GAY CULTURE?
are hanging out in straight bars; some are eschewing bars altogether
and finding partners online or via location-based smartphone apps
like Grindr, Qrushr, and Scruff. Between 2005 and 2011, the num-
ber of gay and lesbian bars and clubs in gay-travel-guide publisher
Damrons database decreased by 12.5 percent, from 1,605 to 1,405.11
The decline was even steeper before 2005. Thomas estimates that the
number of gay bars [in major cities] has declined from peaks in the
1970s. ... In 1973, Gayellow Pages placed 118 gay bars in San Francisco;
now there are 33. Manhattans peak came in 1978, with 86; the current
tally is 44.12 Meanwhile, Grindr launched in March 2009 and cur-
rently has more than two million users, one-half of them in the
United States. Eight thousand guys sign up for the service every day.13
No wonder Thomas asks, in dismay, Could the double whammy of
mainstreaming and technology mean that gay bars are doomed?14
The replacement of gay bars by online social-networking sites
means that you can now select the gay people you want to associate
with before you meet them or come to know them. You can pick your
contacts from among the kinds of people you already approve of,
according to your unreflective, unreconstructed criteria. You dont
haveto expose yourself to folks who might have more experience of
gaylife than you do or who might challenge your unexamined ideas
about politics. You can hang on to your unliberated, heterosexist,
macho prejudices, your denial, your fear, and you can find other peo-
ple whoshare them with you. You can continue to subscribe to your
ideal model of a good homosexual: someone virtuous, virile, self-
respecting, dignified, non-scene, non-promiscuous, with a conven-
tional outlook and a solid attachment to traditional valuesa proper
citizen and an upstanding member of (straight) society.
In short, the emergence of a dispersed, virtual community and the
disappearance of a queer public sphere, along with the loss of a cou-
ple of generations of gay men to AIDS, has removed many of the
conditions necessary for the maintenance and advancement of gay
liberationfor consciousness-raising, cultural and political ferment,
and the cross-generational transmission of queer values. The lack of
Queer Forever 441
%
These predictions, I believe, overlook a crucial consideration. Social
acceptance, the decriminalization of gay sex, the legalization of ho
mosexual social and sexual institutions, the removal of barriers to
same-sex marriage, to military service, to the priesthood and psycho-
analysis, along with other previously off-limits professions, should
not be confused with the end of sexual normativity, let alone the col-
lapse of heterosexual dominance.
Some gay people, to be sure, may see social equality as tacitly im-
plying an affirmation of the essential normality of lesbigay folks.
That is indeed what it signifies to many people, straight as well as gay,
for better or for worse. And of course the release of gay people from
social oppression, as well as the breakdown of the once-universal con-
sensus about the fundamental pathology of homosexuality, which
served to justify that oppression, represent absolutely momentous de-
velopments, of wide scope and astonishing rapidity, whose signifi
cance cannot be overstated. In fact, the gay movement (as David Al-
derson argues) may be the only prog ressive social movement from
the 1960s to have prevailed, to have consolidated its successes, and
to have realized some of its most far-fetched aims (such as gay
Queer Forever 443
people with our boringness and banality when they learn that we go
to grocery stores Saturday afternoon, take our kids to school plays
and go see movies.16 Electing a gay president would change noth-
ing, apparently: nobody would be able to tell the difference. It would
be a non-event. (In which case, why bother?)
A particularly striking example of this attitude was provided by
Patrick Califia-Rice in a cover story for the Queer Issue of The Village
Voice on June27, 2000. In an article pointedly entitled Family Values,
Califia-Rice (the former lesbian writer Pat Califia) gave an account of
queer parenthood that emphasized its lack of queerness. The articles
header succinctly summarizes what makes Califia-Rices family so
queer: Two Dads with a Difference: Neither of Us Was Born Male.
But the opening line insists that this difference makes no difference.
Our mornings follow a set routine, Califia-Rice begins, that any
parent with a high-needs baby would recognize.17
The Voice announces its Queer Issue with a programmatic banner
headline on the cover: Dont Call Us Gay. But Califia-Rices article
could just as easily have been subtitled Dont Call Us Queer.
As Califia-Rice takes care to indicate, both he and his male partner
are transgendered men (female-to-male or FTM), and my boyfriend
is the mother of my child(48). According to the article, Califia-Rice
met his partner, Matt, when they were both still women and lesbians.
They began a torrid affair, but Califia-Rice was in another relation-
ship at the time and broke off the affair with Matt; when they got
back together, three years later, Matt had been on testosterone for
several years, had chest surgery and a beard. ... Our relationship was
a scandal. We were generally perceived as a fag/dyke couple rather
than two gay/bi men in a daddy/boy relationship, which was how we
saw ourselves(48). Soon Califia-Rice began the process of transition-
ing from female to male.
Meanwhile, Matt Califia-Rice, who wanted a child and didnt think
he would be allowed to adopt one, had been unable to take testos-
terone for a couple of years because of side effects like blinding mi-
graines. Doctors informed him that it was still biologically possi-
27 Cover of The Village Voice, 45, no.25, June27, 2000:
Trans Dads Patrick and Matt Califia-Rice with their son, Blake.
446 WHAT IS GAY CULTURE?
blefor him to conceive a child and give birth to one, and the couple
found three men who loved us but didnt love children to donate
their sperm. Patrick and Matts son was born a year and a half
later(48).
It would be hard to imagine a queerer family: two same-sex par-
ents of different generations, who form a paederastic couple; both of
them men, but neither of them born male; one of whom gave birth
to a child after transitioning from female to male; and a son with three
possible biological fathers and no positively identifiable one. It is quite
understandable that Patrick Califia-Rice, who is painfully aware of
the hostility and intolerance that a non-standard family such as his
provokes, should want to play down its queerness and champion its
ordinariness. He may have been fortified in that impulse by the sup-
port he received from his and his partners birth families and straight
neighbors, in shocking contrast to the outrage expressed by a hand-
ful of straight-identified homophobic FTMs online who started call-
ing Matt by his girl name, because real men dont get pregnant. One
of these bigots even said it would be better for our baby to be born
dead than be raised by two people who are confused about their gen-
der(48).
Nonetheless, what is striking about this testimony is its insistence
on, precisely, family values. The cover of the Voice announces that
its special issue will contain Portraits of Radical Lives, and indeed it
is difficult to picture a life more radical than the one described by
Califia-Rice. Our family configuration is bound to be controversial,
he acknowledges, even among lesbians and gay men, especially those
who believe mainstreaming is the best strategy for securing our civil
rights. But Califia-Rices article engages in its own kind of main-
streaming. Not only does it celebrate the possibility of enjoy[ing] a
place at the table(48), evoking the title of a notorious book by right-
wing gay polemicist Bruce Bawer.18 It also contains lyrical evocations
of the banality of coupled domesticity, adorned with sentimental
commonplaces that most heterosexual journalists nowadays might
well be embarrassed to publish:
Queer Forever 447
Since the baby arrived, there are precious few moments when Matt
and I can meet each other alone. The occasions when lust can break
through the fence are even more rare. We are oddly shy during these
adult-only interludes, as if becoming parents has made us strange to
one another. The house is sticky. Piles of clean laundry that we cant
find time to put away topple over and get mixed up with the dirty
clothes. Yet we continue to be loving and kind with each other and
with Blake. Matt especially is a monument of patience. I am often
struck dumb by his profound and consistently deep love for our
son.(46)
%
Sometimes I think homosexuality is wasted on gay people.
%
What Quinns testimony plainly indicates is that the end of discrimi-
nation, the rectification of social injustice, and the leveling of all dif-
ferential treatment of sexual minoritieseven should it occur
would not be the same thing as the end of the cultural dominance of
heterosexuality, the disappearance of heterosexuality as a set of cul-
tural norms. Social equality for gay people will not in and of itself
make the world gay. It will not enable us to attain a queerer world
more in line with our desires, our wishes, and our fantasies. It should
therefore not be confused with, nor will it lead to, the erasure of gay
subjective specificity or cultural difference.
Gayness would still be a deviation with respect to the cultural
Queer Forever 449
norm, the ways in which the majority of people live or expect to live,
and the socio-cultural forms which their lives take or aspire to take.
What makes gay people different from others is not just that we
are discriminated against, mistreated, regarded as sick or perverted.
That alone is not what shapes gay culture. (That indeed could end.)
Its that we live in a social world in which heterosexuality retains the
force of a norm. In fact, heterosexuality is the name for a system of
norms that goes far beyond the relatively harmless sexual practice of
intercourse between men and women.
The received wisdom, in straight culture, as Michael Warner de-
scribes it,
is that all of its different norms line up, that one is synonymous with
the others. If you are born with male genitalia, the logic goes, you will
behave in masculine ways, desire women, desire feminine women, de-
sire them exclusively, have sex in what are thought to be normally ac-
tive and insertive ways and within officially sanctioned contexts, think
of yourself as heterosexual, identify with other heterosexuals, trust in
the superiority of heterosexuality no matter how tolerant you might
wish to be, and never change any part of this package from childhood
to senescence. Heterosexuality is often a name for this entire package,
even though attachment to the other sex is only one element.21
This system of norms may not describe how people actually be-
have. Its a system of norms, after all, not an empirical description of
social existence. But it does define the expectations that many people
have for the way they and other people live. It implies that gender
norms, [erotic] object-orientation norms, norms of sexual practice,
and norms of subjective identification are congruent and stable.22 If
you deviate at any point from this program, Warner adds, you do
so at your own cost. And one of the things straight culture hates most
is any sign that the different parts of the package might be recom-
bined in an infinite number of ways. But experience shows that this is
just what tends to happen. ... No wonder [heterosexuality] needs so
much terror to induce compliance.23
Because, as Warner emphasizes, sexual desire for a person of a dif-
450 WHAT IS GAY CULTURE?
tity into a style of life that produces a relation to self that finds its
proper temporality and fulfillment in generational transmission and
gives rise to an ethos of self-transcendence as the basis of human
dignity.27
The dominance of heteronormativity depends on the pervasive-
ness and inescapability of that ethosmuch more than it does on
compulsory heterosexuality as a sexual practice. Just as gay culture
ismore taboo nowadays than gay sex, so it is the culture of hetero
sexualitywhat we call heteronormativitythat currently provides
the strongest guarantee of heterosexualitys social legitimacy. So-
cialequality for gay men and other sexual outlaws, should we ever
achieve it, will not in itself overthrow heterosexualitys cultural and
normative dominance, or the single form of intimacy it produces and
imposes. So gay equality alone will not spell the end of heteronor
mativity and its social ramifications. Heteronormativity may well be
qualified, restricted, limited, and possibly undermined or weakened
to some extent that is now hard to predict. But the model of human
life that it represents, and that it promotes as a horizon of aspiration
for every proper human subject, will not disappear with the legali
zation of gay marriage or the ability of non-heterosexuals to serve
openly in the U.S. military.
That is why queer politics is so much more far-reaching, so much
more transformative than the politics of gay rights. Because the logic
of the sexual order is so deeply embedded by now in an indescribably
wide range of social institutions, and is embedded in the most stan-
dard accounts of the world, Warner observes, queer struggles aim
not just at toleration or equal status but at challenging those institu-
tions and accounts.28 Queer politics takes aim at the very heart of
our modernity.
%
Gay men, like all queers, are necessarily detached or alienated, at least
to some degree, from heteronormative culture, as well as from the
received forms of personal and social life that heteronormativity fash-
Queer Forever 453
%
Where would we be without the insights, the impertinence, the un-
fazed critical intelligence provided by gay subculture? And where
would we be without its conscious consciousness, its awareness of so
456 WHAT IS GAY CULTURE?
much about the way we live our lives that is particular to specific
social forms? Without that alienated perspective, those social forms
would pass for obvious, or naturalwhich is to say, they would re-
main invisible, and the shape of our existence would escape us.
And what kind of spiritual freedom would heterosexuals achieve
without the benefit of the detached, alienated perspective on their
world, and its socially naturalized values, that gay male subculture
now that it is no longer secretaffords them? How otherwise would
they stay honest? Without the benefit of various queer culturesof
the queerness of culture itself, of the queerness that is culturehow
would heterosexuals acquire an understanding of the protocols and
priorities of the heteronormative world in which they remain im-
mersed?
Which points to a final paradox. It may be heterosexuals, nowa-
days, who appreciate, and who need, gay male culture more than gay
men do themselves.
%
We will be queer forever.
Gay kids still grow up, for the most part, in heterosexual families
and in heteronormative culture. That is not going to change to any
great extent. And even kids who do not grow up in straight fami-
liesare still exposed, to an overwhelming degree, to heterosexual cul-
tural forms. Heterosexual culture remains the first culture we experi-
ence, and our subjectivities, our modes of feeling and expression, our
sense of difference are all bound to take shape within the context and
framework of heterosexual culture.
Gay men, as Sartre wrote sixty years ago, avail themselves simulta-
neously of two different systems of reference.34 That is because of the
typical social situation in which gay male subjectivity originates and
in which gay male cultural practices assume their initial form: the sit-
uation of growing up and being raised by heterosexual parents in
a normatively and notionally, if not actually, heterosexual environ-
ment. From our earliest years, many of us are asked to act in ways
Queer Forever 457
that are at odds with the way we feel and the way we instinctively re-
spond to the established social order. We are called to subjectivity by
a demand to be inauthentic. We are required by the social vicissitudes
of our very existence to play a role that involves faking our own sub-
jectivity.
Those social conditions have great explanatory power for the phe-
nomena we have been studying here. The formation of gay male sub-
jectivity in an originary experience of inauthenticity defines for many
gay men what it is to be gay. It accounts for the doubleness of gay
consciousness, for that hypersensitivity to the artificial nature of se-
miotic systemsa hypersensitivity which expresses itself so distinc-
tively in camp and which generates the specific battery of hermeneu-
tic techniques that gay men have evolved for exposing the artifice of
social meaning and for spinning its codes and signifiers in ironic, so-
phisticated, defiant, inherently theatrical ways.35 And so it conduces
to the production of the gay cultural forms and styles with which we
have become familiar.
So long as queer kids continue to be born into heterosexual fami-
lies and into a society that is normatively, notionally heterosexual,
and so long as they remain alienated from heteronormative social
forms, they will have to devise their own non-standard relation to het-
erosexual culture. And they will have to find ways of understanding,
receiving, and relating to heterosexual culture that express or con-
dense their lack of subjective fit with its protocols. Straight culture
will always be our first culture, and what we do with it will always es-
tablish a certain template for later, queer relations to standard cultural
forms. Gay subjectivity will always be shaped by the primeval need
on the part of gay subjects to queer heteronormative culture.
That is not going to change. Not at least for a very long time. And
wed better hope it doesnt. For what is at stake is not just gay culture.
It is culture as a whole.
N otes
1. Diary of a Scandal
perin, What Do Gay Men Want? An Essay on Sex, Risk, and Subjectivity, rev. ed.
(Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2009).
17. On lesbian cinematic spectatorship, see Patricia White, Uninvited: Classical Hol-
lywood Cinema and Lesbian Representability (Bloomington: Indiana University
Press, 1999); also Valerie Traub, The Ambiguities of Lesbian Viewing Plea
sure: The (Dis)articulations of Black Widow, in Body Guards: The Politics of Gen-
der Ambiguity, ed. Julia Epstein and Kristina Straub (New York: Routledge, 1991),
305328; Judith Mayne, Lesbian Looks: Dorothy Arzner and Female Author-
ship, How Do I Look? Queer Film and Video, ed. Bad Object-Choices (Seattle: Bay
Press, 1991), 103135; Ann Pellegrini, Unnatural Affinities: Me and Judy at the
Lesbian Bar, Camera Obscura: Feminism, Culture, and Media Studies 65=22.2
(2007): 127133; Lisa Henderson, Love and Fit, Camera Obscura: Feminism, Cul-
ture, and Media Studies 67=23.1 (2008): 172177; and Amy Villarejo, Lesbian Rule:
Cultural Criticism and the Value of Desire (Durham,NC: Duke University Press,
2003). See, further, Terry Castle, In Praise of Brigitte Fassbaender (AMusical
Emanation), The Apparitional Lesbian: Female Homosexuality and Modern Culture
(New York: Columbia University Press, 1993), 200238, 268273. On the relations
between gay male and female, feminist, and lesbian spectatorship, see Pamela
Robertson, Guilty Pleasures: Feminist Camp from Mae West to Madonna (Durham,
NC: Duke University Press, 1996).
18. I refer here to the brilliant, though as yet unpublished, work by my former stu-
dent Emma Crandall. Publish it, Emma!
19. Compare Brian Larkin, Indian Films and Nigerian Lovers: Media and the Cre-
ation of Parallel Modernities, in The Anthropology of Globalization: AReader, ed.
Jonathan Xavier Inda and Renato Rosaldo (Oxford: Blackwell, 2002), 350378,
who does not discuss gay audiences in particular; Gayatri Gopinath, Bolly-
wood/Hollywood: Queer Cinematic Representation and the Politics of Trans-
lation, Impossible Desires: Queer Diasporas and South Asian Public Cultures (Dur-
ham,NC: Duke University Press, 2005), 93130, 208213.
20. See, for example, Richard Parker, Beneath the Equator: Cultures of Desire, Male Ho
mosexua lity, and Emerging Gay Communities in Brazil (New York: Routledge, 1999);
Niko Besnier, Transgenderism, Locality, and the Miss Galaxy Beauty Pageant
in Tonga, American Ethnologist 29.3 (2002): 534566; Martin F. Manalansan, Global
Divas: Filipino Gay Men in the Diaspora (Durham, NC: Duke University Press,
2003); William L. Leap and Tom Boellstorff, eds., Speaking in Queer Tongues: Glob
alization and Gay Language (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2003); Juana Ma-
ria Rodriguez, Queer Latinidad: Identity Practices, Discursive Spaces (New York:
New York University Press, 2003); Gopinath, Impossible Desires; Tom Boellstorff,
The Gay Archipelago: Sexuality and Nation in Indonesia (Princeton,NJ: Princeton
University Press, 2005); Mark McLelland, Queer Japan from the Pacific War to the
Internet Age (Lanham,MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 2005); William J. Spurlin,
462 Notes to Pages 1920
Imperialism within the Margins: Queer Representation and the Politics of Culture in
Southern Africa (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2006); Lisa Rofel, Desiring China:
Experiments in Neoliberalism, Sexuality, and Public Culture (Durham, NC: Duke
University Press, 2007); Ricardo L. Ortiz, Cultural Erotics in Cuban America (Min-
neapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2007); Fran Martin, Peter A. Jackson,
Mark McLelland, and Audrey Yue, eds., AsiaPacifiQueer: Rethinking Genders and
Sexualities (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2008); Lawrence LaFountain
Stokes, Queer Ricans: Cultures and Sexualities in the Diaspora (Minneapolis: Uni-
versity of Minnesota Press, 2009).
21. George Archibald, How To Be Gay Course Draws Fire at Michigan, Wash-
ington Times, August18, 2003, A1.
22. I have speculated at length about the reasons for the panic that perennially sur-
rounds the male instruction of boys. See my essay Deviant Teaching, Michi-
gan Feminist Studies 16 (2002): 129; reprinted, with revisions, in A Companion to
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer Studies, ed. George E. Haggerty
and Molly McGarry (Malden, MA: Blackwell, 2007), 144165.
23. Here, for the record, is the complete text of the press release.
the homosexual lifestyle, Professor Halperin should tell students the truth,
that homosexual behavior will make them 8.6 times more likely to catch a
venereal disease, with a 1-in-10 chance of acquiring the potentially fatal HIV
virus, he said. UM may as well force taxpayers to pay for teaching students
how to play Russian Roulette. (See Center for Disease Control study at:
<http://www.cdc.gov/epo/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm4835a1.htm>
www.cdc.gov/epo/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm4835a1.htm.)
On behalf of Michigan families whose tax dollars and children are at
stake, AFA-Michigan urges you to do everything in your power to stop this
outrage before it becomes a reality this fall, Glenn wrote.
He said, however, that just the proposal of a class on How To Be Gay,
and especially Professor Halperins description of it in the course catalogue,
makes an important concession in the ongoing debate over homosexual be-
havior.
If such a renowned expert says you need a course from the University of
Michigan to learn how to be gay, then its obvious that high-risk homosex
ual behavior is a learned lifestyle that is a matter of choice, not genetics,
he said.
Halperin wrote in UMs Fall 2000 course catalogue: Just because you hap-
pen to be a gay man doesnt mean that you dont have to learn how to be-
come one. Gay men do some of that learning on their own, but often
welearn how to be gay from others, either because we look to them for in-
struction or because they simply tell us what they think we need to know,
whether we ask for their advice or not.
24. B+ Could Try Harder, Sydney Star Observer, March23, 2000, 10. Many thanks
to Jason Prior for clipping this article and sending it to me.
25. Edward Albee, Whos Afraid of Virginia Woolf? A Play (New York: Athenaeum,
1962), 36.
26. See, generally, Martin Meeker, Contacts Desired: Gay and Lesbian Communications
and Community, 1940s1970s (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2006). For
thenotion of a queer public sphere, or queer counterpublic, see Lauren Ber-
lant and Michael Warner, Sex in Public, Critical Inquiry 24.2 (Winter 1998):
547566.
Compare Daniel Harris, The Rise and Fall of Gay Culture (New York: Hyperion,
1997), 21: Over the decades gay men have become so adept at communicating
their forbidden desires through camp allusions that a sort of collective amnesia
has descended over the whole process, and we have lost sight of the fact that
our love for performers like Judy Garland was actually a learned behavior, part
of our socialization as homosexuals.
27. Skool Daze, San Francisco Bay Times, March30, 2000, 910.
28. For my information and quotations in this paragraph, I rely on Hanna LoPatin,
464 Notes to Pages 2736
How To Be Gay Course under Fire from House, Michigan Daily, ca. May24,
2003. See also Beth Berlo, Michigan Legislators Debate Gay Studies, Bay Win-
dows (Boston), June 814, 2000; Antonio Planas, Gay Course at U-M Scrutinized
by Group, State News (Michigan State University), August6, 2003.
29. At the request of a local newspaper, I attempted to intervene in the debate, but
my response did not appear until two days after the primary. See U of M
Course Has No Intentions of Recruiting Gays (Letter to the Editor), Hastings
Banner, 147.32, August10, 2000,4.
30. Geoff Larcom, Outrage over Gay Identity Class Prompts Run for U-M Re-
gent Seat, Ann Arbor News, August22, 2000; Charlie Cain, Divisive Issues Top
U-M Race: GOP Considers Quotas, Gays in Picking Candidates, Detroit News,
August25, 2000,1.
31. Jen Fish, U of Michigan Regents Hear How To Be Gay Class Complaints,
Michigan Daily, October20, 2000.
32. Geoff Larcom, U-M Gay Studies Class Leads Lawmakers to Seek Controls: Bill
Would Give State Legislators the Power to Prohibit Courses, Ann Arbor News,
Thursday, August21, 2003.
33. For the information in this paragraph, I am indebted to Kim Kozlowski, Man
on a Mission, Detroit News, February4, 2001. See also Jay McNally, Modern-
Day Gideon: Gary Glenn Wages War for Family Values, Credo, March5, 2001.
34. Kozlowski, Man on a Mission.
35. Dustin Lee, Gay Courses and the First Amendment, Michigan Review, April
1230, 2000.
2. History of an Error
1. John M. Clum, Something for the Boys: Musical Theater and Gay Culture (New York:
Palgrave/St. Martins, 2001), 2, makes precisely this complaint about Ethan
Morddens writing about the Broadway musical. Some prominent exceptions to
the general pattern include Clum himself; Michael Bronski, Judy Garland and
Others: Notes on Idolization and Derision, in Lavender Culture, ed. Karla Jay
and Allen Young (New York: Jove, 1979), 201212; Al LaValley, The Great Es-
cape, American Film (April 1985): 2834, 7071; Wayne Koestenbaum, The Queens
Throat: Opera, Homosexuality, and the Mystery of Desire (New York: Poseidon
Press, 1993); Sam Abel, Opera and Homoerotic Desire, Opera in the Flesh: Sexu-
ality in Operatic Performance (Boulder,CO: Westview, 1996), 5875; Kevin Kopel-
son, Beethovens Kiss: Pianism, Perversion, and the Mastery of Desire (Stanford: Stan-
ford University Press, 1996); D. A. Miller, Place for Us: Essay on the Broadway
Musical (Cambridge,MA: Harvard University Press, 1998); Mitchell Morris, Its
Raining Men: The Weather Girls, Gay Subjectivity, and the Erotics of Insatiabil-
ity, in Audible Traces: Gender, Identity, and Music, ed. Elaine Barkin and Lydia
Hamessley (Zurich: Carciofoli Verlagshaus, 1999), 213229; Richard Dyer, Judy
Notes to Pages 3743 465
Garland and Gay Men, Heavenly Bodies: Film Stars and Society (New York: St.
Martins, 1986), 141194, and The Culture of Queers (London: Routledge, 2002);
Ellis Hanson, ed., Out Takes: Essays on Queer Theory and Film (Durham, NC:
Duke University Press, 1999); Patrick E. Horrigan, Widescreen Dreams: Growing
Up Gay at the Movies (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1999); Brett
Farmer, Spectacular Passions: Cinema, Fantasy, Gay Male Spectatorships (Dur-
ham, NC: Duke University Press, 2000); Michael DeAngelis, Gay Fandom and
Crossover Stardom: James Dean, Mel Gibson, and Keanu Reeves (Durham,NC: Duke
University Press, 2001); Roger Hallas, AIDS and Gay Cinephilia, Camera Ob-
scura 52=18.1 (2003): 84127; Steven Cohan, Incongruous Entertainment: Camp,
Cultural Value, and the MGM Musical (Durham,NC: Duke University Press, 2005);
the double issue of Camera Obscura entitled Fabulous! Divas, Camera Obscura:
Feminism, Culture, and Media Studies, 65 and 67=22.2 (2007) and 23.1 (2008); and,
most recently, Marc Howard Siegel, AGossip of Images: Hollywood Star Im-
ages and Queer Counterpublics (Ph.D. diss., University of California, Los An-
geles, 2010). For a brilliant analysis of gay male musical culture by someone who
is not a gay man, see Nadine Hubbs, The Queer Composition of Americas Sound:
Gay Modernists, American Music, and National Identity (Berkeley: University of
California Press, 2004).
2. For the notion, underlying the argument of this book as a whole, that style has
a meaning, and that form has a content, I am directly indebted to Myra Jehlen,
Five Fictions in Search of Truth (Princeton,NJ: Princeton University Press, 2008),
and to my many conversations with the author.
3. Already in the 1970s, mutual accusations of self-hatred and internalized ho-
mophobia were being exchanged between gay activists critical of gay male ef-
feminacy who favored a virile style of gay deportment and others critical of the
vogue for gay masculinity who defended effeminacy: see Alice Echols, The
Homo Superiors: Disco and the Rise of Gay Macho, Hot Stuff: Disco and the Re-
making of American Culture (New York: Norton, 2010), 121157, esp.124134.
4. Compare Echols, Homo Superiors, 128, who attributes gays ... identifica
tion with tragic, doomed women like Garland during the pre-disco period to
the notionwidely accepted by gay men at the timethat gayness . . . sig-
naled failed masculinity.
5. Clum, Something for the Boys, 23, quips that this new, far more sexual gay cul-
ture was a form of musical theater in which everyone could be a performer.
Spoken like a true show queen! (Clum proudly identifies himself as such
throughout his book.)
6. For the quotation, see Andrew Holleran, Dancer from the Dance: ANovel (New
York: Morrow, 1978), 15, and rpt. (New York: Bantam, 1979),7, as cited by Echols,
Homo Superiors, 130.
7. C. Westphal, Die contrre Sexualempfindung: Symptom eines neuropath
ischen (psychopathischen) Zustandes, Archiv fr Psychiatrie und Nerven
466 Notes to Pages 4344
krankheiten 2 (1870): 73108 (the fascicle of the journal in which Westphals arti-
cle was published actually appeared in 1869); Arrigo Tamassia, Sull inversione
dell istinto sessuale, Rivista sperimentale di freniatria e di medicina legale 4 (1878):
97117. The latter was the earliest published use of inversion that Havelock
Ellis, at least, was able to discover; see Ellis, Sexual Inversion=Studies in the Psy-
chology of Sex, 3rd ed., vol.2 (Philadelphia: F.A. Davis, 1922),3.
See, generally, the fundamental study by George Chauncey, Jr., From Sexual
Inversion to Homosexuality: The Changing Medical Conceptualization of Fe-
male Deviance, in Homosexuality: Sacrilege, Vision, Politics, ed. Robert Boyers
and George Steiner=Salmagundi 5859 (19821983): 114146, revised in Passion
and Power: Sexuality in History, ed. Kathy Peiss and Christina Simmons (Philadel-
phia: Temple University Press, 1989), 87117.
8. Westphal, Contrre Sexualempfindung, 107n, explaining his choice of con-
trary sexual feeling as a clinical designation for the mental condition he had
identified: Es soll darin ausgedrckt sein, dass es sich nicht immer gleichzeitig
um den Geschlechtstrieb als solchen handle, sondern auch bloss um die Emp-
findung, dem ganzen inneren Wesen nach dem eigenen Geschlechte entfrem-
det zu sein, gleichsam eine unentwickeltere Stufe des pathologischen Phno-
mens. See, further, David M. Halperin, How To Do the History of Male
Homosexuality, in Halperin, How To Do the History of Homosexuality (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 2002), 104137 and 185195, esp.127130.
9. See Hubert C. Kennedy, The Third Sex Theory of Karl Heinrich Ulrichs, in
Historical Perspectives on Homosexuality, ed. Salvatore J. Licata and Robert P. Pe-
tersen=Journal of Homosexuality 6.12 (1980/1981): 103111; as well as Hubert C.
Kennedy, Ulrichs: The Life and Works of Karl Heinrich Ulrichs, Pioneer of the Modern
Gay Movement (Boston: Alyson, 1988), 4353.
10. This formulation is highly deliberate. I do not want to deny that same-sex sexual
contact could qualify as deviant in the period, and I dont want to make a falsely
stark and simplistic historical division between an era of inversion followed by
an era of homosexuality, as if the two never occurred together, coincided, or
were conflated. Nonetheless, I continue to believe it is useful to distinguish be-
tween them, as I have done, most recently, in How To Do the History of Male
Homosexua lity, where I emphasize the temporal overlaps between inversion
and homosexuality. Henning Bech, When Men Meet: Homosexuality and Moder-
nity, trans. Teresa Mesquit and Tim Davies (Cambridge: Polity Press, 1997), 85ff.
and 239242, argues powerfully that historians have overplayed the distinction
between inversion and homosexuality, and perhaps he is right. Bech cites evi-
dence that same-sex sexual contact in itself was targeted as both criminal and
pathological in the nineteenth century even without an element of gender devi-
ance. But his examples tend to occur quite late in the nineteenth century, and
his claim that before the modern homosexual, mens same-sex attraction was
Notes to Page 44 467
ity, Sex Roles 58.2 (2008): 104115; and Amanda Lynn Hoffman, Im Gay, For
Jamie: Heterosexual/Straight-Identified Men Express Desire to Have Sex with
Men (M.A. thesis, San Francisco State University, 2010).
16. Alfred C. Kinsey, Wardell B. Pomeroy, and Clyde E. Martin, Sexual Behavior in
the Human Male (Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders, 1948), 615. The point was consid-
erably expanded by a subsequent writer in the Kinsey tradition, C.A. Tripp, The
Homosexual Matrix (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1975), 2235, who devotes an entire
chapter to it.
Kinsey was anticipated by Havelock Ellis and Sigmund Freud, who distin-
guished sexual object-choice from gender role, but who did not limit their defi
nitions of homosexuality to same-sex sexual behavior as consistently or as
categorically as Kinsey did.
17. Kinsey et al., Sexual Behavior in the Human Male, 616, 623.
18. See Louis-Georges Tin, Linvention de la culture htrosexuelle (Paris: Editions Au-
trement, 2008), who traces the earliest stages of this evolution back to the liter-
ary culture of the Middle Ages.
19. Chauncey, Gay New York, 111121; E. Anthony Rotundo, American Manhood:
Transformations in Masculinity from the Revolution to the Modern Era (New York:
Basic, 1993), 274279; Axel Nissen, Manly Love: Romantic Friendship in American
Fiction (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2009).
20. Nils Axel Nissen correctly observes to me that the eponymous hero of Imre, a
short novel by Xavier Mayne (Edward Irenaeus Stevenson), privately printed
in 1906, has the best claim to be the first representation of a straight-acting gay
man. See now the superb scholarly edition of Imre by James J. Gifford (Peterbor-
ough,ON: Broadview Press, 2003).
21. I derive this information from a public lecture by George Chauncey at a confer-
ence in Oslo, Homosexuality 2000, in August 2000; a Norwegian translation
appears in Kvinneforskning 34 (2000): 5671. Here is John Richardson speaking
about the impression made on him by the poet James Schuyler in the summer
of 1949: With his short haircut, tight blue jeans, and white T-shirt, he epito-
mized the fresh American sailor-boy look that would soon become mandatory
for young men everywhere: John Richardson, The Sorcerers Apprentice: Picasso,
Provence, and Douglas Cooper (New York: Knopf, 1999), 62. See also the opening
photospread of a San Francisco leather bar in Paul Welch and Ernest Have-
mann, Homosexuality in America, Life Magazine, 56.26 ( June 26, 1964): 6680.
For additional background, see Gayle S. Rubin, The Valley of the Kings: Leath-
ermen in San Francisco, 19601990 (Ph.D. diss., University of Michigan, 1994).
22. The term effete is featured in Robert K. Martins unpublished memoir of gay
life at Wesleyan University in the early 1960s, Scenes of Gay Life at Wesleyan
before Stonewall, delivered as a lecture at the conference Homosexuality
2000 in Oslo; a Norwegian translation appears in Kvinneforskning 34 (2000):
2739.
Notes to Pages 4850 469
by Richard Hunter, Michael Tresser, James Lynch, and John Maresca in the Let-
ters section of Outweek 76 (December12, 1990):5.
27. For those who know French, a brilliant satirical perspective on this transforma-
tion is provided by the song Viril, by P.Philippe and M.Cywie, performed in
1981 by Jean Guidoni, of which a video is available at www.dailymotion.com/
video/xt37x_guidoni-81-viril_music (accessed January11, 2009). Thanks to Ros-
tom Mesli for directing my attention to this performance.
28. Frances Fitzgerald, Cities on the Hill (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1986), 34;
also 54: Now the Castroids, as they sometimes called themselves, were dress-
ing with the care of Edwardian dandiesonly the look was cowboy or bush pi-
lot: tight blue jeans, preferably Levis with button flies, plaid shirts, leather vests
or bomber jackets, and boots; 6263: There was the clone style proper: short
hair, clipped mustache, blue jeans, and bomber jacket. For more details, see
Martin P. Levine, Gay Macho: The Life and Death of the Homosexual Clone, ed. Mi-
chael S. Kimmel (New York: New York University Press, 1998), esp.60, for an
anatomy of the canonical butch types: Western, Leather, Military, Laborer,
Hood, Athlete, Woodsman, Sleaze, Uniforms. For a contemporary apprecia-
tion of the Castro Street Clone, see Edmund White, States of Desire: Travels in
Gay America (New York: Dutton, 1980), 4546.
29. Echols, Homo Superiors, 123.
30. See Dr. Charles Silverstein and Edmund White, The Joy of Gay Sex: An Intimate
Guide for Gay Men to the Pleasures of a Gay Lifestyle (New York: Crown, 1977), 185:
Since the advent of feminism and gay liberation, role-playing has taken on a
decidedly negative aura. ... To the gay liberationist role-playing conjures up a
picture of two men living out a grotesque parody of heterosexual married life;
186: The disadvantages of role-playing are manifold and increasingly obvious;
187: In the late sixties, the birth of modern feminism and gay liberation called
for the abolition of all role-playing.
31. See Echols, Homo Superiors, 121 and 127, quoting the protagonist of Edmund
Whites 1997 novel The Farewell Symphony, which is set in the 1970s.
32. Silverstein and White, Joy of Gay Sex, 1011.
33. Edmund White, The Gay Philosopher (1969), The Burning Library: Essays, ed.
David Bergman (New York: Knopf, 1994), 319 (quotation on p.18).
34. Silverstein and White, Joy of Gay Sex, 1011.
35. Robert Ferro, The Blue Star (New York: Dutton, 1985), 64; cf.121: we did every
thing equally to each other.
36. Mark Merlis, An Arrows Flight (New York: St. Martins, 1998), 14.
37. See Damon Ross Young, Pain Porn, in Porn Archives, ed. Tim Dean, Steven
Ruszczycky, and David Squires (Durham,NC: Duke University Press, forthcom-
ing).
38. Pansy Division, Undressed (Lookout! Records, 1993), track1.
39. The clones performance of butch as a kind of self-conscious dress-up, even a
Notes to Pages 5563 471
form of drag, distinguishes his brand of machismo from its more earnest and
tyrannical straight counterpart. ... Even as the gay clone mimed heterosexual
masculinity, he helped to reveal that so-called original as illusory and contin-
gent, as its own brand of (humorless) performance: Richard Meyer, Warhols
Clones, in Negotiating Lesbian and Gay Subjects, ed. Monica Dorenkamp and
Richard Henke (New York: Routledge, 1995), 92122 (quotation on p.112), quot-
ing Judith Butlers classic essay, Imitation and Gender Insubordination, in In-
side/Out: Lesbian Theories, Gay Theories, ed. Diana Fuss (New York: Routledge,
1991), 1331, rpt. in The Lesbian and Gay Studies Reader, ed. Henry Abelove,
Michle Aina Barale, and David M. Halperin (New York: Routledge, 1993), 307
320. See also Sue-Ellen Case, Towards a Butch-Femme Aesthetic, Discourse 11
(Winter 19881989): 5573, rpt. in The Lesbian and Gay Studies Reader, 294306. For
opposing views, see Esther Newton, Dick(less) Tracy and the Homecoming
Queen: Lesbian Power and Representation in Gay Male Cherry Grove, in New-
ton, Margaret Mead Made Me Gay: Personal Essays, Public Ideas (Durham, NC:
Duke University Press, 2000), 6389, 270276; and Biddy Martin, Sexualities
without Genders, and Other Queer Utopias, diacritics, 24.23 (Summer/Fall
1994): 104121, rpt. in Biddy Martin, Femininity Played Straight: The Significance of
Being Lesbian (New York: Routledge, 1996), 7194.
40. Leo Bersani, Is the Rectum a Grave? in AIDS: Cultural Analysis/Cultural Activ-
ism, ed. Douglas Crimp, October 43 (Winter 1987): 197222 (quotation on p.208).
41. On this point, see the detailed discussion in Esther Newton, Mother Camp: Fe-
male Impersonators in America, 2nd ed. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
1979; first publ. 1972), 2325, 3133, and, especially, 103104.
42. On the requirement that male homosexuality be legible, and on the contradic-
tions and paradoxes to which that requirement gives rise, see the classic study
by Lee Edelman, Homographesis: Essays in Gay Literary and Cultural Theory (New
York: Routledge, 1994).
43. Rogers Brubaker, The Return of Assimilation? Changing Perspectives on Im-
migration and Its Sequels in France, Germany, and the United States, Ethnic
and Racial Studies 24 ( July 2001): 531548, cited and discussed in Kenji Yoshino,
Covering: The Hidden Assault on Our Civil Rights (New York: Random House,
2006), xxi. Yoshino goes on to offer a judicious critique of the politics of as-
similation and its implicit refusal to address continuing practices of discrimina-
tion.
44. Will Fellows, A Passion to Preserve: Gay Men as Keepers of Culture (Madison: Uni-
versity of Wisconsin Press, 2004), ixx.
45. Ibid., 14. Compare Clum, Something for the Boys, 30: Im gay, but Im no sissy
... is the watchword of the majority of gay men these days.
46. I quote the opening sentence of a classic essay by Michael Warner, Introduc-
tion, in Fear of a Queer Planet: Queer Politics and Social Theory, ed. Warner (Min-
neapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1993), viixxxi (quotation on p.vii); an
472 Notes to Pages 6365
earlier version of this essay, minus the opening sentence, had appeared as In-
troduction: Fear of a Queer Planet, Social Text 29 (1991): 317. See also Eve Ko-
sofsky Sedgwick, Epistemology of the Closet (Berkeley: University of California
Press, 1990); and Sedgwick, Tendencies (Durham, NC: Duke University Press,
1993).
47. It is an eloquent sign of the times that Brett Farmer, introducing his brave and
original study of gay mens distinctive relation to the movies, has to spend pages
justifying his project against the anticipated objection on the part of queer theo-
rists that it is illegitimately essentialist. See Farmer, Spectacular Passions, 615.
48. Barry D. Adam, How Might We Create a Collectivity That We Would Want To
Belong To? in Gay Shame, ed. David M. Halperin and Valerie Traub (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 2009), 301311 (quotation on p.306). By way of sup-
port, Adam cites an earlier essay of his: Love and Sex in Constructing Identity
among Men Who Have Sex with Men, International Journal of Sexuality and
Gender Studies 5.4 (2000): 325339.
49. Fellows, Passion to Preserve; Clum, Something for the Boys; Neil Bartlett, Who Was
That Man? A Present for Mr Oscar Wilde (London: Serpents Tail, 1988); David
Nimmons, The Soul beneath the Skin: The Unseen Hearts and Habits of Gay Men
(New York: St. Martins, 2002).
50. Yoshino, Covering, 22.
51. In an op-ed piece in the New York Times on March 26, 2006, Orlando Patterson
inveighed against a deep-seated dogma that has prevailed in social science and
policy circles since the mid-1960s: the rejection of any explanation that invokes a
groups cultural attributesits distinctive attitudes, values and predispositions,
and the resulting behavior of its members. He went on to welcome recent his-
torical, political, intellectual developments that have made it impossible to ig-
nore the effects of culture on the shape of Black life in the United States,
though by this he meant only the factors internal to Black society that might
account for underachievement and poverty. This appeal to the effects of cul-
ture might well explain why so many people remain wary of any explanation
that invokes a groups cultural attributes.
52. In capitalizing the terms Black and White, Im following an orthographic
practice in cultural studies intended to signal that these color terms are not de-
scriptors, but designations of ethnic identities.
53. Ten months later, in an appearance on the Ellen DeGeneres Show on October22,
2008, Obama said, Michelle may be a better dancer than me, but Im convinced
Im a better dancer than John McCain. See youtube.com/watch?v=880gl_jJcG0
(accessed October27, 2008).
54. Baratunde Thurston, a Black comedian and blogger, has announced a new book
called How To Be Black as forthcoming from HarperCollins in February 2012; see
his website, baratunde.com (accessed August 9, 2011). Compare Michelle M.
Wright, Becoming Black: Creating Identity in the African Diaspora (Durham,NC:
Notes to Pages 6573 473
Duke University Press, 2004), who takes a rather different approach to the ques-
tion from my own, though I believe we share some of the same concerns.
55. See Dyer, Judy Garland and Gay Men.
what if it didnt become such a story? What if it turned out to be a story about
gay peoplea story just about gay people? Would that make it less interesting,
less valuable, less worth telling? Yoshinos own example shows how a universal-
ist model of identity politics paradoxically functions to erase difference and pro-
mote assimilation.
For another typical instance of sexual despecification as a universalizing strat-
egy whose effect is to erase gayness, see John Lahrs review of Matthew Bournes
all-male version of Swan Lake in the New Yorker (October19, 1998): the male du-
ets, Lahr wrote, are not really about gay sex but about sexuality itself. The re-
view is cited, quoted, and aptly criticized in John M. Clum, Something for the
Boys: Musical Theater and Gay Culture (New York: Palgrave/St. Martins, 2001),
208209, on precisely these grounds.
6. Daniel Harris, The Rise and Fall of Gay Culture (New York: Hyperion, 1997), 84.
7. For a critique of homonormativity, see Lisa Duggan, The Twilight of Equality?
Neoliberalism, Cultural Politics, and the Attack on Democracy (Boston: Beacon Press,
2003).
8. See, now, Heather Love, Feeling Backward: Loss and the Politics of Queer History
(Cambridge,MA: Harvard University Press, 2007).
9. Warner, The Trouble with Normal. See also Gayle Rubin, Thinking Sex: Notes
for a Radical Theory of the Politics of Sexuality, in Pleasure and Danger: Explor-
ing Female Sexuality, ed. Carole S. Vance (Boston: Routledge and Kegan Paul,
1984), 267319, revised and updated in The Lesbian and Gay Studies Reader, ed.
Henry Abelove, Michle Aina Barale, and David M. Halperin (New York: Rout-
ledge, 1993), 344.
10. John Howard, Men Like That: A Southern Queer History (Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 1999), 15.
11. See David M. Halperin, Gay Identity and Its Discontents, Photofile 61 (Decem-
ber 2000): 3136, somewhat expanded as Halperin, Identit et dsenchante-
ment, trans. Paul Lagneau-Ymonet, in Linfrquentable Michel Foucault: Renou-
veaux de la pense critique, ed. Didier Eribon (Paris: EPEL, 2001), 7387; Spanish
translation by Graciela Graham in El infrecuentable Michel Foucault: Renovacin
del pensamiento crtico, ed. Eribon (Buenos Aires: Letra Viva/EDELP, 2004), 105
120.
12. I am invoking the celebrated formula that Douglas Crimp proposed in Mourn-
ing and Militancy, October 51 (Winter 1989): 318. Crimp, even at the time, ar-
gued that the AIDS activist movement was in danger of repressing its own emo-
tional needs in its drive to political action. See, now, the detailed exploration of
AIDS activist feeling in Deborah B. Gould, Moving Politics: Emotion and ACTUPs
Fight against AIDS (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2009).
13. On the difference between emotions that are politic ally good and those that are
politically bad, see Sianne Ngai, Ugly Feelings (Cambridge,MA: Harvard Univer-
sity Press, 2004); and Anne Anlin Cheng, The Melancholy of Race: Psychoanalysis,
Notes to Pages 7982 475
Assimilation, and Hidden Grief (New York: Oxford University Press, 2002), both
discussed in Love, Feeling Backward, 1214, with considerable pertinence to the
issues reviewed here.
14. For an early brilliant critique of this gay tendency to distinguish between good
and bad emotions, see Lee Edelman, The Mirror and the Tank: AIDS, Subjec-
tivity, and the Rhetoric of Activism, Homographesis: Essays in Gay Literary and
Cultural Theory (New York: Routledge, 1994), 93117, 256260. See also Paul Mor-
rison, End Pleasure, The Explanation for Everything: Essays on Sexual Subjectivity
(New York: New York University Press, 2001), 5481, 181184.
15. In this context, some writers stand out for their bravery. See Leo Bersanis praise
of sex in general, and of gay mens sexual culture in particular, for being anti-
communal, antiegalitarian, antinurturing, antiloving: Is the Rectum a Grave?
in AIDS: Cultural Analysis/Cultural Activism, ed. Douglas Crimp=October 43
(Winter 1987): 197222 (quotation on p.215). See also Lee Edelmans praise of
gay male narcissism and passivity in The Mirror and the Tank.
16. See, for example, Douglas Crimp, Mario Montez, For Shame, in Regarding
Sedgwick: Essays on Queer Culture and Critical Theory, ed. Stephen M. Barber and
David L. Clark (New York: Routledge, 2002), 5770. Crimp calls his project
Queer before Gay. It was anticipated in certain respects, as Crimp himself ac-
knowledges, by Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Queer Performativity: Henry Jamess
The Art of the Novel, GLQ: AJournal of Lesbian and Gay Studies 1.1 (1993): 116.
The work of Crimp and of Sedgwick has been reprinted in Gay Shame, ed. Da-
vid M. Halperin and Valerie Traub (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2009),
4975, which is a compendium of some recent attempts to move queer politics
and queer theory beyond gay pride.
4. Homosexualitys Closet
1. Only after drafting an early version of the following paragraphs in 2001 (see
David M. Halperin, Homosexualitys Closet, Michigan Quarterly Review 41.1
[Winter 2002]: 2154, esp. 2629) did I come across a similar analysis by John
Clum of a different interview with David Daniels in a 1998 issue of the New
Yorker: see John M. Clum, Something for the Boys: Musical Theater and Gay Culture
(New York: Palgrave/St. Martins, 2001), 3435. While Clum and I are both in-
terested in the way Daniels publicly presents his sexual and gender identity, and
while we are both critical of how the liberal print media normalize him, we de-
rive rather different lessons from the interviews we examine.
For Tommasinis openness as a gay man, see his biography of Virgil Thom-
son, starting with the Acknowledgments. Anthony Tommasini, Virgil Thomson:
Composer on the Aisle (New York: Norton, 1997), xii: Many thanks to my partner,
Ben McCommon, for helping me get through the rough times. (By contrast,
Tommasini does not identify himself as a gay man in his New York Times article.)
476 Notes to Pages 8390
I am indebted to Nadine Hubbs for this reference, for her incisive criticism of
this section of my book, and for opening up to me the world of queer musicol-
ogy, whose impact is easy to discern in much of what follows.
2. David Daniels, with Martin Katz (piano), Serenade, Virgin Classics, no.5454002
(1999). An earlier recording of European countertenors presents itself in a much
more explicitly camp style; see Pascal Bertin, Andreas Scholl, Dominique Visse,
Les Trois Contre-tnors, Harmonia Mundi, no.901552 (April 1995).
3. For some pioneering efforts to open up the musicality/sexuality nexus as a topic
for future research in a queer mode, see Philip Brett, Musicality, Essentialism,
and the Closet, and Suzanne G. Cusick, On a Lesbian Relationship with Mu-
sic: ASerious Effort Not to Think Straight, both in Queering the Pitch: The New
Gay and Lesbian Musicology, ed. Philip Brett, Elizabeth Wood, and Gary C.
Thomas (New York: Routledge, 1994), 926 and 6784.
4. See D.A. Miller, Anal Rope, Representations 32 (Fall 1990): 114133, reprinted in
Inside/Out: Lesbian Theories, Gay Theories, ed. Diana Fuss (New York: Routledge,
1991), 119141, for a classic account of the operations of homosexual implication
in discourses governed by the regime of the closet. Miller clearly establishes
that such operations originate in the shadow kingdom of connotation, whose
mode of signification is particularly characteristic of the closet. For a brilliant
analysis of some journalistic instances, provided by the New York Times and Life
magazine in the early 1960s, see Lee Edelman, Tearooms and Sympathy; or,
The Epistemology of the Water Closet, Homographesis: Essays in Gay Literary
and Cultural Theory (New York: Routledge, 1994), 148170, 263267.
1. Heather Love, Feeling Backward: Loss and the Politics of Queer History (Cam-
bridge,MA: Harvard University Press, 2007), 17.
2. Susan Sontag, Against Interpretation, Against Interpretation and Other Essays
(New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1966; orig. publ. 1964), 314, esp. 610
(quotation on p.7).
3. For a compelling demonstration of how the psychoanalytic destabilization of
heterosexual identity conduces, paradoxically but ineluctably, to the consolida-
tion of heterosexual privilege, see Paul Morrison, The Explanation for Everything:
Essays on Sexual Subjectivity (New York: New York University Press, 2001).
4. For a couple of eloquent examples, see Christopher Guests film Waiting for
Guffman (1996), and Neil Patrick Harriss opening number at the 2011 Tony
Awards Broadway: Its Not Just for Gays Any More, www.youtube.com/
watch?v=-6S5caRGpK4 (accessed June 17, 2011). The Broadway musical still
functions so ubiquitously as a signifier of male homosexua lity in popular cul-
turefor instance, in TV shows such as Will and Grace, Queer Eye for the Straight
Guy, Desperate Housewives, and Gleethat it would be impossible to cite all the
occurrences of what has now become an obvious commonplace, a truth univer-
Notes to Pages 9098 477
engaged tolerance (in regard to Judy Garland), see Michael Joseph Gross, The
Queen Is Dead, Atlantic Monthly, August 2000, 6270. For a similar impulse by a
gay male critic to disavow the queeniness of grand opera and to rescue it for a
dignified gay identity and a healthy gay sexuality, see Sam Abel, Opera and
Homoerotic Desire, Opera in the Flesh: Sexuality in Operatic Performance (Boul-
der,CO: Westview, 1996), 5875.
12. I refer here to the passage from Proust which Miller has selected as his books
epigraph: That bad music is played, is sung more often and more passionately
than good, is why it has also gradually become more infused with mens dreams
and tears. Treat it therefore with respect. Its place, insignificant in the history of
art, is immense in the sentimental history of social groups. Miller is quoting,
somewhat freely, the following passage: Marcel Proust, Eloge de la mauvaise
musique, Les Plaisirs et les jours, ed. Thierry Laget(Paris: Gallimard, 1993), 183.
13. Barry D. Adam, How Might We Create a Collectivity That We Would Want to
Belong To? in Gay Shame, ed. David M. Halperin and Valerie Traub (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 2009), 301311 (quotation on p.305; italics added).
Compare Al LaValley, The Great Escape, American Film (April 1985): 2834,
7071; LaValley speaks of the utopian and alternate world that gay men find in
Hollywood movies and in aesthetic experience in general (29).
14. See Miller, Place for Us, 3: the Broadway musicals frankly interruptive mode-
shifting between book and lyrics had the same miraculous effect on [proto-
gay boys in the 1950s] as on every character, no matter how frustrated in ambi-
tion or devastated by a broken heart, who felt a song coming on: that of sending
the whole world packing. Compare Clum, Something for the Boys, 56.
15. Clum, Something for the Boys, 13, speaking specifically of old-time, unmiked fe-
male singers in Broadway musicals, belters like Ethel Merman, and the grand
gesture that went with the big noise.
16. Clum, Something for the Boys, 57, goes on to make an interesting argument that
the queer pleasure of opera consists in the transcending of the body through
music, whereas Broadway musicals feature glamorous performers with lithe
bodies flamboyantly decked out in gorgeous clothes: in musical theater, Clum
says, the musical triumphs over mortality.
17. On Clums view, the Broadway musical therefore confirms the truth that every
gay man learns by pubertyeverything involved with gender and sex is role-
playing one way or another. Thats what unites gay men (23).
1. On the enduring gay appeal of The Golden Girls, see Charles Grandee, House
of Dames, New York Times Magazine, Part Two: Home Design, Spring 2002,
April14, 2002, 52ff.
2. One might have expected Stonewall to make [Hollywood] star cults outmoded
Notes to Pages 113121 479
among gays, wrote Al LaValley as long ago as 1985, yet neither gay openness
nor the new machismo has completely abolished the cults. Al LaValley, The
Great Escape, American Film (April 1985), 71.
3. I allude to the classic work by Erving Goffman, Stigma: Notes on the Management
of Spoiled Identity (Englewood Cliffs,NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1963).
4. Alice Echols, Hot Stuff: Disco and the Remaking of American Culture (New York:
Norton, 2010), 147.
5. See www.out.com/slideshows/?slideshow_title=Lady-Gagas-Born-This-Way
-Love-It-or-Leave-It&theID=1#Top (accessed June6, 2011).
6. Katie Zezima, Lady Gaga Goes Political in Maine, New York Times, September
20, 2010.
7. Lyrics available online at www.metrolyrics.com/born-this-way-lyrics-lady-gaga
.html (accessed June6, 2011).
8. Mark Simpson, Bored This Way: Gaga Lays a Giant Egg, www.out.com/
slideshows/?slideshow_title=Lady-Gagas-Born-This-Way-Love-It-or-Leave-It&
theID=3#Top (accessed June6, 2011).
9. Compare Mark Simpson, That Lady Gaga Backlash Is So Tired Already, Out
Magazine, September24, 2010: When was the last time pop music mattered?
When was the last time you cared? Until Lady Gaga came along, just a couple
years ago, pop seemed thoroughly pooped. Some nice tunes and haircuts here
and there and some really excellent financial institution ad soundtracks, but re-
ally, who thought pop could ever trouble us again as a total art form? Gaga has
single-handedly resurrected pop. Or at least shes made it seem like its alive.
Maybe its a kind of galvanic motionthose pop promos sometimes look like
Helmut Newton zombie flicksbut boy, this is shocking fun.
10. Logan Scherer, personal communication, June5, 2011.
11. Ibid.
12. Clum, in Something for the Boys: Musical Theater and Gay Culture (New York: Pal-
grave/St. Martins, 2001), suggests that show queens predominated at a mo-
ment in gay history when the closet was still an operative principle for gay men
(27; and passim).
13. Daniel Harris, The Rise and Fall of Gay Culture (New York: Hyperion, 1997), 37,
34, as quoted and cited by Clum, Something for the Boys, 22, 34.
14. This is Andrew Sullivan, The End of Gay Culture, New Republic, Octo-
ber24,2005, www.tnr.com/politics/story.html?id=cac6ca08-7df8-4cdd-93cc-1d2
0cd8b7a70 (accessed July13, 2009), quoting Michael Walzer.
15. Sullivan, End of Gay Culture.
16. For a canonical representation of the classic gay male night out, see Howard
Cruse, Billy Goes Out (1979?), in Cruse, Dancin Nekkid with the Angels: Comic
Strips and Stories for Grownups (New York: St. Martins, 1987), 6672. For an ex-
ample of the dissatisfactions with official gay culture, see the remarks by the
transgender performance artist Glenn Maria to Smith Galtney, Let the Gays
480 Notes to Pages 123131
field they themselves constitutea field that might well prove to be synony-
mous with, but considerably more precise, than whatever it is that is designated
by that obscure mana-word, culture, itself.
9. For some striking examples, see Nicholas Graham, U.S. Soldiers in Afghani-
stanRemake Lady Gagas Telephone Music Video and U.S. Soldiers Remake
Keshas Blah Blah Blah Video into Dont Ask, Dont Tell Spoof, Huffington
Post (April 2930, 2010; and May12, 2010), www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/04/29/
telephone---the-afghanist_n_557123.html and www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/
05/12/us-soldiers-remake-keshas_n_573831.html (accessed May 14, 2010). See
also the commentary by Mark Simpson, Why Straight Soldiers Cant Stop Act-
ing Gay on Video, posted on marksimpson.com (accessed May14, 2010).
10. Maeve Reston, Newt Gingrich, Dancing Queen, Los Angeles Times, May19,
2011, available online at articles.latimes.com/2011/may/19/news/la-pn-newt
-g ingrich-dancing-queen-20110519 (accessed June4, 2011).
11. For an early effort in one of these directions, see Charles I. Nero, Toward
a Black Gay Aesthetic: Signifying in Contemporary Black Gay Literature, in
Brother to Brother: New Writings by Black Gay Men, ed. Essex Hemphill (Boston:
Alyson, 1991), 229252. Compare Jos Esteban Muoz, Disidentifications: Queers
of Color and the Performance of Politics (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota
Press, 1999).
12. For some examples, see David M. Halperin, How To Do the History of Homosexu
ality (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2002); Halperin, One Hundred Years
of Homosexuality, and Other Essays on Greek Love (New York: Routledge, 1990);
and Halperin Is There a History of Sexuality? History and Theory 28.3 (October
1989): 257274.
13. Esther Newton, Mother Camp: Female Impersonators in America, 2nd ed. (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1979; first publ. 1972), 109.
14. Tony Kushner, Angels in America: A Gay Fantasia on National Themes, Part2: Pere-
stroika (New York: Theatre Communications Group, 1996), 97.
15. Adrian Kiernander, Theatre without the Stink of Art: An Interview with Neil
Bartlett, GLQ: AJournal of Lesbian and Gay Studies 1.2 (1994): 221236 (quotation
on p.234).
16. Kestutis Nakas, e-mail message to Chad Allen Thomas (September 3, 2008),
quoted by Thomas in Performing Queer Shakespeare (Ph.D. diss., University
of Michigan, 2009), ch.1.
17. Editorial statement, Diseased Pariah News 1 (1990): 1.
18. T.S. [Tom Shearer], Welcome to Our Brave New World! Diseased Pariah News
1 (1990):2. Italics and ellipsis in original.
19. Scott Alan Rayter, He Who Laughs Last: Comic Representations of AIDS
(Ph.D. diss., University of Toronto, 2002). Rayter argues that gay male writers
and artists, such as Tony Kushner and John Greyson, reject the customary reli-
ance on a tragic model in framing their responses to HIV/AIDS (18), refusing
Notes to Pages 145147 483
to take for granted the normal assumption, apparent in a film like Philadelphia,
that tragedy is the most appropriate and suitable vehicle for representing
AIDS (5866). Instead, gay playwrights often use comic styles and modes ... to
denaturalize these conventions of the realistic problem play (5657). This re-
jection of the tragic, according to Rayter, is designed to frustrate the audiences
desire for closure, by heightening anxiety, through humour and laughter, while
rejecting any easy catharsis (150). But the result is not a complete embrace of
the comic; rather, the writers and filmmakers Rayter examines self-consciously
question the use of the comic even as they exploit it, remaining ambivalent
about their use of the comic form and incorporating that ambivalence into the
work itself. If humour has a place in AIDS representation ... it will always be a
contested siteone where competing factions use, take up, and respond to that
humour in a plethora of ways (52).
Rayter is careful to distinguish among camp, black humour (which he
claims works by encouraging the audience not to laugh, but to recoil [74]),
and sarcasm (39). David Romn, Acts of Intervention: Performance, Gay Culture,
and AIDS (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1998), 88115, is particularly
critical of camp for the purposes of AIDS activist interventions, though he
makes a partial exception for AIDS! The Musical! On the latter, see also the ac-
count by John M. Clum, Something for the Boys: Musical Theater and Gay Culture
(New York: Palgrave/St. Martins, 2001), 267268; Clum provides a good discus-
sion of Zero Patience, as well (274276).
20. A reproduction of David McDiarmids artwork can be viewed on the National
Gallery of Victorias website: www.ngv.vic.gov.au/ngvart/20080828/index.html
(accessed September19, 2008).
21. On David McDiarmids activist art, see C. Moore Hardy, Lesbian Erotica and
Impossible Images, and Ted Gott, Sex and the Single T-Cell: The Taboo of
HIV-Positive Sexuality in Australian Art and Culture, Sex in Public: Australian
Sexual Cultures, ed. Jill Julius Matthews (St.Leonards, NSW: Allen and Unwin,
1997), 127138 and 139156. It should be noted that McDiarmids title, Moody
Bitch Dies of AIDS, invokes the words of a sign that Peter Tully himself would
carry when he dressed up as his alter ego, Judy Free: Moody Bitch seeks a
kind considerate guy for Love Hate relationship. See the film by Tony Ayres,
Sadness: AMonologue by William Yang (1999).
22. On the last two artists, see Christina Sharpe, Monstrous Intimacies: Making Post-
Slavery Subjects (Durham,NC: Duke University Press, 2010), 111187, 212221. On
Kara Walker, see Arlene R. Keizer, Gone Astray in the Flesh: Kara Walker,
Black Women Writers, and African American Postmemory, PMLA 123.5 (Octo-
ber 2008): 16491672, esp. 1670: Though Walker is not gay, her work is pro-
foundly queer, and queer-of-color theory has produced a conceptual matrix that
illuminates her artistic formation and practice.
23. See Isaac Julien, Confessions of a Snow Queen: Notes on the Making of The
484 Notes to Pages 147158
Attendant, in Critically Queer, ed. Isaac Julien and Jon Savage=Critical Quarterly
36.1 (Spring 1994): 120126. My interpretation of the film is much indebted to the
excellent study by Christina Sharpe, Isaac Juliens The Attendant and the Sado-
masochism of Everyday Black Life, Monstrous Intimacies, 111152, 212214.
24. One reveler [in the annual Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras Parade] dressed
as Osama bin Laden led a group of dancing Binlettes, who sported pink se-
quins and improvised miniburkas, which only covered the head. Osamas right-
hand man, who identified himself as Greenie, said the bearded leader was here
to terrorize the intolerant. Its about bringing back the gayness for Osama: Ex-
press the flesh! Greenie said. Hes been in a cave for a long time. Bill Clinton
couldnt do it, George Bush couldnt do it, Barack Obama doesnt want to do it
... but hes come out today for the Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras here in Syd-
ney. Quoted from an unsigned article, Bin Laden Parodied in Sydney Gay
Mardi Gras, Japan Times, March1, 2010,3.
1. Justin Ocean, Viva la Diva! The Out Traveler (Spring 2008): 26.
2. David Denby, Escape Artist: The Case for Joan Crawford, New Yorker, January
3, 2011, 6569 (quotation on p.65).
3. Craig G. Harris, Hope against Hope, in Brother to Brother: New Writings by
Black Gay Men, ed. Essex Hemphill (Boston: Alyson, 1991), 148154 (quotation on
pp.148149).
4. See, for example, www.commonplacebook.com/jokes/gay_jokes/100_best
_things.shtm (accessed October20, 2008).
5. This combination of glamour and abjection may recall the similar combina-
tion of strength and suffering that Richard Dyer identified as a source of Judy
Garlands gay appeal; see Dyer, Judy Garland and Gay Men, Heavenly Bodies:
Film Stars and Society (New York: St. Martins, 1986), 141194, esp.149.
6. The distinguished gay critic, novelist, and cultural historian Ethan Mordden
goes out of his way to mention this line and to highlight its particularly horrify-
ing violence. See Ethan Mordden, Movie Star: ALook at the Women Who Made
Hollywood (New York: St. Martins, 1983), 88.
7. One exception is Sam Staggs, who in his dazzling book-length commentary on
All about Eve, makes an effort to explain its gay appeal; see Sam Staggs, All about
All about Eve: The Complete Behind-the-Scenes Story of the Bitchiest Film Ever Made
(New York: St. Martins Griffin, 2001; first publ. 2000), 241246, though the entire
book can be taken as an effort at explanation. See also Sam Staggs, Close-Up on
Sunset Boulevard: Billy Wilder, Norma Desmond, and the Dark Hollywood Dream
(New York: St. Martins, 2002). Another exception, and a most distinguished
one, is Richard Dyer, Judy Garland and Gay Men, as well as Dyer, The Culture
of Queers (London: Routledge, 2002). And see Brett Farmer, Spectacular Passions:
Cinema, Fantasy, Gay Male Spectatorships (Durham,NC: Duke University Press,
Notes to Pages 158179 485
2000); Farmer deserves a lot of credit for taking on this topic and for giving it his
best shot, but he is inevitably hampered by his psychoanalytic method, which
leads him to substitute theoretical commonplaces and deductive applications of
Lacanian dogma for what should have been detailed, original readings of the
films he analyzes.
8. Mordden, Movie Star, 84.
9. Christina Crawford, Mommie Dearest: A True Story (New York: William Morrow,
1978).
10. Adam H. Graham, Matthew Link, and Benjamin Ryan, The Best Gay-Owned
Spas in the U.S., The Out Traveler (Spring 2008): 2223 (quotation on p.22).
11. The first of Eppersons shows was reviewed by Ben Brantley in the New York
Times on February10, 1998; the second, by Charles Isherwood in the New York
Times on May7, 2005. See John M. Clum, Something for the Boys: Musical Theater
and Gay Culture (New York: Palgrave/St. Martins, 2001), 138139.
12. I have consulted the Amazon website a number of times, most recently on Sep-
tember23, 2008.
13. Compare Esther Newton, Mother Camp: Female Impersonators in America, 2nd ed.
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1979; first publ. 1972), 56: Camp style
represents all that is most unique in the homosexual subculture. For some at-
tempts at a systematic, pragmatic account of camp style and its relation to
subculture, see Keith Harvey, Describing Camp Talk: Language/Pragmat-
ics/Politics, Language and Literature 9.3 (2000): 240260; also, Harvey, Camp
Talk and Citationality: A Queer Take on Authentic and Represented Utter-
ance, Journal of Pragmatics 34 (2002): 11451165; and Ross Chambers, Isnt
There a Poem about This, Mr. de Mille? On Quotation, Camp and Colonial
Distancing, Australian Literary Studies 23.4 (October 2008): 377391. Chambers
defines camp as a genre-quoting genre of a type that often offers convenient
rallying points for affiliations of an unofficial, non-national, non-familial, non-
state-sanctioned kind, such as define friendship and communitarian groups
(p.381). That is why, in Chamberss view, camp is not a cultural practice, prop-
erly speaking, but a subcultural one: it has to be understood in a secondary rela-
tion to the existing genres it cites.
14. With this example, we say good-bye for the moment to Joan Crawford, without
having completed the close reading of the scenes of mother-daughter conflict
in Mildred Pierce and Mommie Dearest with which we began. But this detour,
though necessary, is only temporary: well return to those scenes in Part Four,
when well be in a better position to understand their gay male appeal.
15. The tradition began not on July4, in fact, but on July12, 1976date of the first
Invasion of the Pines by lesbians and gay men, wearing drag, from the neigh-
boring community of Cherry Grove. According to local legend, that colorful
eruption aimed to protest the refusal by the owner of the Botel at the Pines to
serve a popular Italian American drag queen from Cherry Grove. For the his-
torical background, see Esther Newton, Cherry Grove, Fire Island: Sixty Years in
486 Notes to Pages 180186
Americas First Gay and Lesbian Town (Boston: Beacon Press, 1993), 268271, 344
346. The rest of my information about the Italian widows also comes from Es-
ther Newton, specifically from a lecture and slide show entitled, Dick(less)
Tracy and the Homecoming Queen: Lesbian Power and Representation in Gay
Male Cherry Grove, delivered on February7, 2000, at the University of Michi-
gan in Ann Arbor. An extended version of that talk, which unfortunately does
not include the slides showing the Italian widows, has been published in Esther
Newton, Margaret Mead Made Me Gay: Personal Essays, Public Ideas (Durham,NC:
Duke University Press, 2000), 6389, 270276.
16. Esther Newton, personal communication, February4, 2009.
17. Newton, Mother Camp, 111. Newton adds: By accepting his homosexua lity and
flaunting it, the camp undercuts all homosexuals who wont accept the stigma-
tized identity. Compare Edmund White, who in The Gay Philosopher (1969)
speaks of the famous mordant gay humor, which always attempts to cancel
the sting of any jibe by making it funny; White, The Burning Library: Essays, ed.
David Bergman (New York: Knopf, 1994), 319 (quotation on p.8).
18. Those needing to refresh their memories of AIDS discourse in the 1980s may
consult Douglas Crimp, ed., AIDS: Cultural Analysis/Cultural Activism=October
43 (Winter 1987).
19. For the definitive study of gay mens combined social empowerment and dis-
empowerment and its consequences for gay male subjectivity and culture, see
Earl Jackson, Jr., Strategies of Deviance: Studies in Gay Male Representation (Bloom-
ington: Indiana University Press, 1995).
20. This analysis of the meaning of the Italian widows drag is not intended to ob-
scure the reality of male privilege or to deny the power imbalances between gay
men and lesbians in the society of Cherry Grove and the Pines on Fire Island;
for the details, see Newton, Dick(less) Tracy. Those material realities underlie
the drag performance and generate its conditions of possibility, but they do not
constitute or determine its meaning, which is the interpretive point at issue
here.
1. See Esther Newton, Mother Camp: Female Impersonators in America, 2nd ed. (Chi-
cago: University of Chicago Press, 1979; first publ. 1972), 109: Camp humor is a
system of laughing at ones incongruous position instead of crying. ... When
the camp cannot laugh, he dissolves into a maudlin bundle of self-pity.
2. Ibid., 109.
3. I follow here the brilliant observations in Scott Alan Rayter, He Who Laughs
Last: Comic Representations of AIDS (Ph.D. diss., University of Toronto,
2002), 79. Rayter argues that AIDS humor contradicts Bergsons eloquent and
influential description of comedy.
Notes to Pages 189193 487
together qualities that are elsewhere felt as antithetical: theatricality and authen-
ticity (p.154).
27. Sontag, On Style, 18, makes a version of this point by saying, Our manner of
appearing is our manner of being. The mask is the face. The problem with this
admittedly striking claim is that its contrasting terms are dichotomous from the
start: Sontags statement is not so much a description of social life as a deliber-
ate paradox. It depends on a play of antitheses which Sontag treats as opposites,
thereby effectively impeding the possibility of bringing them together. (Com-
pare Dyers observation in the previous note about the way that the gay sensi-
bility holds together qualities that are elsewhere felt as antithetical.) Sontags
dichotomy is misleading in this context for the very reason that it takes the dif-
ference between being and appearing to be simply antithetical and thus to be
more polarized than it actually is. After all, if in fact a mask really is also a face,
then it is no longer just a mask, and our manner of being is not exactly the same
as our manner of appearing: our manner of being is rather a manner of consti-
tuting our identity by performing it.
It is necessary to rearticulate the issue in these revised terms precisely in order
to bridge the polarity between being and appearing, which Sontag wants to do
but cannot do because she overstates the differences between them, turning
them into metaphysical oppositions. Sontags paradox consequently makes it
more difficult to understand how being and appearing could actually turn out to
coincide in the concrete practices of social life.
28. Qualifying her claim that camp is anti-serious, Sontag says, More precisely,
Camp involves a new, more complex relation to the serious. One can be seri-
ous about the frivolous, frivolous about the serious (Notes on Camp, 288).
Sontag even allows at one point that there is seriousness in camp (287). Com-
pare Patrick Paul Garlinger, All about Agrado; or, The Sincerity of Camp in
Almodvars Todo sobre mi madre, Journal of Spanish Cultural Studies 5.1 (Febru-
ary 2004): 97111. Garlinger argues that camp is in fact compatible with sincer-
ity.
29. Dyer, Culture of Queers, 49, goes on to say: Particularly in the past, the fact that
gay men could so sharply and brightly make fun of themselves meant that the
real awfulness of their situation could be kept at baythey need not take things
too seriously, need not let it get them down.
30. Dyer, Judy Garland and Gay Men, 180, speaks of the knife edge between
camp and hurt, a key register of gay culture.
1. For the latest and most distinguished contribution to this debate, see Ross
Chambers, Isnt There a Poem about This, Mr. de Mille? On Quotation,
Notes to Pages 201205 491
Camp and Colonial Distancing, Australian Literary Studies 23.4 (October 2008):
377391. Chambers describes camp as queer but not necessarily gaya perfor-
mance genre which involves a collective interaction of performance and audi-
ence, somewhat akin to acting, and offers a rallying point for affiliations of
an unofficial, non-national, non-familial, non-state-sanctioned kind (381); under-
stood in this way, camp becomes an appropriate vehicle for expressing various
sorts of cultural and political dissidence beyond the merely (homo)sexual.
2. Richard Dyer, The Culture of Queers (London: Routledge, 2002), 49. Dyers essay
was originally published in the Body Politic 36 (September 1977).
3. For an excellent survey of critical writing on camp, see Fabio Cleto, ed., Camp:
Queer Aesthetics and the Performing Subject: AReader (Ann Arbor: University of
Michigan Press, 1999). For two very different analyses that indicate the range of
possible approaches to camp, see Kim Michasiw, Camp, Masculinity, Masquer-
ade, differences 6.23 (1994): 146173; and Chambers, Isnt There a Poem about
This?
4. Esther Newton, Mother Camp: Female Impersonators in America, 2nd ed. (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1979; first publ. 1972), 56 (emphasis added).
5. Ibid., 111.
6. Matt Crowley, The Boys in the Band (1968), in Stanley Richards, ed., Best Plays of
the Sixties (Garden City,NY: Doubleday, 1970), 801900, esp.844845.
7. Compare Esther Newton, Mother Camp, 107: Masculine-feminine juxtapositions
are, of course, the most characteristic kind of camp; and Dyer, Culture of
Queers, 61: camp does undercut sex roles.
8. Dyer, Culture of Queers, 49.
9. In traditional gay male culture, trade designates the straight-identified man
who, although willing to have sex with gay men (usually in the inserter role),
refuses gay identifications and give-away behaviors such as kissing; Thomas
Waugh, Hard to Imagine: Gay Male Eroticism in Photography and Film, from Their
Beginnings to Stonewall (New York: Columbia University Press, 1996), 423, n.27.
For a more detailed semantic and historical analysis of the term trade, see
Gayle S. Rubin, The Valley of the Kings: Leathermen in San Francisco, 1960
1990 (Ph.D. diss., University of Michigan, 1994), 8189. For the study of trade
in a particular context, see Barry Reay, New York Hustlers: Masculinity and Sex in
Modern America (Manchester,UK: Manchester University Press, 2010).
10. See, for example, Esther Newtons 1978 preface to the second edition of Mother
Camp, esp. p.xiii, where she notes that on the streets of Greenwich Village the
limp wrists and eye makeup have been replaced by an interchangeable pa-
rade of young men with cropped hair, leather jackets, and well-trimmed mous-
taches ... a proliferation of ersatz cowboys, phony lumberjacks, and ... imita-
tion Hells Angels, adding, This is playing with shadows, not substance. For a
similar sentiment, see Ethan Mordden, Interview with the Drag Queen, Ive a
492 Notes to Pages 206212
Feeling Were Not in Kansas Anymore (New York: New American Library, 1987),
19. See, further, Richard Dyer, Dressing the Part, Culture of Queers, 6369, on
the commerce between straight and gay male styles.
11. See John M. Clum, Something for the Boys: Musical Theater and Gay Culture (New
York: Palgrave/St. Martins, 2001), 89.
12. As one gay man told Martin Levine, Familiarity for me kills desire. Knowing
someone is a turn-off because their personality ruins the fantasy I have of
them. Martin P. Levine, Gay Macho: The Life and Death of the Homosexual Clone,
ed. Michael S. Kimmel (New York: New York University Press, 1998), 93; quoted
in Jeffrey Escoffier, Bigger Than Life: The History of Gay Porn Cinema, from Beefcake
to Hardcore (Philadelphia: Running Press, 2009), 138.
13. I am paraphrasing a brilliant passage from Sartres commentary on Genet (no
translation can do it justice): La mchancet bien connue des pdrastes vient
en partie de ce quils disposent simultanment de deux systmes de rfrences:
lenchantement sexuel les transporte dans un climat platonicien; chacun des
hommes quils recherchent est lincarnation passagre dune Ide; cest le Marin,
le Parachutiste quils veulent saisir travers le petit gars qui se prte leur dsir.
Mais, ds que leur dsir est combl, ils rentrent en eux-mmes et considrent
leurs amants merveilleux sous langle dun nominalisme cynique. Finies les es-
sences, adieu les archtypes: restent des individus quelconques et interchange-
ables. Mais je ne savais pas, me dit un jour un pdraste en me dsignant une
petite frappe de Montparnasse, que ce jeune homme tait un assassin! Et le
lendemain: Adrien? Une lope sans intrt. Jean-Paul Sartre, Saint Genet: Com-
dien et martyr (Paris: Gallimard, 1952), 146147; compare 349ff.
14. Tony Kushner, Notes toward a Theater of the Fabulous, in Staging Gay Lives,
ed. John Clum (Boulder,CO: Westview, 1996), vii, as quoted and cited by Clum,
Something for the Boys,5.
15. Summarizing Kushners career, a New York Times critic recently remarked, Per-
haps alone among American playwrights of his generation [Kushner] uses his
tory as a character, letting its power fall on his protagonists as they stumble
through their own and others lives. Andrea Stevens, Cosmos of Kushner,
Spinning Forward, New York Times, June10, 2009.
16. Compare the discussion in Scott Herring, Queering the Underworld: Slumming,
Literature, and the Undoing of Lesbian and Gay History (Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 2007), 6971. Herring goes on to argue, however, that Cathers
story ultimately refuse[s] sexual identifications of any kind (74)a reading
which owes more to Leo Bersanis theory of self-loss than it does to Cather.
Jane Nardin, by contrast, probably goes too far in the direction of literalness in
her identification of Paul as a fairy or invert: see Nardin, Homosexual Identi-
ties in Willa Cathers Pauls Case, Literature and History, 3rd series, 17.2 (Au-
tumn 2008): 3146.
17. Willa Cather, Pauls Case: AStudy in Temperament, Coming, Aphrodite! and
Other Stories, ed. Margaret Anne OConnor (New York: Penguin, 1999), 116136
Notes to Pages 212214 493
(quotation on p.116). All further page references to this work will be incorpo-
rated in the text. As to Pauls carnation, it is worth remarking that Cather
hadreviewed Robert Hichenss thinly disguised satire of Oscar Wilde entitled
The Green Carnation when that book appeared in 1894; see Claude J. Summers,
A Losing Game in the End: Aestheticism and Homosexuality in Cathers
Pauls Case, Modern Fiction Studies 36.1 (Spring 1990): 103119; rpt. with slight
alterations as A Losing Game in the End: Willa Cathers Pauls Case, in
Summers, Gay Fictions: Wilde to Stonewall, Studies in a Male Homosexual Literary
Tradition (New York: Continuum, 1990), 6277, 224226.
18. Michel Foucault, The History of Sexuality, vol.1: An Introduction, trans. Robert
Hurley (New York: Vintage, 1980), 43 (translation modified); for the original
text, see Michel Foucault, La Volont de savoir, Histoire de la sexualit,1 (Paris:
Gallimard, 1984; first publ. 1976), 59.
19. Susan Sontag, Notes on Camp in Sontag, Against Interpretation, and Other Es-
says (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1966; first publ. 1964), 275.
20. Thanks to Brandon Clements for this hyperbolic but justified remark. For cor-
roboration, see Larry Rubin, The Homosexual Motif in Willa Cathers Pauls
Case, Studies in Short Fiction 12.2 (Spring 1975): 127131, apparently the first criti-
cal article to deal with this obvious but hitherto unmentioned fact. See also
Summers, Losing Game; and Nardin, Homosexual Identities.
21. What, then, are the clues with which Cather has been so lavish? These are so
numerous that one despairs of setting them all down in a short paper (Rubin,
Homosexual Motif, 129). For an opposing view, see Loretta Wasserman, Is
Cathers Paul a Case? Modern Fiction Studies 36.1 (Spring 1990): 121129. Wasser-
man reads Cathers story without reference to homosexua lity, though her pow-
erful interpretation does not invalidate Nardins historical arguments for seeing
an implicit homosexuality in Cathers portrait of Paul (Nardin, Homosexual
Identities).
22. D.A. Miller, Place for Us: Essay on the Broadway Musical (Cambridge,MA: Har-
vard University Press, 1998), 23; the entire passage was quoted in Chapter 5.
SeeHeather Love, Feeling Backward: Loss and the Politics of Queer History (Cam-
bridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2007), 180, n. 21, who rightly insists,
against Scott Herrings interpretation of Pauls Case in Queering the Under-
ground, on Pauls intense loneliness and isolation. Rubin, Homosexual Mo-
tif, 130, takes the Yale boy to be a foil to Paul . . . a red-blooded American
youth who is in town over the weekend to relieve his sexual drive and whose
incompatibility with Paul stems from not sharing Pauls sexual and aesthetic in-
terests; that is certainly a plausible reading, but it need not rule out other ones.
Compare, for example, the following passage by Denton Welch, an English nov-
elist and painter of the 1940s, who noted in his journal, apropos of a likable sol-
dier who had offered to help him repair a punctured bicycle tire, I can never be
true friends with anyone except distant womenfar away. For I wish for com
munion with the inarticulate and can only fray and fritter with the quick. I
494 Notes to Pages 214218
would tinsel, tinsel all the day if I were so placed. Yet I love myself and my com-
pany so much that I would not even ask the soldier to come in for fear of his
becoming a regular visitor. I even feel that people pollute my house who come
into it; Michael De-la-Noy, ed., The Journals of Denton Welch (New York: Dut-
ton, 1986), 11.
23. Neil Bartlett, Who Was That Man? A Present for Mr Oscar Wilde (London: Ser-
pents Tail, 1988), 173.
24. See Summers, Losing Game; also, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Willa Cather and
Others, Tendencies (Durham,NC: Duke University Press, 1993), 167176. Her-
ring (Queering the Underground, 81) draws an interesting parallel between Paul
and his namesake, the French poet Paul Verlaine, a favorite of Cathers and an-
other sexual outlaw.
25. Herman Melville, Billy Budd, Sailor (An Inside Narrative), Billy Budd, Sailor,
and Other Stories (New York: Penguin, 1986), 287385 (quotation on p.362). All
further page references to this work will be included in the text. This edition of
Melvilles story reproduces the Reading Text established by Harrison Hayford
and Merton M. Sealts, Jr., and published by the University of Chicago Press in
1962.
26. On his blog, in an entry dated October23, 2008, the director Chris Ward justi
fied his gambit as follows: It is true that To the Last Man is a very violent movie.
It is a Western epic, as true to a Hollywood blockbuster as gay porn will ever be.
Ben Leon, Tony Dimarco, and I decided that we wanted to make a real Western
movienot some cheesy porno rip-off as has been made in the past. We shot
on location in Arizona, used real horses, real guns, hired some real cowboys to
be in the castin short, we spent lots of time, money, and energy to be as au-
thentic as possible. In this spirit we made the decision to stay true to the West-
ern genrewhich requires violence. The Old West was a very violent place
on the ranch where the movie was filmed, there was a graveyard with a
memorial to everyone who had died on the property. The monument listed
how each person was killed: one man was killed by Indians up at the river; an-
other person had been shot in a drunken fight at a saloon; still another died of
injuries from a fist fight; the best one was the guy who died in a horse wreck.
No one in the graveyard lived past about 40 years of age. Today Hollywood
films are rife with violenceit is part of modern entertainment. To the Last Man
looks to the examples of the Coen Brothers and Tarantino. Its not a porn movie
from the 1990s nor is it Little Miss Sunshine. Its a film for the 21st century and it
reflects the entertainment values of 2008. See www. chriswardpornblog.com/
(accessed November13, 2008).
27. Newton, Mother Camp, 105.
28. On this point, and on Foucaults famous statement that power is everywhere,
see David M. Halperin, Saint Foucault: Towards a Gay Hagiography (New York:
Oxford University Press, 1995), 2930.
29. That is precisely Leo Bersanis objection to camp; see Leo Bersani, Is the
Notes to Pages 219228 495
1. Sigmund Freud, Family Romances (1909; first publ. 1908), trans. James Stra-
chey, in The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud,
vol. 9: 19061908, ed. James Strachey (London: Hogarth Press, 1959), 235242.
For a wonderful exploration of this topic with reference to gay men, art collect-
ing, and William Beckford in particular, see Whitney Davis, Queer Family Ro-
mance in Collecting Visual Culture, in Queer Bonds, ed. Damon Young and
Joshua J. Weiner=GLQ: AJournal of Lesbian and Gay Studies 17.23 (2011): 309
329.
2. Willa Cather, Pauls Case: AStudy in Temperament, Coming, Aphrodite! and
Other Stories, ed. Margaret Anne OConnor (New York: Penguin, 1999), 116136
(quotation on pp.131132; italics added). All further page references to this work
will be incorporated in the text.
3. See Jean-Paul Sartre, Saint Genet: Comdien et martyr (Paris: Gallimard, 1952),
398399; David Sedaris, Chipped Beef, in Sedaris, Naked (Boston: Little, Brown,
1997), 16. The sentiment is not unique to gay men; for a lesbian equivalent, see
Laurie Essig, Harry Potters Secret, New York Blade News, January7, 2000, 13:
Certainly many of us felt the same rush of excitement when we came out as
Harry Potter did when he figured out that he was not the same as his ridicu-
lously ordinary family.
4. Compare the gay English writer Denton Welch, who, in his journal entry for
August22, 1942, recalls in similar terms his feelings as an eleven-year-old school-
boy: And now I see myself as I was then, running up to the cold dormitory,
hiding myself in the bedclothes, imagining my cubicle transformed with pre-
cious stones and woods. Praying, always praying for freedom and loveliness.
See Michael De-la-Noy, ed., The Journals of Denton Welch (New York: Dutton,
1986),6.
5. Denton Welch expresses astonishment at a visitor to his house who seemed
surprised that anyone should love things enough to seek them out and prize
them ( Journals of Denton Welch, 200).
6. Neil Bartlett, Who Was That Man? A Present for Mr Oscar Wilde (London: Ser-
496 Notes to Pages 228233
pents Tail, 1988), 181. All further page references to this work will be incorpo-
rated in the text. Unless otherwise noted, all italics that appear in quoted ex-
tracts from this book are Bartletts own.
7. George Haggerty, Desire and Mourning: The Ideology of the Elegy, in Ideol-
ogy and Form in Eighteenth-Century Literature, ed. David H. Richter (Lubbock:
Texas University Press, 1999), 203; quoted by Heather Love, Compulsory Hap-
piness and Queer Existence, New Formations 63 (Spring 2008): 5264 (quotation
on p.52).
8. For additional arguments in favor of this distinction, see Susan Sontag, On
Style, in Sontag, Against Interpretation, and Other Essays (New York: Farrar,
Straus and Giroux, 1966; first publ. 1964), 1536, esp.2627.
9. For a brilliant demonstration, see Dennis Cooper, Square One, in Cooper,
Wrong: Stories (New York: Grove Weidenfeld, 1992), 8192. For an example, see
an undated entry in Denton Welchs journal for the year 1943 ( Journals of Denton
Welch, 6364):
Today I have been to Ightham Moat. It was less spoilt than I remember it. I
wanted so much to own it and undo all that was done in 1889. The drawing-
room could be lovely, with its Chinese wallpaper, if the two blocked windows
could be opened, if some of the garish paint could be taken off the Jacobean
mantelpiece, if the exposed beams could be covered in again and if the appall-
ing little 1889 fireplace could be swept away. How lovely to have elegant nostal-
gic tea out of a Georgian silver teapot and urn-shaped milk jug in such a room
properly restored and furnished!
The great hall too needs stripping of its dreary panelling and the old medi-
eval windows opened to air again. Then the courtyard, squalid with weeds and
a huge dog kennel, large and elaborate as a Gothic chapel. What a waste!
I biked out on to the main road where I rode a little way with a dark, wide-
shouldered, football-bottomed youth. I could see where his pants stopped, the
flannel of his trousers were so thin and meagre. He took off his coat, rolled up
his sleeves, bent only on getting to the top of the hill. Dark, sulky, good-looking.
I guessed that he was probably a little simple minded. Sulky looking people
nearly always are.
10. On the differences between the novel and the film, see the informative and as-
tute reading by Robert J. Corber, Joan Crawfords Padded Shoulders: Female
Masculinity in Mildred Pierce, Camera Obscura 62=21.2 (2006): 131; expanded
inCorber, Cold War Femme: Lesbianism, National Identity, and Hollywood Cinema
(Durham,NC: Duke University Press, 2011), 97126, 203206. On the production
history of the film, see Albert J. LaValleys introduction to the published screen-
play, Mildred Pierce (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1980), 953, esp.21
30, as reported and cited by Linda Williams, Feminist Film Theory: Mildred
Pierce and the Second World War, in Female Spectators: Looking at Film and Tele-
vision, ed. E.Deidre Pribram (New York: Routledge, 1988), 1230, esp.13.
Notes to Pages 233236 497
11. Corber, Crawfords Padded Shoulders, 104, citing James C. Robertson, The
Casablanca Man: The Cinema of Michael Curtiz (New York: Routledge, 1993), 91.
Williams, Feminist Film Theory, which provides the exact date of the films
release (p.14), also usefully complicates and qualifies the standard reading of the
film as an allegory of womens removal from the workplace to the home in the
aftermath of the war (esp.2128).
12. Susan Sontag, Notes on Camp (first publ. 1964), in Sontag, Against Interpreta-
tion, 275292 (quotation on p.277); also, Sontag, On Style, 2728.
13. Perhaps that is what explains, at least in part, the antiquarianism of gay male
culture, or of a certain version of it: I am not concerned with dead stones or
lifeless furniture, declared Charlotte von Mahlsdorf, the German collector and
author of the celebrated transgender memoir, Ich bin meine eigene Frau: They
are embodiments that mirror the history of the men who built them, who lived
in them. See Charlotte von Mahlsdorf, IAm My Own Woman: The Outlaw Life of
Charlotte von Mahlsdorf, Berlins Most Distinguished Transvestite, trans. Jean Hol-
lander (Pittsburgh: Cleis Press, 1995), 124125, as quoted by Will Fellows, APas-
sion to Preserve: Gay Men as Keepers of Culture (Madison: University of Wisconsin
Press, 2004), 11. The memoir originally appeared in the same year, 1992, as a re-
markable documentary film of the same title by the pioneering gay German di-
rector Rosa von Praunheim.
Similarly, in his journal Denton Welch remarks, Yet how I loathe nature lov-
ers! My thoughts are never on nature though I go out to roam for hours in the
fields every day. My thoughts always go to history, to what has happened cen-
tury after century on each spot of earth ( Journals of Denton Welch,5). Later,
Welch records a sense of wonder at nature, but he notes that this feeling, so
bandied about, seldom visits me in a form that is not mingled with history
(206).
14. Sontag, Notes on Camp, 277. See also Sartre, Saint Genet, 422.
15. It may be worth quoting Sontag at length on this point. The passage of time,
she says, can bring out the element of enjoyable and outlandish fantasy in a
cultural object: Time may enhance what seems simply dogged or lacking in
fantasy now because we are too close to it, because it resembles too closely our
own everyday realities, the fantastic nature of which we dont perceive. We are
better able to enjoy a fantasy as fantasy when it is not our own. This is why so
many of the objects prized by Camp taste are old-fashioned, out-of-date, d-
mod. Its not a love of the old as such. Its simply that the process of aging or
deterioration provides the necessary detachmentor arouses a necessary sym-
pathy. When the theme is important, and contemporary, the failure of a work
of art can make us indignant. Time can change that (Notes on Camp, 285).
Mildred Pierce is surely more enjoyable now than it was in 1945. For a lengthy set
of reflections on gay mens loving relation to outdated artifacts, see Fellows,
Passion to Preserve.
498 Notes to Pages 236239
1. D.A. Miller, Place for Us: Essay on the Broadway Musical (Cambridge,MA: Har-
vard University Press, 1998), 71. All further page references to this work will be
incorporated in the text. John M. Clum, Something for the Boys: Musical Theater
and Gay Culture (New York: Palgrave/St. Martins, 2001),8, makes the point suc-
cinctly: The musical doesnt give us much to identify with among the men on-
stage.
2. See Steven Cohan, Feminizing the Song-and-Dance Man: Fred Astaire and
the Spectacle of Masculinity in the Hollywood Musical, in Screening the Male:
Exploring Masculinities in Hollywood Cinema, ed. Steven Cohan and Ina Rae Hark
(London: Routledge, 1993), 4669. See also a later chapter by Cohan, Dancing
with Balls: Sissies, Sailors, and the Camp Masculinity of Gene Kelly, in Cohan,
Incongruous Entertainment: Camp, Cultural Value, and the MGM Musical (Dur-
ham, NC: Duke University Press, 2005), 149199, 348349; and Jeffrey Masten,
Behind Gene Kelly, unpublished manuscript.
3. Clum, Something for the Boys,7.
4. John Berger, Sven Blomberg, Chris Fox, Michael Dibb, and Richard Hollis, Ways
of Seeing (London: British Broadcasting Corporation and Penguin Books, 1972),
47 (italics in original). The whole passage (pp.4547) is worth quoting in full, but
a few excerpts provide a sense of the basic line of reasoning: Amans presence
is dependent upon the promise of power which he embodies ... a womans
presence expresses her own attitude to herself. ... If a woman throws a glass on
500 Notes to Pages 244246
the floor, this is an example of how she treats her own emotion of anger and so
of how she would wish it to be treated by others. If a man does the same, his
action is only read as an expression of his anger. ... One might simplify this by
saying: men act and women appear. Men look at women. Women watch them-
selves being looked at. ... The surveyor of woman in herself is male: the sur-
veyed, female. Thus she turns herself into an objectand most particularly an
object of vision: a sight. This represents an elaboration, for the art historian, of
the final sections of Freuds essay on narcissism. Paul Morrison, in turn, has
taken Bergers insight in a queer direction; see Muscles, in Morrison, The Ex-
planation for Everything: Essays on Sexual Subjectivity (New York: New York Uni-
versity Press, 2001), 113139, 187191. I have been deeply influenced by his formu-
lations.
5. That is why sports provide a cover and an alibi for men who would otherwise
risk emasculation by dancing in front of an audience; see Maura Keefe, Men
Dancing Athletically, Gay and Lesbian Review Worldwide 13.6 (Nov.Dec. 2006):
1516.
6. According to the Womens Sports Foundation, Since the passage of TitleIX,
increases in athletic participation for both males and females have occurred at
both the high school and collegiate levels. In 1970, only 1 out of every 27 high
school girls played varsity sports. Today, that figure is one in 2.5. Female high
school participation increased from 294,015 in 1971 to 2,472,043 in 1997. College
participation has more than tripled, from 31,000 to 128,208. Both male and fe-
male athletic particip ation made steep increases immediately after the pas-
sageof TitleIX at the high school level. Mens and womens rises in particip a
tion have also followed a similar pattern at the collegiate levels. However, male
athletes still receive twice the participation opportunities afforded female ath-
letes. See Womens Sports Foundation, www.womenssportsfoundation.org/
Content/Articles/Issues/Title-IX/T/Title-IX-Q--A.aspx (accessed June 29,
2010).
7. See Keefe, Men Dancing Athletically. See, for additional details, Kevin Kopel-
son, The Queer Afterlife of Vaslav Nijinsky (Stanford, CA: Stanford University
Press, 1997), 181185.
8. See www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/d/dennis_rodman.html (accessed
February5, 2009).
9. On David Beckham, see the now-classic analyses by Mark Simpson, Meet the
Metrosexual (Salon.com, July 22, 2002); Beckham, the Virus (Salon.com,
June28, 2003); and Sporno (Out Magazine, May 2006, and the V&A Fashion
and Sport catalogue 2008). All are now collected in Simpson, Metrosexy: A21st-
Century Self-Love Story (Marksimpsonist Publications, 2011), 2029, 8489. See,
generally, David Coad, The Metrosexual: Gender, Sexuality, and Sport (Albany:
SUNY Press, 2008).
10. I owe this insight to KT Lowe, whom I wish to thank for giving me this entire
line of reasoning.
Notes to Pages 251260 501
11. Compare the brilliant feminist analysis by Rosemary Pringle, Bitching: Rela-
tions between Women in the Office, Secretaries Talk: Sexuality, Power and Work
(Sydney: Allen and Unwin, 1988), 231249.
12. I quote the evocative phrase of Louise Glck, the final words of her poem Mes-
sengers, in Glck, The House on Marshland (New York: Ecco Press, 1975), 10.
13. The incident is recounted in a letter by Edmund White, written two weeks after
the event and quoted in Jonathan Ned Katz, The Stonewall Rebellion: Edmund
White Witnesses the Revolution, The Advocate 527 ( June20, 1989): 40. Lee Edel-
man cites this document in his essay The Mirror and the Tank: AIDS, Subjec-
tivity, and the Rhetoric of Activism, in Edelman, Homographesis: Essays in Gay
Literary and Cultural Theory (New York: Routledge, 1994), 93117, 256260; he of-
fers the following commentary: The drag queen striking the cop with her
purse to defend the dignity of her narcissism before the punitive gaze of the law
remains a potent image of the unexpected ways in which activism can find
embodiment when the dominant notions of subjectivity are challenged rather
than appropriated (113).
For more details, see David Carter, Stonewall: The Riots That Sparked the Gay
Revolution (New York: St. Martins, 2004), 148: The first hostile act outside the
club occurred when a police officer shoved one of the transvestites, who turned
and smacked the officer over the head with her purse. The cop clubbed her, and
a wave of anger passed through the crowd, which immediately showered the
police with boos and catcalls, followed by a cry to turn the paddy wagon over
(see also 261). Compare Lucian K. TruscottIV, The Real Mob at Stonewall,
New York Times, June25, 2009: The young arrestees paused at the back of the
waiting paddy wagon and struck vampy poses, smiling and waving to the
crowd.
14. In fact, Joan Crawfords gender coding is subtle and subject to both variation
and manipulation. For a very useful and careful analysis, see Robert J. Corber,
Joan Crawfords Padded Shoulders: Female Masculinity in Mildred Pierce, in
Corber, Cold War Femme: Lesbianism, National Identity, and Hollywood Cinema
(Durham,NC: Duke University Press, 2011), 97126, 203206.
15. See Judith Halberstam, Female Masculinity (Durham,NC: Duke University Press,
1998).
16. Andrew Sullivan, The End of Gay Culture, New Republic (October24, 2005),
available online at www.tnr.com/politics/story.html?id=cac6ca08-7df8-4cdd-93
cc-1d20cd8b7a70 (accessed July13, 2009).
1. Sam Staggs, All about All about Eve: The Complete Behind-the-Scenes Story of the
Bitchiest Film Ever Made (New York: St. Martins Griffin, 2001; first publ. 2000),
241, understands the gay male response to All about Eve in a similar way: But
more than anything, [the movie] is about women in conflict, and gays cheer for
502 Notes to Pages 263274
this theme (cf. Scarlett versus Melanie, Baby Jane versus Blanche, Veda and Mil-
dred Pierce, Mommie Dearest and Christina). He does not expand further on
this observation and leaves us to wonder about how to explain the general phe-
nomenon.
2. Susan Sontag, Notes on Camp, Against Interpretation, and Other Essays (New
York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1966; first publ. 1964), 283. Also 282: It seems
unlikely that much of the traditional opera repertoire could be such satisfying
Camp if the melodramatic absurdities of most opera plots had not been taken
seriously by their composers.
3. See, generally, Pamela Robertson, Guilty Pleasures: Feminist Camp from Mae West
to Madonna (Durham,NC: Duke University Press, 1996).
4. See the famous opening of Book 24 (lines 322) of Homers Iliad, in Richmond
Lattimores translation:
only Achilleus
wept still as he remembered his beloved companion, nor did sleep
who subdues all come over him, but he tossed from one side to the other
in longing for Patroklos, for his manhood and his great strength
and all the actions he had seen to the end with him, and the hardships
he had suffered; the wars of men; hard crossing of the big waters.
Remembering all these things he let fall the swelling tears, lying
sometimes along his side, sometimes on his back, and now again
prone on his face; then he would stand upright, and pace turning
in distraction along the beach of the sea, nor did dawn rising
escape him as she brightened across the sea and the beaches.
Then, when he had yoked running horses under the chariot
he would fasten Hektor behind the chariot, so as to drag him,
and draw him three times around the tomb of Menoitios fallen
son [Patroklos], then rest again in his shelter, and throw down the dead man
and leave him to lie sprawled on his face in the dust. But Apollo
had pity on him, though he was only a dead man, and guarded
the body from all ugliness, and hid all of it under the golden
aegis, so that it might not be torn when Achilleus dragged it.
So Achilleus in his standing fury outraged great Hektor.
5. On this point, see James M. Redfield, Nature and Culture in the Iliad: The Tragedy
of Hector (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1975), 104. Redfields reading of
the Iliad has decisively shaped my understanding of the issues.
6. The closest Broadway has gotten to the Iliad is The Golden Apple (1954), a musical-
comedy fantasia based on the Troy saga but set in the state of Washington at
the beginning of the twentieth century. It was the work of John Latouche
(book, lyrics) and Jerome Moross (music), and it won the New York Drama Crit-
ics Circle Award for Best Musical. For details see Ken Mandelbaum, Not since
Carrie: Forty Years of Broadway Musical Flops (New York: St. Martins, 1991), 341
Notes to Pages 276282 503
345. The Odyssey, however, was made into a musical of the same title, with book
and lyrics by Erich Segal, and with Yul Brynner in the starring role. After tour-
ing for a year, it was renamed Home Sweet Homer and lasted exactly one Sunday
matinee on Broadway (Mandelbaum, 3132).
Compare, generally, Sontag, Notes on Camp, 286287, which presents
camp as antagonistic to the high seriousness of great art, such as the Iliad. Camp
represents, according to Sontag, an alternate aesthetic sensibility.
7. See Paul Morrison, Noble Deeds and the Secret Singularity: Hamlet and Ph-
dre, Canadian Review of Comparative Literature/Revue Canadienne de Littra-
tureCompare 18.2 ( June and September 1991): 263288; rpt. in Reading the Re
naissance, ed. Jonathan Hart (New York: Garland, 1996), 179202. See also
Michael D. Bristol, Shakespeares America, Americas Shakespeare (London: Rout-
ledge, 1990).
8. Sontag, Notes on Camp, 283.
9. The genius of Pedro Almodvars queer cinema lies in its simultaneous belief
and disbelief in melodrama, in its passionate embrace of the form and its criti-
cal disengagement from it. Almodvar fuses melodramas emotional intensities
with its self-canceling histrionics, its seriousness with its failures. He thereby
conveys the impression of taking melodramatic plots completely literally, while
at the same time maintaining an ironic, bemused perspective on them. That
combination of headlong devotion and ironic distance, of a loving identification
with melodrama and a cool distance from it, both as an artistic form and an
emotional posture, is what Daniel Mendelsohn misses, when, in analyzing the
work of gay directors such as Almodvar and Todd Haynes, he posits two kinds
of melodrama, and contrasts camp or parodic with straight or deadly
earnest versions of it, as if they represented alternate and mutually exclusive
approaches to the genre; see Mendelsohn, The Melodramatic Moment, New
York Times Magazine, March23, 2003, 4043. For a sharp corrective, see Kathryn
Bond Stockton, Beautiful Bottom, Beautiful Shame: Where Black Meets Queer
(Durham,NC: Duke University Press, 2006), 212216; and, more generally, Ale-
jandro Herrero-Olaizolas forthcoming book on camp, melodrama, and Latin
America in Almodvars films.
10. Compare Neil Bartlett, Who Was That Man? APresent for Mr Oscar Wilde (Lon-
don: Serpents Tail, 1988), 169: a fake..., when detected, alarmingly reveals
that a fake has just as much life, as much validity as the real thinguntil de-
tected. It is then revealed as something that has no right to exist. It puts into
question authenticity. It even has the power to damage, specifically and effec-
tively, certain specific forms of authentication.
1. Ang Lees 2005 film Brokeback Mountain is often put forward as an exception to
this rule and is presented as an example of a gay tragedy. The film itself surely
504 Notes to Pages 282292
aspires to that status. But even Heather Love, who tries hard to make a plausible
case for the movie as a tragedy, blurs her own focus on questions of genre, first
by calling its tragic view of gayness ... melodramatic, and then by shifting
her preferred generic designation for the film to pastoral elegy. That indeed
seems to be a more apt category than tragedy for the film, and certainly for the
short story by Annie Proulx on which the film is based. See Heather Love,
Compulsory Happiness and Queer Existence, New Formations 63 (Spring
2008): 5264, esp. 55 and 58ff.
2. Susan Sontag, observing that camp converts the serious into the frivolous, ar-
gues that camp incarnates the victory of ... irony over tragedy and insists
that Camp and tragedy are antitheses. See Sontag, Notes on Camp, Against
Interpretation, and Other Essays (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1966; first
publ. 1964), 276, 287.
3. Neil Bartlett, Who Was That Man? A Present for Mr Oscar Wilde (London: Ser-
pents Tail, 1988), 167: On 16November 1897 he wrote: My existence is a scan-
dal. ... The characteristic name for the heroic life of things or people which
have no right to exist was invented, along with so many other features of our
lives, during the life and times of Mr Oscar Wilde. ... If you cant be authentic
(and you cant), if this doesnt feel like real life (and it doesnt), then you can be
camp.
4. For a brilliant attempt to imagine what a public, but queer, ritual of love might
look like, and how it might be founded in the existing social institutions of gay
male life, see Neil Bartlett, Ready To Catch Him Should He Fall (New York: Dut-
ton, 1991; first publ. 1990). For a survey of the actual rituals that real, non-
fictional gay people adopt to celebrate their love, compare Ellen Lewin, Recog-
nizing Ourselves: Ceremonies of Lesbian and Gay Commitment (New York: Columbia
University Press, 1998).
5. This may be one of the characteristic woes of modernity more generally; see
Richard Sennett, The Fall of Public Man (New York: Knopf, 1977).
6. Michael Warner, The Trouble with Normal: Sex, Politics, and the Ethics of Queer Life
(New York: Free Press, 1999), 100104.
7. For some testimony to this effect, see Lewin, Recognizing Ourselves, esp.191192.
8. See Charles Osborne, W.H. Auden: The Life of a Poet (New York: Harcourt Brace
Jovanovich, 1979), 273, reporting the reminiscence of Audens New York friend
John Button, published in September 1974, a year after Audens death, in the
Boston magazine Fag Rag.
9. For example, Proust says that gay mens desire would be permanently unsatis-
fiable if their money did not procure them real men, and if their imagination
did not end up having them take for real men the inverts to whom they prosti-
tute themselves (leur dsir serait jamais inassouvissable si largent ne leur
livrait de vrais hommes, et si limagination ne finissait par leur faire prendre
pour de vrais hommes les invertis qui ils se sont prostitus). Marcel Proust,
Notes to Pages 292297 505
Ala recherche du temps perdu, vol.3: Sodome et Gomorrhe and La Prisonnire, ed.
Jean-Yves Tadi, Antoine Compagnon, and Pierre-Edmond Robert, Biblio-
thque de la Pliade (Paris: Gallimard, 1988), 17.
10. Leo Bersani, Is the Rectum a Grave? in AIDS: Cultural Analysis/Cultural Activ-
ism, ed. Douglas Crimp=October 43 (Winter 1987): 197222 (quotation on
p.208).
11. Armistead Maupin, Tales of the City (New York: Harper and Row, 1978), 219. All
ellipses are in the original, except for the one after bathroom cabinet, where I
have omitted a bit of the narrative. For further details about the practice of
masculinity on the part of gay men of that time and place, see pp.7172, where
Mona, in order to console her friend Michael for breaking up with Robert the
Marine recruiter, remarks: Christ! You and your Rustic Innocent trip! Ill bet
that asshole had a closetful of lumberjack shirts, didnt he? ... Hes down at
Toad Hall [a long-extinct cruise bar in the Castro] right now, stomping around
in his blue nylon flight jacket, with a thumb hooked in his Levis and a bottle of
Acme beer in his fist.
12. This is not a piece of wisdom that is limited to gay men, though some of its ca-
nonical expressions retain a certain kinship with gay culture. On Plato, see Da-
vid M. Halperin, Loves Irony: Six Remarks on Platonic Eros, in Erotikon: Es-
says on Eros, Ancient and Modern, ed. Shadi Bartsch and Thomas Bartscherer
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005), 4858. On Shakespeare, see Ed-
ward A. Snow, Loves of Comfort and Despair: A Reading of Shakespeares
Sonnet 138, English Literary History 47.3 (Autumn 1980): 462483.
13. In his wonderful essay on gay mens relation to Judy Garland, which serves as
one of the chief inspirations for my own project, Richard Dyer has some tren-
chant and eloquent things to say about gay mens ability to combine passion
with irony: see Dyer, Judy Garland and Gay Men, Heavenly Bodies: Film Stars
and Society (New York: St. Martins, 1986), 141194, esp.154155.
14. See Douglas Crimp, Right On, Girlfriend! in Fear of a Queer Planet: Queer Poli-
tics and Social Theory, ed. Michael Warner (Minneapolis: University of Minne-
sota Press, 1993), 300320, esp. 300ff., from whom I have lifted this entire ac-
count.
15. Ibid., 313318 (quotation on p.317).
16. Lisa Maria Hogeland, Invisible Man and Invisible Women: The Sex/Race Anal-
ogy of the 1970s, Womens History Review 5.1 (1996): 3153 (quotation on p.46);
cited in Ellen Samuels, My Body, My Closet: Invisible Disability and the Limits
of Coming-Out Discourse, in Desiring Disability: Queer Theory Meets Disability
Studies, ed. Robert McRuer and Abby L. Wilkerson=GLQ: AJournal of Lesbian
and Gay Studies 9.12 (2003): 233255 (quotation on p.234). Hogeland is summa-
rizing here the argument of Tina Grillo and Stephanie M. Wildman, Obscur-
ing the Importance of Race: The Implications of Making Comparisons between
Racism and Sexism (or Other Issues), in Critical White Studies: Looking behind
506 Notes to Pages 297304
the Mirror, ed. Richard Delgado and Jean Stefancic (Philadelphia: Temple Uni-
versity Press, 1997), 619626.
17. Hegel, Phenomenology of Spirit, Chapter VI.A.b.38475.
18. Just how much the Stonewall Riots had to do with the death and funeral of Judy
Garland has been a matter of dispute. A lot is made of the coincidence by Ste-
phen Maddison, who reviews some of the controversy: see Maddison, Fags,
Hags and Queer Sisters: Gender Dissent and Heterosocial Bonds in Gay Culture (New
York: St. Martins, 2000), 112. Compare, however, John Loughery, The Other Side
of Silence: Mens Lives and Gay Identities: ATwentieth-Century History (New York:
Henry Holt, 1998), 316; and now David Carter, Stonewall: The Riots That Sparked
the Gay Revolution (New York: St. Martins, 2004), 260261. Carter makes a very
powerful, careful, and convincing historical argument that the rioters at the
Stonewall Inn were not in fact spurred to militancy by mourning for Judy
Garland.
1. David Denby, Escape Artist: The Case for Joan Crawford, New Yorker, Janu-
ary3, 2011, 6569 (quotation on p.65).
2. Will Fellows, A Passion to Preserve: Gay Men as Keepers of Culture (Madison: Uni-
versity of Wisconsin Press, 2004), 14. Further page references to this work will
be incorporated in the text.
3. Will Fellows, Farm Boys: Lives of Gay Men from the Rural Midwest (Madison: Uni-
versity of Wisconsin Press, 1996).
4. For a detailed exploration of the ways that gender and sexuality mutually con-
struct each other in male childhood, see David Plummer, One of the Boys: Mas
culinity, Homophobia, and Modern Manhood (Binghamton,NY: Harrington Park
Press, 1999).
5. The reference is to John M. Clum, Something for the Boys: Musical Theater and Gay
Culture (New York: Palgrave/St. Martins, 2001), 19.
6. In support of this position, Fellows cites Rictor Norton, The Myth of the Modern
Homosexual (London: Cassell, 1997), 132, which makes an eloquent appeal of a
similar kind to students of gay history: Queer historians need to widen the
definition of homosexuality so as to encompass queer culture rather than just
queer sex and the laws against it. ... Queer history is still too much a part of the
history of sexuality and needs to be resituated within the history of non-sexual
culture and ethnic customs (Fellows, Passion to Preserve, 267268n).
7. Fellows, Passion to Preserve, 268, n.3, gives as his source for this quotation the fol-
lowing reference: Edward Carpenter, Selected Writings, vol.1: Sex (London: GMP
Publishers, 1984), 278. Fellows quotes Carpenter again, approvingly, on pp.247,
253254, and 257.
8. Fellows, Passion to Preserve, 275, n.1, gives as his source for this quotation the fol-
Notes to Pages 304310 507
lowing reference: C.G. Jung, The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious, vol.9,
pt.1 of Collected Works (Princeton,NJ: Princeton University Press, 1968), 8687,
para. 164.
9. For an account of the Radical Faeries, see Scott Lauria Morgensen, Arrival at
Home: Radical Faerie Configurations of Sexuality and Place, GLQ 15.1 (2008):
6796. Morgensen provides a useful overview of the movement and a multitude
of references to earlier writings related to it.
10. The best introduction to this revival, which has gained considerable momen-
tum since, is provided by Gilbert Herdt, ed., Third Sex, Third Gender: Beyond
Sexual Dimorphism in Culture and History (New York: Zone Books, 1994).
11. Edmund White, The Gay Philosopher, in White, The Burning Library: Essays,
ed. David Bergman (New York: Knopf, 1994), 319 (quotation on p.5). White in-
dicates that the essay was written and circulated in 1969 but never published
until it was collected by Bergman for this anthology. Fellows (Passion to Preserve,
260), who quotes and cites this sentence, implies that White accepted the third-
sex model after a lifetime of pondering similar phenomena (in fact, White
was no more than twenty-nine when he wrote the essay). White does indeed
refute various objections to the idea that homosexuals constitute a third sex,
but his discussion of this point is subordinated to a larger argument against all
theories, or myths, of homosexuality. (Was it nature or nurture? he asks skep-
tically on p.5.) He concludes: None of the metaphors Ive suggested quite fits
the homosexual. ... Its about time homosexuals evolved metaphors that fit the
actual content of their lives (pp.1819).
12. Fellows, Passion to Preserve, 260263, vigorously denounces such effeminopho-
bia, as he calls it, surveying some of the scholarly literature on it and providing
an eloquent account of self-censorship on the part of the gay men he inter-
viewed, some of whom systematically suppressed evidence of their feminine
identifications when they came to edit the written transcripts of their earlier
conversations with Fellows (261).
13. For a moving and intelligent popular account of these controversies as they
bearon transgender children, see Hanna Rosin, ABoys Life, Atlantic (Novem-
ber 2008), www.theatlantic.com/doc/200811/transgender-children (accessed
July29, 2009). A gay psychoanalyst has since entered the fray, pleading humanely
for a less pathologizing treatment of gender-variant boys; see Ken Corbett, Boy-
hoods: Rethinking Masculinities (New Haven,CT: Yale University Press, 2009).
14. See Judith Butler, Imitation and Gender Insubordination, in Inside/Out: Les-
bian Theories, Gay Theories, ed. Diana Fuss (New York: Routledge, 1991), 1331;
rpt. in The Lesbian and Gay Studies Reader, ed. Henry Abelove, Michle Aina Ba-
rale, and David M. Halperin (New York: Routledge, 1993), 307320.
15. John Weir, Queer Guy with a Slobs Eye, New York Times, August10, 2003. On
the stereotype that gay men all have impeccable taste, see Clum, Something for
the Boys, 21.
508 Notes to Pages 311312
A personal note
Before, of the many thousands of films I have seen from silent classics to new
releases, I could not say I had one clear favorite. Brokeback changed that; it is the
best film I have ever seen. On getting home after seeing this film for the first
time, I searched the Internet, unsettled, looking for I knew not what. I discov-
ered the goy movement. I feel this way despite the fact that the sex acts implied
are not what I would do as a gay man.
I do not expect to ever have the privilege of being so totally shaken by a work
of art again in my lifetime. You would not be reading this now if it were not for
Brokeback Mountain.
Do not read the insert of the DVD as the titles of the chapters will spoil
the story.
Notes to Pages 313319 509
Treat the DVD as if you were at the cinema; prepare yourself to sit and
watch for two hours at a stretch.
Watch with other people who are really interested and will not talk dur-
out. Turn off your mobile. Unplug the doorbell. Tell people you live with
who are not watching that you want two hours for yourself. (Some peo-
ple watch on laptops while parked in the car to get away from their family
for two hours).
Sit fairly near the screen directly in front of the TV. Turn the lights low or
out altogether.
Have tissues to hand if you know you cry when watching old Hollywood
films.
Use the bathroom before you press play.
Ennis makes a phone call to the wife of Jack (played by Michelle Wil-
liams). Watch carefully during this scene, because the inset flashbacks ex-
plain what really happened.
Pay attention to the shirts.
If you feel you need support after watching this film, go to www.ennisjack
.com.
Judy Garland and Gay Men, Heavenly Bodies: Film Stars and Society (New York:
St. Martins, 1986), 141194.
27. See Stephen Maddison, All about Women: Pedro Almodvar and the Heteroso-
cial Dynamic, Textual Practice, 14.2 (2000), 265284; Leo Bersani and Ulysse Du-
toit, Almodvars Girls (All about My Mother), Forms of Being: Cinema, Aesthet-
ics, Subjectivity (London: British Film Institute, 2004), 74123.
1. Joe Kort reports that a local news show about my class How To Be Gay fea-
tured an African American woman who remarked, by way of expressing her
opposition to the class, No one had to teach me how to be black. He goes on
quite properly to retort, How untrue. Her family and culture taught her from
the day she was born. See Joe Kort, 10Smart Things Gay Men Can Do To Find
Real Love (New York: Alyson, 2006), 56.
2. For a few hints about this, see Michael Warner, The Trouble with Normal: Sex,
Politics, and the Ethics of Queer Life (New York: Free Press, 1999), 102. See, gener-
ally, Lauren Berlant, The Female Complaint: The Unfinished Business of Sentimental-
ity in American Culture (Durham,NC: Duke University Press, 2008), especially
169205, on Now, Voyager. Compare David M. Halperin, Deviant Teaching, in
ACompanion to Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer Studies, ed. George
E. Haggerty and Molly McGarry (Malden,MA: Blackwell, 2007), 146167.
3. Will Fellows, A Passion to Preserve: Gay Men as Keepers of Culture (Madison: Uni-
versity of Wisconsin Press, 2004), is consistently hostile to social-constructionist
approaches to sexuality and subjectivity, which he regards as entailing an
assimilationist-minded denial of the existence of gay male culture and of the
two-spiritedness of gay male subjectivity; he looks to Camille Paglia for author-
itative confirmation of his view (esp.260262). Although it is certainly the case
that a social-constructionist approach is opposed to the notion that there are
essential differences between gay males and straight males, as Fellows cor-
rectly states (261), it need not carry with it all the unfortunate consequences that
Fellows rightly laments. In fact, if the essential differences between gay and
straight men with which Fellows is concerned are understood to be effects of
social processes, it might even be possible to reconcile his views with those of
social constructionists, such as myself.
4. Quaint is the word Fellows uses to characterize the near-extinct tradition of
post-Stonewall gay masculinity (Passion to Preserve, 280, n.11), which he describes
as follows: Gay men in the 1970s and 1980s affected a hyperbutch look (denim,
leather, flannel, facial hair, stiff wrists) and began to proffer themselves as thor-
oughly regular guys (262).
5. For the first quotation, see Fellows, Passion to Preserve, 267, note2, citing Larry
Kramer, Sex and Sensibility, The Advocate (May27, 1997), 59, 6465, 6769. The
Notes to Pages 330341 511
second quotation (Fellows, Passion to Preserve, 262) is from Kramers 1985 play,
The Normal Heart, where it is part of a rant by a character who serves as Kra
mers mouthpiece in the drama; Fellows cites the Penguin edition of the play
(New York, 1985), 114. For a similar complaint that practitioners of lesbian and
gay studies reduce homosexuality to sex, see Lee J. Siegel, The Gay Science:
Queer Theory, Literature, and the Sexualization of Everything, New Republic,
November9, 1998, 3042; rpt. in Lee Siegel, Falling Upwards: Essays in Defense of
the Imagination (New York: Basic Books, 2006), 182214.
6. On Liberaces activity as a restorer of neglected houses, see Fellows, Passion to
Preserve, 3132, 133134.
7. These are aspects of gay mens cultural practices that Fellows, Passion to Pre-
serve, brings out very well (esp.244246, 249254).
8. For the specification of escape from identity (or flight from identity) as a
tactic that stigmatized or captive populations typically use to cope with social
dominationin this case, homophobiasee Barry D. Adam, The Survival of
Domination: Inferiorization and Everyday Life (New York: Elsevier, 1978), 8993.
9. For the most systematic, rigorous, and sophisticated theoretical elaboration of
the social, psychic, and erotic consequences of the simple fact that gay men are
like straight men insofar as they are men, but different from them insofar as
they are gay, see Earl Jackson, Jr., Strategies of Deviance: Studies in Gay Male Repre-
sentation (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1995), especially the first chap-
ter, Calling the Questions: Gay Male Subjectivity, Representation, and Agency
(pp. 152, 267274). For a brilliant, subtle, and thoroughgoing study of the
unique subjectivity and gender positioning of gay men, see Jean-Paul Sartre,
Saint Genet: Comdien et martyr (Paris: Gallimard, 1952).
10. See, for example, Sam Abel, Opera and Homoerotic Desire, in Opera in the
Flesh: Sexuality in Operatic Performance (Boulder,CO: Westview, 1996), 5875.
11. John M. Clum, Something for the Boys: Musical Theater and Gay Culture (New York:
Palgrave/St. Martins, 2001), 61.
12. Stuart Hall, Culture, the Media and the Ideological Effect, in Mass Communi-
cation and Society, ed. James Curran, Michael Gurevitch, Janet Woollacott, et al.
(London: Edward Arnold, 1977), 315348 (quotation on p.330), as cited by Ken
Tucker and Andrew Treno, The Culture of Narcissism and the Critical Tradi-
tion: An Interpretive Essay, Berkeley Journal of Sociology 25 (1980): 341355 (quota-
tion on p.351). See, generally, Halls discussion of the constitutive role of ideol-
ogy in Deviance, Politics, and the Media, in Deviance and Social Control, ed.
Paul Rock and Mary McIntosh (London: Tavistock, 1974), 261305; reprinted in
The Lesbian and Gay Studies Reader, ed. Henry Abelove, Michle Aina Barale, and
David M. Halperin (New York: Routledge, 1993), 6290.
13. See The Collected Poems of Frank OHara, ed. Donald Allen (Berkeley,CA: Univer-
sity of California Press, 1995), 449.
14. Compare the remark of German filmmaker Matthias Mller, speaking about
512 Notes to Pages 345348
Robert J. Podesva, Sarah J. Roberts, and Andrew Wong, ed., Language and Sexu-
ality: Contesting Meaning in Theory and Practice (Stanford,CA: CSLI Publications,
2002); Don Kulick, Transgender and Language: A Review of the Literature and
Suggestions for the Future, GLQ 5.4 (1999): 605622; Deborah Cameron and
Don Kulick, Language and Sexuality (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
2003); and, for an overview, Deborah Cameron and Don Kulick, ed., The Lan-
guage and Sexuality Reader (New York: Routledge, 2005).
19. Clum, Something for the Boys, 19.
20. On the continuing gay appeal of divas, see the double issue of Camera Obscura
entitled Fabulous! Divas, Camera Obscura: Feminism, Culture, and Media Studies
65 and 67=22.2 (2007) and 23.1 (2008); also, the collection by Michael Montlack,
ed., My Diva: 65Gay Men on the Women Who Inspire Them (Madison: University of
Wisconsin Press, 2009).
21. Barry D. Adam, How Might We Create a Collectivity That We Would Want To
Belong To? in Gay Shame, ed. David M. Halperin and Valerie Traub (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 2009), 301311 (quotation on pp.305306).
22. On the different historical temporalities of lesbian and gay male sexualities, see
David M. Halperin, The First Homosexuality? How To Do the History of Homo
sexuality (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2002), 4880, esp. 7880, and
Valerie Traub, The Present Future of Lesbian Historiography, in ACompanion
to Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer Studies, 124143.
1. The basic and pioneering study of this phenomenon is Pierre Bourdieu, Dis
tinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste, trans. Richard Nice (Cam-
bridge,MA: Harvard University Press, 1984; first publ. 1979). Bourdieu examines
how taste cultures are created and distributed within social collectivities, such as
families, social classes, local communities, ethnic groups, and other social for-
mations that reproduce themselves and their aesthetic standards across the gen-
erations through biological reproduction, inheritance, primary socialization,
and similar sorts of mainstream social mechanismsin other words, that repro-
duce themselves heterosexually. His analysis pertains to tastes that are linked to
social class, but it does not apply specifically to the acquisition and transmission
of gay taste, or to the kinds of counter-acculturation that are at issue here.
2. Film noir criticism does attempt to capture the meaning of film noir style in
general. It is perfectly able to describe how a standard element, like the use of
the shadow cast by Venetian blinds, condenses the play with light and shadow
that is fundamental to film noir style. Thus, as Damon Young explains, Whereas
traditional cinematography starts with white space and fills it with shapes, film
noir starts with black space and lights some parts of it. Objects and people are
always disappearing into shadow space. One never knows what is going to
514 Note to Page 362
emerge into the realm of visibilitywhich is never fully available, but always
striated by zones of obscurity. The shadows from a Venetian blind perfect this
effect of striation, this play with light and shadows (and all the metaphorical
meanings that shadows have accrued). Damon Young, personal communica-
tion, June17, 2011.
Other critics try to go further and offer greater specificity. James Naremore,
for example, commenting on a color film, The Glass Shield (1994), says it uses
venetian blind shadows to create a sense of isolation and fear, in keeping
with the chiaroscuro effects of black-and-white lighting in conventional film
noir: see Naremore, More Than Night: Film Noir in Its Contexts (Berkeley: Univer-
sity of California Press, 1998), 248249, 189. Robert E. Smith notes that in An-
thony Manns black-and-white Raw Deal (1948), the moonlight which shines
through the Venetian blinds of Marsha Hunts bedroom constitutes an artful
and often poetic approximation of natural light; see Smith, Mann in the Dark:
The Films Noir of Anthony Mann, in Film Noir Reader, ed. Alain Silver and James
Ursini (Pompton Plains, NJ: Limelight Editions, 2006), 189202 (quotation on
p. 191). Most interesting of all is Tom Conley, who associates Venetian blinds
with the immobility of the present in film noir: The present is confining, artifi
cial, cast under dim three-point lighting fragmenting the figure of the charac-
ters. The outside is seen across orders of Venetian blinds. Actors stare through
their slits, as if disheartened avatars of the nineteenth-century novel and paint-
ing, figures whose search for bliss leads to gazes into the absolute nothing of the
world outside. They are striated by the shadows of light cutting their bodies
into lines. About Mildred Pierce, Conley has this to say: The lush Californian
coast of Mildred Pierce (Warner, 1945) is shot in the past tense, in flashbacks that
lead forward to the stale odor of acrid coffee and cigarettes in a police station in
the early hours of the morning. Outside space or light tends to be evoked but
closed off or set apart by narrative immobilized in no-exit situations. See Con-
ley, Stages of Film Noir, Theatre Journal 39.3 (October 1987): 347363 (quota-
tions on p.350).
All three writers, in short, imply something about the meaning of Venetian
blinds in film noir style: the blinds convey isolation and fear (Naremore), artifi
ciality and distance from the natural world (Smith), or the separation of interior
space from an outside space imagined as the space of the past, plenitude, sun-
light, and nature, with the interior space represented as a space of stasis, of the
immobility of no-exit situations (Conley). None of these critics, however, at-
tempts to identify the meaning of the fleeting shadow of Venetian blinds as an
element of visual style in the specific context of this specific moment in this spe
cific scene in Mildred Pierce. Much less do they try to get at what that stylistic ele-
ment might mean to a specific segment of the audience of the movie, belonging
to a specific sexual subculture.
3. D.A. Miller, 8 [Otto e mezzo], British Film Institute (Basingstoke: Palgrave Mac-
Notes to Pages 362366 515
millan, 2008), 7475; also 8688. Despite valiant efforts to describe the meaning
of Fellinis visual style, Millers account is less satisfying than his elucidation of
the meaning of Jane Austens literary style: see, for example, his brilliant and
sure description of the content of a formal element in the narrative of Emma in
Jane Austen; or, The Secret of Style (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press,
2003), 6168. For a systematic argument to the effect that style is its own thing,
see Myra Jehlen, Five Fictions in Search of Truth (Princeton,NJ: Princeton Univer-
sity Press, 2008), especially the remarks on Flauberts style (1346, 133143), to
which I am deeply indebted.
4. Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray, ch.2. The passage was complete in the
earliest version of the novel: see Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray: An An-
notated, Uncensored Edition, ed. Nicholas Frankel (Cambridge,MA: Harvard Uni-
versity Press, 2011), 99. Susan Sontag quotes a slightly different formulation,
which she attributes to a different source, in the second epigraph to her essay
Against Interpretation, in Sontag, Against Interpretation, and Other Essays (New
York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1966; first publ. 1964), 314 (see p.3).
5. My affectionate thanks to Michael Forrey for working out with me the meaning
of this shot.
6. For some testimony by the creators of film noir that indicates how they under-
stood the meaning of their aesthetic, see Robert Porfirio, Alain Silver, and James
Ursini, eds., Film Noir Reader3: Interviews with Filmmakers of the Classic Noir Pe-
riod (New York: Limelight Editions, 2002), esp.42, 125, and 230231. These state-
ments do indicate how careful and deliberate the filmmakers were in setting up
shots and establishing a style, but they are couched in a language so close to the
film noir aesthetic itself that they do not yield much information about what
the elements of film noir style actually mean.
7. Dick Hebdige, Subculture: The Meaning of Style (London: Routledge, 1979).
8. Sontag, Against Interpretation, 8.
9. Ibid., 9.
10. Susan Sontag, On Style (first publ. 1965), in Against Interpretation, 1536 (quota-
tion on p.20).
11. Susan Sontag, Notes on Camp (first publ. 1964), in Against Interpretation, 275
292, esp.275276 (quotation on p.276).
12. Pier Dominguez, Susan Sontag, Superstar; or, How To Be a Modernist Ge-
nius in Post-Modern Culture: Gender, Celebrity and the Public Intellectual
(M.A.thesis, Columbia University, 2008), 16. Dominguez discovered that one of
the issues of Partisan Review that preceded the issue in which Sontags famous
essay on camp appeared contained an announcement of her forthcoming con-
tribution under the rubric Camp as Style. Whether that was actually a pre-
liminary title or merely a description of the topic of the essay remains unclear,
but in either case it is telling.
13. Sontag, On Style, 36 (emphasis added).
516 Notes to Pages 368387
14. See John M. Clum, Something for the Boys: Musical Theater and Gay Culture (New
York: Palgrave/St. Martins, 2001), xii. Clum compares and contrasts the Broad-
way musical with baseball in gay/straight terms: Some of us also love the ar-
cana of musical theater the way other men love baseball statistics (see also
pp.23, 137).
15. On the camp form of this sort of utterance, see Keith Harvey, Camp Talk and
Citationality: AQueer Take on Authentic and Represented Utterance, Jour-
nal of Pragmatics 34 (2002): 11451165, esp.11511152.
1. For a very clear and patient elaboration of the distinction, see Judith Butler, Bod-
ies That Matter: On the Discursive Limits of Sex (New York: Routledge, 1993),
412.
2. Compare John M. Clum, Something for the Boys: Musical Theater and Gay Culture
(New York: Palgrave/St. Martins, 2001), 48: Our enthusiasms may reveal that
for all our interest in femininity, were often not really interested in women.
3. Compare Moe Meyer, Introduction: Reclaiming the Discourse of Camp, in
The Politics and Poetics of Camp, ed. Meyer (London: Routledge, 1994), 122,
esp.11: Parody becomes the process whereby the marginalized and disenfran-
chised advance their own interests by entering alternative signifying codes into
discourse by attaching them to existing structures of signification. Without the
process of parody, the marginalized agent has no access to representation, the
apparatus of which is controlled by the dominant order. ... Camp, as specifi
cally queer parody, becomes, then, the only process by which the queer is able
to enter representation and to produce social visibility. This piggy-backing upon
the dominant orders monopoly on the authority of signification explains why
Camp appears, on the one hand, to offer a transgressive vehicle yet, on the
other, simultaneously invokes the specter of dominant ideology within its prac-
tice, appearing, in many instances, to actually reinforce the dominant order.
4. See the influential arguments in Judith Butler, Imitation and Gender Insubordi-
nation, in Inside/Out: Lesbian Theories, Gay Theories, ed. Diana Fuss (New York:
Routledge, 1991), 1331; rpt. in The Lesbian and Gay Studies Reader, ed. Henry Abe-
love, Michle Aina Barale, and David M. Halperin (New York: Routledge, 1993),
307320.
5. On the general question of gay male misogyny, see Richard Dyers sensible re-
marks in Gay Misogyny, in Dyer, The Culture of Queers (London: Routledge,
2002), 4648.
6. I want to express my particular gratitude to D.Nathaniel Smith for urging me
to think through this issue and for patiently working it out with me.
7. See www.sonicyouth.com/mustang/sy/song92a.html (accessed January 15,
2009).
Notes to Pages 387389 517
8. See David Browne, Goodbye 20th Century: ABiography of Sonic Youth (New York:
DaCapo, 2008), 202, 210: Pettibon specialized in black-ink drawings that felt
like cells taken randomly from comic strips, yet worked on their own. In an ar-
ticle for Artforum in 1985, Gordon praised Pettibons work as statements unto
themselves that feed off the simplistic morals of made-for-TV movies, which
center around contemporary questions.
9. Stevie Chick, Psychic Confusion: The Sonic Youth Story (London: Omnibus, 2008),
170. See, further, Browne, Goodbye 20th Century, 210211.
10. Chick, Psychic Confusion, 173174.
11. Quoted from LyricsMode.com: www.lyricsmode.com/lyrics/s/sonic_youth/
androgynous_ mind.html (accessed January 15, 2009). Cobain had already as-
serted that God is gay in the closing line of Stay Away on Nevermind (1991).
Another possible source could be the Nirvana song All Apologies from the
1993 InUtero CD:
in full: I saw her [Mariah Carey] doing a cover of the 70s disco song, Last
Night a DJ Saved My Life. I just couldnt get it out of my head. She was bounc-
ing through this set of gangsta rappers. It was right after her breakdown and she
seemed so vulnerable. And she was barely singing! It stuck with me. She and
Karen Carpenter [the anorexic subject of Sonic Youths Tunic] are both about
the body. Karen was trying to get rid of hers. Aesthetics have changed a lot since
Karen. Im sure theyre similar A-type personalitiesdriven perfectionists who
just want to please people so much. Karens voice showed a lot of vulnerabil-
itymore so than Mariah. She made the words she was singing her own. Thats
a scary thing to do when youre standing in a media spotlight. You lose a sense
of your identity. Its a narcissist thing. Those comments may hint at how Gor-
don and Coppola related to Joan Crawfords performance as Mildred Pierce.
17. Browne, Goodbye 20th Century, 220.
18. Susan Sontags warnings against deliberate camp are pertinent in this context.
See Notes on Camp, in Sontag, Against Interpretation, and Other Essays (New
York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1966; first publ. 1964), 282: Camp which knows
itself to be Camp (camping) is usually less satisfying. The pure examples of
Camp are unintentional; they are dead serious. ... Genuine Camp ... does not
mean to be funny. ... It seems unlikely that much of the traditional opera rep-
ertoire could be such satisfying Camp if the melodramatic absurdities of most
opera plots had not been taken seriously by their composers. ... Probably, in-
tending to be campy is always harmful.
19. See Butler, Imitation and Gender Insubordination, esp.312316.
20. Douglas Haddow, Hipster: The Dead End of Western Civilization, Adbusters,
79 ( July29, 2008), www.adbusters.org/magazine/79/hipster.html (accessed Au-
gust1, 2009, at which point 4,167 online comments had been posted to it; they
are worth consulting every bit as much as the article itself ). Thanks to D.Na-
thaniel Smith for referring me to this essay.
21. Christian Lorentzen, Kill the Hipster: Why the Hipster Must DieAModest
Proposal to Save New York Cool, Time Out New York (May 30June 5, 2007),
available online at newyork.timeout.com/articles/features/4840/why-the-hip
ster-must-die (accessed August 1, 2009). Lorentzen goes on to write, Those
18-to-34-year-olds called hipsters have defanged, skinned and consumed the
fringe movements of the postwar eraBeat, hippie, punk, even grunge. Hun-
gry for more, and sick with the anxiety of influence, they feed as well from the
trough of the uncool, turning white trash chic, and gouging the husks of long-
expired subculturesvaudeville, burlesque, cowboys and pirates. He accuses
them of transforming gay style into metrosexuality.
22. Charles Ludlam, Camp, Ridiculous Theatre, Scourge of Human Folly: The Essays
and Opinions of Charles Ludlam, ed. Steven Samuels (New York: Theater Com-
munications Group, 1992), 227, as quoted and discussed in Marc Howard Siegel,
Notes to Pages 394403 519
1. Time Out New York 661, May29June4, 2008, 1621. Further page references to
this article will be incorporated in the text.
2. David M. Halperin, What Do Gay Men Want? An Essay on Sex, Risk, and Subjectiv-
ity (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2007; rev. ed. 2009); Halperin,
Small Town Boy: Neil Bartlett Learns How To Be Gay, Identities: Journal for
Politics, Gender and Culture 13 (20072008): 117155, reprinted, with revisions, in
Tiresias: Culture, Politics and Critical Theory 3 (April 2009): 335; Halperin, Be-
520 Notes to Pages 405417
yond Gay Pride (with Valerie Traub), in Gay Shame, ed. David M. Halperin and
Valerie Traub (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2009), 340; Halperin, In-
troduction: Among MenHistory, Sexuality, and the Return of Affect, in Love,
Sex, Intimacy, and Friendship Between Men, 15501800, ed. Katherine ODonnell and
Michael ORourke (Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2003), 111; Halperin, Deviant Teach-
ing, in ACompanion to Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer Studies, ed.
George E. Haggerty and Molly McGarry (Malden,MA: Blackwell, 2007), 146
167; Halperin, Homosexualitys Closet, Michigan Quarterly Review 41.1 (Winter
2002): 2154; Halperin, Gay Identity and Its Discontents, Photofile (Sydney) 61
(December 2000): 3136; Halperin, Des lits dinitis, LUnebvue (Paris) 16 (Au-
tumn 2000): 2339.
3. Richard Dyer, Judy Garland and Gay Men, in Dyer, Heavenly Bodies: Film Stars
and Society (New York: St. Martins, 1986), 141194 (quotation on p.149).
4. See, for example, Derek Jarman, Derek Jarmans Garden, with photographs by
Howard Sooley (London: Thames and Hudson, 1995); Simon Doonan, Confes-
sions of a Window Dresser: Tales from the Life of Fashion (New York: Penguin Stu-
dio, 1998); Andrew Gorman-Murray, Homeboys: Uses of Home by Gay Aus-
tralian Men, Social and Cultural Geography 7.1 (February 2006): 5369;
Gorman-Murray, Gay and Lesbian Couples at Home: Identity Work in Domes-
tic Space, Home Cultures 3.2 (2006): 145168; Greg Louganis, with Eric Marcus,
Breaking the Surface (New York: Random House, 1995).
5. John M. Clum, Something for the Boys: Musical Theater and Gay Culture (New York:
Palgrave/St. Martins, 2001), 23.
6. This generational ideology has been recorded, elaborated, amplified, accepted
as true, and provided with academic credibility by Ritch C. Savin-Williams, The
New Gay Teenager (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2005). Savin-
Williams projects that the gay adolescent will eventually disappear. Teens who
have same-gendered sex and desires wont vanish. But they will not need to
identify as gay (21).
7. Clum, Something for the Boys, 28.
8. Kenji Yoshino, Covering: The Hidden Assault on Our Civil Rights (New York: Ran-
dom House, 2006), xi, 1719.
9. Scott James, Celebration of Gay Pride Masks Community in Transition, New
York Times, June 26, 2011, A27A.
10. Bre DeGrant, Why I Dont Celebrate Gay Pride, Salon.com, June 27, 2011,
www.salon.com/life/feature/2011/06/27/out_not_proud_open2011/index.html
(accessed June27, 2011).
11. James, Celebration of Gay Pride.
12. Quoted in June Thomas, The Gay Bar: Its New Competition, Slate.com,
June30, 2011, www.slate.com/id/2297608 (accessed July12, 2011).
13. I am quoting from the web-based version of Time Out New York (TONY):
newyork.timeout.com/things-to-do/this-week-in-new-york/22619/poll-which
Notes to Pages 418424 521
(If only being gay guaranteed that you would be a genius. And how did Mahler
and Mozart get onto the list, anyway?)
Compare the following claim by Ned Weeks, the hero of Larry Kramers play
The Normal Heart (1985) and fictional alter ego of the playwright himself: I be-
long to a culture that includes Proust, Henry James, Tchaikovsky, Cole Por-
ter,Plato, Socrates, Aristotle, Alexander the Great, Michelangelo, Leonardo da
Vinci, Christopher Marlowe, Walt Whitman, Herman Melville, Tennessee Wil-
liams, Byron, E.M. Forster, Lorca, Auden, Francis Bacon, James Baldwin, Harry
Stack Sullivan, John Maynard Keynes, Dag Hammarskjld . . . See Larry
Kramer, The Normal Heart and The Destiny of Me: Two Plays by Larry Kramer
(New York: Grove Press, 2000), 109.
4. See Matthew Tinkcom, Working Like a Homosexual: Camp, Capital, Cinema (Dur-
ham,NC: Duke University Press, 2002).
5. Smith Galtney, Let the Gays Begin: Six City Culture Makers Attempt to Answer
Our BurningPossibly FlamingQuestions, Time Out New York 661 (May29
June4, 2008): 1821 (quotation on pp. 2021).
6. Barry D. Adam, The Survival of Domination: Inferiorization and Everyday Life (New
Notes to Pages 434438 523
York: Elsevier, 1978), 92 (on the flight from identity, more generally termed
escape from identity, 8993) and 106114 (on in-g roup hostility).
1. For the origins of these developments, see Martin Meeker, Contacts Desired: Gay
and Lesbian Communications and Community, 1940s1970s (Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 2006).
2. June Thomas, The Gay Bar: Is It Dying? Slate.com, June27, 2011, www.slate
.com/id/2297604/ (accessed July12, 2011).
3. Compare, for a later period, the testimony of Guillaume Dustan, Dans ma cham-
bre (Paris: P.O.L., 1996), 75.
4. I am summarizing a history that has been partially documented for San Fran-
cisco in great detail by Gayle S. Rubin, Elegy for the Valley of Kings: AIDS and
the Leather Community in San Francisco, 19811996, in InChanging Times: Gay
Men and Lesbians Encounter HIV/AIDS, ed. Martin P. Levine, Peter M. Nardi, and
John H. Gagnon (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1997), 101144, esp.107
123; also, Rubin, The Miracle Mile: South of Market and Gay Male Leather,
19621997, in Reclaiming San Francisco: History, Politics, Culture, ed. James Brook,
Chris Carlsson, and Nancy J. Peters (San Francisco: City Lights, 1998), 247272,
esp.259267.
5. Patrick S. Sullivan and Richard J. Wolitski, HIV Infection among Gay and Bi-
sexual Men, in Unequal Opportunity: Health Disparities Affecting Gay and Bisexual
Men in the United States, ed. Richard J. Wolitski, Ron Stall, and Ronald O. Valdi
serri (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008), 220247.
6. As of December 31, 2010, a total of 19,341 deaths have occurred among San
Francisco AIDS cases since the beginning of the epidemic, of whom 17,444 are
estimated to be among men who had sex with men. See San Francisco Depart-
ment of Public Health, HIV/AIDS Epidemiology Annual Report, 2010, p. 23, Ta-
ble5.1.
7. On Bostons South End, see Sylvie Tissot, De bons voisins: Enqute dans un quar
tier de la bourgeoisie progressiste (Paris: Raisons dagir, 2011).
8. For an analysis, see Gary J. Gates, Same-Sex Couples: U.S.Census and the American
Community Survey (Los Angeles: Williams Institute, n.d.), services.law.ucla.edu/
williamsinstitute/pdf/CensusPresentation_LGBT.pdf (accessed August 30,
2011); Sabrina Tavernise, New Numbers, and Geography, for Gay Couples,
New York Times, August25, 2011, A1.
9. For an early account of this process, describing how Dianne Feinstein and
wealthy developers managed to break the stranglehold of gay power over City
Hall in San Francisco after the assassination of Harvey Milk and Mayor George
Moscone in 1978, see Frances Fitzgerald, The Castro, in Fitzgerald, Cities on
the Hill (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1986), 25119.
524 Notes to Pages 439450
10. As June Thomas also points out, it is not only the Internet that has undermined
the traditional commercial gay infrastructure. A number of new face-to-face
forms of gay socializing have also emerged. When it comes to nightlife, gay
revelers have more options than ever. Gay men have the circuit party scene
lavish multiday, multivenue annual events, such as the Palm Springs and Miami
white partieswhere the emphasis is on grand spectacle and production values
that exceed anything that would be possible at a neighborhood bar. In some cit-
ies, groups use the Web to organize guerrilla gay bars, a sort of flaming flash
mob in which homosexuals descend unannounced on a straight bar and turn it
gay for one night only. And in most cities, freelance promoters produce regular
parties at straight venues as an alternative to the gay every day bar scene.
Thetrend took off in the 1980s, when the communitys desire for variety out-
paced the supply of gay venues, and accelerated after 2000, when it became
easier to publicize events via email. Thomas, The Gay Bar: Its New Competi-
tion, June30, 2011, www.slate.com/id/2297608 (accessed July12, 2011).
11. Thomas, Gay Bar: Is It Dying?
12. June Thomas, The Gay Bar: Can It Survive? Slate.com, July1, 2011, www.slate
.com/id/2297609 (accessed July12, 2011).
13. Thomas, Gay Bar: Its New Competition.
14. Thomas, Gay Bar: Is It Dying?
15. There are, of course, many exceptions to this trend; see, for example, Amanda
Sommers, Not Playing House the Way Mom and Dad Do: Same-Sex Commit-
ment without Marriage (M.A. thesis, Smith School for Social Work, 2010).
16. Maureen Dowd, A Gay Commander in Chief: Ready or Not? New York Times,
December18, 2010, WK9.
17. Patrick Califia-Rice, Family Values, Village Voice, 45.25 ( June27, 2000): 4648
(quotation on p.45). All further references to this article will be included in the
text.
18. Bruce Bawer, A Place at the Table: The Gay Individual in American Society (New
York: Poseidon Press, 1993).
19. Andrew Sullivan, Virtually Normal: An Argument about Homosexuality (New York:
Knopf, 1995).
20. Associated Press, NY Legalizes Gay Marriage 42 Years after Stonewall, June25,
2011, www.bostonherald.com/news/national/northeast/view.bg?articleid=134
7820&format=&page=2&listingType=natne#articleFull (accessed July 8,
2011).
21. Michael Warner, The Trouble with Normal: Sex, Politics, and the Ethics of Queer Life
(New York: Free Press, 1999), 3738.
22. Ibid., 39.
23. Ibid., 38.
24. For the original formulation of heteronormativity, see Michael Warner, In-
troduction: Fear of a Queer Planet, Social Text 29 (1991): 317.
Notes to Pages 451457 525
25. Ibid., 8.
26. Ibid., 6. I have directly borrowed a number of Warners formulations.
27. Ibid., 9. See, further, Damon Youngs forthcoming essay, The Living End, or
Love without a Future.
28. Warner, Introduction: Fear of a Queer Planet,6.
29. Frank Bidart, The Second Hour of the Night, in Bidart, Desire (New York: Far-
rar, Straus and Giroux, 1997), 2759 (quotation on p.53).
30. Warner, Introduction: Fear of a Queer Planet, 6.
31. See, generally, Christopher Reed, Art and Homosexuality: A History of Ideas (New
York: Oxford University Press, 2011).
32. Edmund White, The Political Vocabulary of Homosexuality, in The State of
the Language, ed. Leonard Michaels and Christopher Ricks (Berkeley: University
of California Press, 1980), 235246 (quotation on p.246).
33. Susan Sontag, On Style, Against Interpretation, and Other Essays (New York:
Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1966; first publ. 1965), 1536 (quotation on p.36).
34. Jean-Paul Sartre, Saint Genet: Comdien et martyr (Paris: Gallimard, 1952), 146: Ils
disposent simultanment de deux systmes de rfrences. I am taking Sartres
statement in a different and more general direction from the one he intended;
for the context, see Chapter10, where the entire quotation appears in note13.
35. Many thanks to Edward Baron Turk for helping me to articulate this formu
lation.
A cknowledgments
I have been thinking about the topic of this book for a dozen years,
and I have been dining out on it extensively. Many people have con
tributed ideas and insights to it, and I have freely helped myself to
their observations and suggestions. So I have a lot of acknowledging
to do.
My earliest and many of my best interlocutors have been at the
University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, which gave me a number of oc-
casions, both formal and informal, to present my work. I am deeply,
proudly, happily indebted to my friends and colleaguesand to the
university as a whole.
Let me highlight in particular the early, formative influence of dis-
cussions I had with Ross Chambers, Valerie Traub, Suzanne Raitt,
Brenda Marshall, Patsy Yaeger, Jill and Tobin Siebers, Nadine Hubbs,
Aric Knuth, Zachary Sifuentes, Brent Armendinger, Jennifer Moon,
Sherri Joyner, LaMont Egle, and Jack Tocco.
Other early, decisive influences on the conceptualization of this
project were Michael Warner, Myra Jehlen, Gay Hawkins, and Jean
Allouch. This book also reflects a number of inspiring discussions I
have had over the years with Lee Monk, David Caron, Didier Eribon,
Mark Simpson, Mandy Merck, Amalia Ziv, Daniel Boyarin, Lauren
Berlant, Linda Williams, Whitney Davis, Candace Vogler, Jill Casid,
Rostom Mesli, Isabelle Chtelet, Sasho Lambevski, Matthieu Dupas,
528 Acknowledgments
Kirk Ormand, David Alderson, Neil Bartlett, Dee Michel, Anne Cur-
zan, Emma Crandall, Zachary Manning, Marie Ymonet, Stephen Or-
gel, Randy Mackie, Kane Race, Susana Bercovich, Michael Forrey,
Damon Young, Marc Siegel, and Martha Nussbaum.
Myra Jehlen was a constant companion and spiritual guide
throughout the entire, extended process of conceptualizing and com-
posing the manuscript; she read and discussed in detail with me many
drafts and many versions from its very inception. The result bears the
imprint of her ideas. I cannot begin to thank her enough.
A great number of other friends and colleagues read versions of
the manuscript, in whole or in part (some of them more than once)
and gave me invaluable advice, help, courage, cautions, strenuous,
rigorous criticism, and indispensable insight. I am grateful and in-
debted to them in equal measure. For their heroic efforts, I offer eter-
nal thanks to Alison MacKeen, Damon Young, Valerie Traub, Paul
Morrison, Pier Dominguez, Michael Warner, and Marie Ymonet. I
have also been considerably helped and inspired by the readings and
critiques of Peter Gosik, D.Nathaniel Smith, Matthew Chess, Logan
Scherer, Gregg Crane, Mark Simpson, Marc Siegel, Esther Newton,
Nadine Hubbs, Martha Nussbaum, Gayle Rubin, Aaron Boalick, June
Howard, and Jill Casid.
%
It is conventional in the acknowledgments section of academic books
for professors to thank their students for stimulating their thinking,
or some such thing. My situation is rather different. This book
emerges directly from a series of five workshops that took the form
of college classes and that provided me with an opportunity to test
out the ideas in this book as they evolved over an extended period of
time. I have worked out my thinking in close, intense, and often con-
tentious collaboration with dozens of students. Some of those stu-
dents will, I hope, have recognized the words, thoughts, or ideas of
theirs that I have not hesitated to appropriate for my own purposes: I
can bring to mind specific instances in which this book has quoted,
Acknowledgments 529
%
My thinking has been tried out on, and much altered by, the audi-
ences who responded to lectures I gave on various topics related to
this book, in such different venues as the Ecole Lacanienne de Psycha-
nalyse in Paris; the Ecole Lacanienne de Psychanalyse in Strasbourg;
the Centre National dArt et de Culture Georges Pompidou in Paris;
the Maison de lHomosocialit in Bordeaux; the conference Homo
sexuality 2000 in Oslo; the annual convention of the National Coun-
cil of Teachers of English, which met that year in Milwaukee; the
annual convention of the American Anthropological Association,
which met that year in New Orleans; the annual conference on Gen-
der Studies of the Programa Universitario de Estudios de Gnero
at the Universidad Nacional Autnoma de Mxico; the 2nd Annual
530 Acknowledgments
%
In order to help me complete this book, the Institute for the Humani-
ties at the University of Michigan awarded me a John Rich Professor-
ship and Michigan Faculty Fellowship. The John Simon Guggenheim
Memorial Foundation also gave me a fellowship. The College of Lit-
erature, Science, and the Arts at the University of Michigan gave me
two leaves from teaching (including a Michigan Humanities Award)
as well as a sabbatical, plus salary support to supplement the Guggen-
heim Fellowship, so as to enable me to spend an entire year complet-
ing the manuscript. I am deeply grateful for all this financial assis-
tance, and particularly to the late John Rich. I wish to express heartfelt
thanks to the Institute for the Humanities, to the Guggenheim Foun-
dation, to the Department of English Language and Literature, and
to the College of LSA at the University of Michigan. I feel extraordi-
narily fortunate to have had colleagues and patrons who believed
from the beginning in this wacky project of mine and who gener-
ously supported it. Every academic should be so lucky.
%
I would like to thank the editors of Michigan Feminist Studies, Michigan
Quarterly Review, Photofile (Sydney), and LUnebvue (Paris) for giving
me the chance to explore my ideas in earlier articles. In addition, John
J. Cleary, George E. Haggerty, Molly McGarry, Katherine ODonnell,
Michael ORourke, and Daniel C. Shartin were kind enough to in-
clude some of my previous writings on related topics in various col-
lected volumes. Valerie Traub and I collaborated on an essay which
anticipated some of the thinking presented here, while Leo Bersani
and Michael Lucey participated in a co-authored volume in which
I speculated about the gay appeal of Joan Crawford. And Mathieu
532 Acknowledgments
%
Matt Johnson, Chad Thomas, Mira Bellwether, Matthew Chess, and
Logan Scherer helped me in various ways, as well as giving me
prompt and crucial assistance in locating hard-to-access materials,
and Jim Leija saved me from a couple of embarrassing errors.
Maria Ascher copy-edited the manuscript with sympathy, insight,
kindness, flexibility, acuity, skill, and tact. Shanshan Wang shepherded
it through publication. Lisa Roberts deserves credit for the typeface
and the brilliant design, both inside and out. Kathryn Blatt proofread
the first print version and gave me the benefit of eyes sharper than
mine. Andrew Rubenfeld also scrutinized the page proofs, and I am
greatly indebted to him for the comprehensive index. Lindsay Waters
encouraged me, welcomed the book proposal, and entered into the
spirit of the project. I am grateful to all of them, and to everyone at
Harvard University Press, for an easy, enjoyable, and efficient collabo-
ration.
%
The epigraph to the book comes from Albert T. Mollegen, Christian
ity and Modern Man: The Crisis of Secularism (Indianapolis,IN: Bobbs-
Merrill, 1961), 30. The quotation purports to be a paraphrase of Saint
Augustine, though nothing in the writings of Augustine exactly cor-
Acknowledgments 533
responds to it. I am grateful to the late Bill Clebsch for citing the
phrase to me and to Mark Jordan for identifying its source.
%
Finally, I want to express my deep appreciation to Wouter Vanden-
brink. As soon as I saw his brilliant photographic series gayboy walk-
ing (after Eadweard Muybridge), in an open-air installation in Am-
sterdam, I knew I wanted it for the cover of my book. Wouter
generously, graciously, and immediately gave me his permission to
reproduce it. (I should point out that the series is linear in the origi-
nalone long set of horizontal panels.) I am also grateful to Wouters
model, Roy Seerden, for agreeing to allow me to use his image to il-
lustrate the argument at the core of this booknamely, that social
forms are things in themselves.
What I particularly love about this photographic series is its camp
essentialismits invocation of time-lapse photography to fix the mo-
tion of a gay male body in its social and formal particularity, defying
the spectators anxieties (or certainties) about stereotypes. I also love
its daring, ironic, if somewhat more distant citation of the ghastly
genre of Victorian medical photography, which documented the
physical symptoms of masturbators, hysterics, and other perverted
personalities, so that psychiatric experts could diagnose their condi-
tions by recognizing, inscribed on their very bodies, the signs of pa-
thology. Here the artistand, by the way, I have no idea if Wouter
Vandenbrink would agree with this interpretationhas taken up that
visual technology, with its characteristic blend of clinical objectivity
and pornographic curiosity, both to extend it and to defy its patholo-
gizing effects, to celebrate the loving irony with which gay men rec-
ognize gayness in one another and scrutinize the appearance of every
man they know to be gay for corroborating signs of gayness. The re-
sult is to offer us a lyrical and tender vision of a gay male body and of
some of the markers that might enable viewers to identify it as gay,
without reducing it to that marking or implying that the gestures in
which we might read the subjects gayness necessarily define either it
534 Acknowledgments
190; democratic nature of, 188, 191, 208, 211, Comedy. See Tragedy/comedy aspects
236, 239, 381; and morality, 190191, 195, 237; Coming out, 38, 254, 436
no exemption allowed, 191, 193, 201, 396, Competition, 244245
397; apolitic al nature of, 193195, 234; and Conformity, 4849, 287, 441, 451
style, 193195, 235, 316, 365, 397; use of term, Confusion Is Sex album, 386
201, 205, 263; and beauty, 202208, 210211, Congress, U.S., 115, 244
218, 235, 288, 295; and femininity, 204205, Conley, Tom, 514n2
208, 210211; and masculinity, 204205, 208, Conservatives, 34, 6, 57, 436
210211; as resistance, 217218; and taste, Consumerism, 120, 322, 393, 426
237238, 497n15; and melodrama, 248, 278 Cooper, Anderson, 122
279, 281, 283, 295, 502n2, 518n18; and ro- Cooper, Dennis, 425
mantic love, 288, 293295; as subcultural Coppola, Sophia, 389395
practice, 422, 426, 485n13 Cotten, Joseph, 20, 2223
Cantor, Nancy, 31 Counter-acculturation, 7, 325, 513n1
Capote, Truman, 417 Counterpublic, 374, 463n26, 521n2
Carey, Mariah, 14, 389, 518n16 Countertenors, 8287
Caron, David, 190, 192 Counter-thematics, 235, 364365, 375
Carpenter, Edward, The Intermediate Sex, 304, Covering, 72, 410411, 473nn3,5
314 Coward, Nol, 243, 423
Carpenter, Karen, 389, 518n16 Crawford, Christina, Mommie Dearest, 159, 346
Carter, David, 506n18 Crawford, Joan, 140, 149179, 181, 211, 234, 248,
Carter, Judy, The Homo Handbook, 35 251259, 262, 265, 280281, 288, 290, 294
Castrati, 8384 295, 297298, 301, 317, 319320, 329, 331, 348,
Castro district, 40, 51, 66, 69, 414, 470n28 354, 359, 362363, 366, 379, 387395, 403407,
Cather, Willa, Pauls Case, 212215, 226228, 415416, 418, 423
240, 492nn1617, 493nn2122 Creative class, 1112
Census, U.S., 460n11 Crimmins, Cathy, How the Homosexuals Saved
Chamberlain, Richard, 425 Civilization, 35
Chambers, Ross, 131, 481nn78, 485n13, 491n1 Crimp, Douglas, 296297, 474n12, 475n16,
Charlies Angels: Full Throttle, 380 486n18, 505n14
Chauncey, George, 47 Critical race theory, 65
Chaz/Chastity, 316 Cross-identification, 257258, 372
Cher, 14, 314 Crowley, Mart, The Boys in the Band, 203204
Chicago, Ill., 138 Cruising, 118
Chick, Steve, 387 Cukor, George, 40, 142
Chin, Staceyann, 426 Cultural attributes, 472n51
Christian Right, 26, 55, 57, 78, 115, 311, 443 Cultural categories (groups), 347349
Civil/human rights, 26, 29, 70, 72, 117, 411, Cultural coding, 12, 18, 24, 98, 112, 116, 148,
432, 443, 447, 452 180, 217, 257, 282, 336, 380, 417418, 426
Civil unions, 29 Cultural differences, 10, 62, 64, 71, 77, 130131,
Class. See Social class 138, 265
Classical music, 3637, 8287 Cultural dissidence, 179
Clinton, Bill, 65 Cultural domination, 452
Clones, 48, 5051, 5455, 205, 470nn28,39 Cultural forms, 10, 12, 1516, 3638, 91, 98, 101,
Closet, 33, 77, 80, 86, 95, 99100, 116, 119, 217, 112114, 137, 249250, 260, 277, 318, 336, 339
320321, 410, 473n3, 476n4 340, 343, 346347, 352, 354, 377, 396, 401, 421
Clum, John, 12, 63, 90, 107, 191, 211, 243, 303, 424, 432, 456457; sexual politics of, 1516,
313, 337338, 349, 409410, 475n1, 477n5, 403, 407
478nn1617, 498n23, 516n14 Cultural grammar, 405
Cobain, Kurt, 387, 517n11 Cultural identification, 124, 338, 350
Coding. See Cultural coding; Gender coding; Cultural identity, 175, 338, 394
Sexual coding; Social coding Cultural imperialism, 385
538 Index
Cultural meaning, 65, 89, 130, 250, 273, 337, Davis, Bette, 9, 2024, 140, 317, 406407
355358 Day, Doris, 16
Cultural norms, 448452 Dean, James, 16
Cultural objects, 7, 10, 12, 16, 18, 24, 37, 66, 89, Deception, 406
98, 112, 119, 123125, 147148, 180, 188, 232, DeGrant, Bre, 413414
235236, 325, 331, 336, 346, 354359, 365367, Delany, Samuel, 344345, 425
375, 395, 401, 403, 416418, 424 Democratic Party, 65
Cultural orientation, 10, 1213, 223, 352353 Denby, David, 150, 301
Cultural performance, 187 Denial, 42, 62, 65, 108, 187, 416
Cultural perversion, 114 Derealization, 105, 200, 218, 381, 383
Cultural poetics, 137138, 188, 337, 343, 346347, Derfner, Joel, Swish, 35
351352, 407 Design. See Architectural design; Interior de-
Cultural politics, 297 sign
Cultural power, 217 Desire. See Sexual desire
Cultural practices, 710, 1213, 1618, 25, 3435, Desperate Housewives, 112, 349, 428
3738, 46, 50, 61, 63, 65, 74, 77, 85, 87, 89, 90, Detroit News, 29
99, 125, 130, 134, 148, 175, 202, 218219, 223, Deviance, 4348, 50, 53, 58, 61, 71, 7577, 8485,
257, 277, 301302, 308, 313, 316, 319, 320, 322, 206, 224, 306, 319, 321, 334, 455, 466n10
324, 327, 330331, 334337, 347, 349, 351352, Diana, Princess of Wales, 405
354, 367, 375377, 381, 384385, 388, 395, 402, Dickens, Charles, The Old Curiosity Shop, 140,
404, 415, 418, 424, 426, 456 181, 277
Cultural pragmatics, 131132, 134, 136, 138139 Dietrich, Marlene, 16
Cultural specificity, 64, 74, 137 Differences. See Cultural differences; Gender
Cultural studies, 89, 151, 472n52 differences; Sexual differences; Social dif-
Cultural theft, 184 ferences
Cultural theory, 247 Dignity, 39, 58, 75, 79, 94, 158, 180185, 187, 192,
Cultural values, 135, 192, 337339, 376, 423 194, 200, 207208, 211212, 217, 241, 246, 251,
Culture: minority, 7, 17, 6465, 72, 115, 136137, 265, 279, 282283, 285, 291293, 306, 311, 325
234, 324, 364, 395, 472n51; straight (main- 326, 378, 382, 385, 450451
stream), 7, 10, 12, 16, 18, 24, 26, 37, 41, 110, DiLallo, Kevin, The Unofficial Gay Manual, 35
114, 118119, 121125, 129, 147148, 174176, Dinkins, David, 295296
179180, 187, 197, 199200, 203, 232, 257, 318 Disavowal, 42, 88, 186, 219, 394
319, 324325, 335, 346, 352, 370, 374, 388, 392 Disco, 114115
393, 395, 401, 404, 417418, 421426, 430, 432, Discourse, 1415, 131132, 135138, 188, 201202,
436, 453, 456457; transnational, 1718; and 293, 338347, 351352, 355, 367, 481n7
subjectivity, 31, 56, 74, 102, 124, 129, 136, 181, Discrimination, 64, 7071, 119, 413, 441, 448
209, 323324, 336, 350, 405407, 422, 456457; 449
popular (mass), 76, 92, 102103, 105, 118119, Diseased Pariah News, 143145
124125, 254, 345, 373, 401, 476n4; and sexual- Disempowerment, 182183, 277, 379
ity, 91, 223; and genre, 129148; use of term, Dis-identification, 98, 189, 258, 265266, 396
129135, 347349; youth, 135, 410; queerness Dissidence, 179, 317318, 325
of, 456457. See also Gay male culture; Les- Divas, 9, 3738, 40, 90, 123, 191, 206, 230, 252
bian culture; Subculture 253, 290, 307, 314, 334, 349, 379, 406407, 426
Cunningham, Michael, The Hours, 422 Dixon, Melvin, 425
Curtiz, Michael, 149, 154155, 232, 360361 Dominguez, Pier, 488n15, 515n12
Dowd, Maureen, 443
Dalida, 17 Drag, 107, 193, 205, 302, 408, 422; changing at-
Damron guides, 440 titudes toward, 48, 117; performance, 142
Dancing Queen, 135 143, 168174, 179180, 196, 199, 202, 206, 211,
Daniels, David, 8288, 100, 305, 475n1 217, 291, 317, 319, 383384, 486n20
Dark Victory, 406 Drag queens, 47, 138140, 159, 183, 204, 210,
Dassin, Jules, 262 253, 255256, 205, 392393
Index 539
Gay aesthetics. See Aesthetics, gay 115, 117, 134, 158, 209210, 212215, 217, 303,
Gayellow Pages, 440 307309, 352353, 419
Gay experience, 93 Gay sexuality. See Sexuality, gay
Gay femininity. See Femininity, gay Gay studies, 109
Gay ghettos, 25, 3839, 4851, 410, 433439 Gay subjectivity. See Subjectivity, gay
Gay Icons exhibition, 12 Geffen, David, 387
Gay identification. See Identification, gay Gender, 217; and subjectivity, 8, 62, 307, 319
Gay identity. See Identity, gay 320, 328, 332335; and sexuality, 15, 46, 48, 55,
Gay liberation, 3841, 4748, 52, 64, 7475, 79, 59, 64, 148, 260, 304, 308, 313315, 317, 327
91, 95, 109, 113, 205206, 229, 254, 292, 308, 328, 333334, 336337, 342, 344, 351352, 354,
328329, 349, 422423, 427428, 431432, 434, 356359, 367; intermediate, 304305, 309,
440, 443, 454, 470n30 311313, 319, 328, 333334, 353; use of term,
Gay lifestyle, 56, 11, 19, 2629, 60, 93, 311, 323 313314
Gay male culture, 8, 10, 24, 3132, 3639, 43, 63, Gender atypicality, 6162, 303304, 313, 317319,
98, 109110, 112, 114, 232, 240, 301, 303, 401, 334335, 338
408, 420421, 425, 428, 448449, 451, 455, Gender-blurring, 84, 86
457; acquisition of, 67, 19, 2526, 122, 347, Gender coding, 245, 302, 313, 334, 336339, 343,
351, 369, 416; and femininity, 8, 50, 252, 256, 351, 355, 357358, 367, 373, 375
336, 372, 378386, 392, 397; diversity/creativ- Gender deviance, 43, 46, 50, 8485
ity of, 1112, 78, 138; and lesbian culture, Gender differences, 265, 318
1618, 81; changes in, 4041, 50, 5556, 91, Gender dissidence, 317318, 336, 339
206, 415, 417, 433439, 441442; no need for, Gender dissonance, 334, 341
4142, 117121, 410412; opposition to, 57 Gender forms, 344
58, 60, 62, 64, 66, 7778, 116117, 216, 218 Gender hierarchy, 306
219, 305, 433; new opportunities for, 8182; Gender identity, 4344, 49, 59, 205, 218, 243
and genre, 129, 132133, 135138, 140, 147 244, 246, 296, 303304, 308309, 324, 328329,
148, 175; and tragedy, 145, 182, 208209, 212, 332, 335336, 338, 343, 346, 353354, 356357,
277; and Joan Crawford, 152, 158159, 174, 372, 384385
212, 234, 248, 255259, 288, 359, 393, 404407; Gender inversion, 4346, 61, 84, 302, 304, 306,
and camp, 179, 183, 193, 210211, 217, 234, 328, 334, 466n10
265, 295, 380; performance in, 199200, 268; Gender meaning, 15, 24, 38, 319, 337, 357359,
and beauty, 207208, 210211, 239; aristo- 367, 370
cratic tendencies, 226, 239; and sexual de- Gender norms, 4950, 54, 84, 301, 307, 449
sire, 230231, 238, 329, 331, 452; and style, Gender orientation, 304, 310, 322, 327, 329, 332,
235, 239, 315, 375; and melodrama, 282283, 335, 337, 343, 354
298, 378; and romantic love, 285, 288, 293 Gender performance, 49, 107, 242245, 247
295; and gay femininity, 306, 317320, 375; 250, 256, 384
and taste, 310; identity art in, 418419; as Gender polarities, 49, 5152, 184, 204205, 313
subculture, 422424, 426427, 432, 456 314, 318, 375
Gay man, use of term, 8, 16 Gender politics, 252, 393
Gay masculinity. See Masculinity, gay Gender practices, 64
Gay meaning, 7, 12, 18, 37, 112, 123, 174 Gender roles, 8, 4749, 5356, 205, 218, 302,
Gay media, 74, 434, 438439, 441 304, 317318, 332333, 377, 383384, 428
Gayness, 1013, 18, 36, 46, 49, 56, 61, 66, 70, 78, Gender style, 44, 4851, 55, 5758, 62, 86, 205,
8485, 90, 92, 100101, 104, 106, 114, 133, 196, 307, 328, 355, 416, 435437
228, 285, 303, 308, 311, 329331, 412, 417, 448 Gender values, 217, 339, 370
Gay News, 49 Gender variance, 62
Gaynor, Gloria, 115 Generational aspects, 3943, 49, 56, 66, 69, 75,
Gay pride, 64, 71, 7475, 77, 92, 9495, 98, 219, 90, 94, 117118, 121122, 174, 218, 250, 261,
401, 413415, 419, 430, 448 281, 325, 348349, 404, 409, 411412, 415419,
Gay sensibility, 7, 10, 18, 38, 63, 74, 77, 8586, 452, 436, 440
Index 541
Genet, Jean: The Maids, 199, 422; Querelle, 216 Hegarty, Antony, 80
Genre, 92, 101, 103, 175, 223, 263, 275, 278, 282 Hegel, G. W. F., 297298
283, 318, 344, 347, 352, 355, 365, 367, 370, 403, Hemphill, Essex, 425
407, 481nn6,7; of discourse, 1415, 131, 135 Henley, Clark, The Butch Manual, 50, 54
138, 293, 351; and culture, 129148; pragmat- Hermeneutics, 364365, 457
ics of, 131132, 294; camp as gay genre, 179, Herring, Scott, 492n16
491n1; melodrama as, 293294, 338343, 345 Heteronormativity, 7, 12, 18, 74, 119, 125, 148,
346 186187, 198, 208, 217218, 241, 248, 260,
Gide, Andr, 422 269, 324325, 331338, 343, 345346, 351, 376
Gifford, James J., 460n9 377, 382, 416, 421, 426, 428, 450457
Gingrich, Newt, 135 Heterosexuality, use of term, 45, 353, 432, 452
Glamour, 38, 140, 191, 215, 225226, 229, 231 Hichens, Robert, The Green Carnation, 493n17
232, 234, 256, 330, 393, 406; and abjection, Hierarchical aesthetics, 208209
152, 158159, 211, 252253, 264, 279, 298, 318 Hierarchy, 5253, 56, 188, 192, 194195, 207, 237,
319, 341, 366, 372, 392, 405, 408; and camp, 239, 282283, 306, 343
202, 204205, 207208; exclusivity of, 238 Highsmith, Patricia, The Price of Salt, 47
240, 277; and melodrama, 279, 298 Hipsters, 388, 393396, 518n21, 519n24
Glenn, Gary, 1920, 2829, 462n23 Hirschfeld, Magnus, 469n22
Globalization, 18 Historic preservation, 61, 302, 309, 314315,
Glck, Robert, 425 329, 350, 354, 423, 499n25
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, 250 Histrionics. See Theatricality
Goffman, Erving, 113 HIV/AIDS, 55, 7881, 141147, 150, 179180,
Golden Apple, The, 502n6 182, 186, 296, 422, 433, 437438, 440, 473n2,
Golden Girls, The, 110111, 118, 123, 258, 349, 428 474n12, 482n19, 523n6
Goo CD, 387388 Hockney, David, 418
Gordon, Kim, 387389, 392 Hocquenghem, Guy, 192, 487n10, 488n19
Gore, Lesley, 145 Holleran, Andrew, 41, 418
Greenfield, Beth, 408409, 419 Hollinghurst, Alan, 425; The Swimming-Pool
Greenwich Village, 491n10 Library, 118
Greyson, John, 145 Holocaust, 146
Grindr app, 414415, 440 Homer: Iliad, 261, 269271, 274, 502nn4,6;
Gurganus, Allan, 425 Odyssey, 503n6
Gypsy, 105, 112, 242, 247248, 367, 426427 Homophobia, 15, 26, 4142, 52, 56, 60, 65, 71,
100, 115116, 119120, 124, 135, 149, 195196,
Habitus, 86, 131, 489n24 217, 232, 283, 296, 305307, 311, 320321, 329,
Haggerty, George, 228 411, 432, 446447; internalized, 39, 310, 328,
Hall, Radclyffe, The Well of Loneliness, 409, 429430, 465n3; and HIV/AIDS, 78, 80
422 Homosexuality: as deviance, 4348, 50, 53, 58,
Hall, Stuart, 338 61, 71, 7577, 8485, 206, 224, 306, 319, 321,
Halliday, M. A. K., 480n3 334, 455, 466n10; use of term, 4446, 60, 70
Halperin, David M., What Do Gay Men Want? 71, 75, 84, 99, 107, 213214, 223, 303304, 311
89, 460n16, 473n1 312, 322323, 329, 353, 432, 452, 466n10,
Harding, Tonya, 405 468n16, 469n22, 506n6; of one, 9698, 121
Harris, Craig G., 150151 Houston, Whitney, 14
Harris, Daniel, 422; The Rise and Fall of Gay Howard, John, 76
Culture, 35, 7374, 117, 463n26, 498n19 How To Be Gay: Male Homosexuality and
Hay, Harry, 304 Initiation, 46, 1820, 2635, 5759, 62,
Haynes, Todd, 416 109111, 118, 123, 305, 402, 411, 425, 462n23
Heather Has Two Mommies, 345 How To Be Gay 101, 4
Heathers, 149 Hudson, Rock, 16
Hebdige, Dick, 364 Human rights. See Civil/human rights
542 Index
Psychoanalysis, 89, 125, 250, 260, 320, 353, 416 218, 237, 260, 318, 325, 367378, 380, 394395,
Psychological approaches, 11, 15, 4345, 61, 71, 397, 428, 430, 441, 455
75, 77, 84, 100, 125, 250, 257258, 302, 304, Reuter, Donald, Gaydar, 35
309, 320321, 325, 328, 337, 353, 407, 442 Richardson, John, 468n21
Puccini, Giacomo, Tosca, 370 Richardson, Samuel, Clarissa, 276
Puig, Manuel: The Buenos Aires Affair, 124; Kiss Ridiculous Theatrical Company, 141, 394
of the Spider Woman, 231232, 237 Rocky Horror Picture Show, The, 115
Punk rock, 386395 Rodman, Dennis, 245
Purdy, James, 425 Roles. See Gender roles; Sexual roles; Social
roles
Queens, 50, 58, 83, 95, 202, 294, 297, 305, 330, Romantic love, 53, 56, 9798, 121, 206207,
342, 487n9; older gay men as, 39, 41, 43, 66, 229230, 283, 289290, 324, 331; and irony,
69, 207, 218, 329, 412; drag, 47, 138140, 159, 284286, 293294; and authenticity, 285,
183, 204, 210, 253, 255256, 295, 392393; and 287, 293294; in gay male culture, 285, 288,
trade, 51, 56, 205, 208209, 214, 292, 307, 372 293295; and camp, 288, 293295; as perfor-
Queens Pride parade, 419420 mance, 294
Queer, use of term, 8, 15, 76, 78, 103, 417, 454 Rousseau, Jean-Jacques, 250
Queer affect, 66, 7982, 8587, 9395, 99100, Rubin, Larry, 493nn21,22
105 Rudnick, Paul, 409
Queer as Folk, 112, 428 RuPauls Drag Race, 10, 117
Queer Eye for the Straight Guy, 10, 76, 118, 310 Russo, Vito, 295296; The Celluloid Closet, 295
Queer identity, 60 Ryder, Winona, 149
Queering, 16, 110, 112, 114, 148, 325, 376, 418
Queerness, 46, 7374, 112114, 196, 241, 285, Saddam Hussein, 370371
396, 446, 456 Sainz, Fred, 443444
Queer studies, 63, 8890, 308 Salon.com, 413414
Queer style, 5354, 60, 113, 206 San Francisco, Calif., 26, 40, 4851, 53, 66, 69,
Queer theory, 54, 6264, 89, 124125, 219, 403, 150, 159, 414415, 434, 437438, 440, 470n28,
472n47 523n9
Queerty website, 413 Sartre, Jean-Paul, 402; Saint Genet, 200, 237,
Querelle, 216 456, 492n13, 525n34
Quinn, Christine, 447448 Savin-Williams, Ritch C., 415, 520n6
Quotation, 124, 195 Scherer, Logan, 116
Schrag, Ariel, 418, 426
Racism, 14, 133, 234, 411, 433 Schuyler, James, 468n21
Radical Faeries, 304 Schwartz, Matthew S., 4, 19
Ramirez, Enrique, 160 Scott, Zachary, 233
Raw Deal, 514n2 Sedgwick, Eve Kosofsky, 188
Raymundo, Oscar, 413 Self-exemption, 187189, 193, 201203, 291, 297
Rayter, Scott Alan, 145, 482n19 Self-hatred, 39, 48, 51, 65, 465n3
Reappropriation, 122, 147148, 184, 258, 288, Semiotics, 260, 333336, 359, 457
381, 386, 395, 426 Sendak, Maurice, 425
Rechy, John, 425 Sensibility. See Gay sensibility
Reciprocity, 5154 Sentimentality, 56, 9295, 99101, 103, 106, 140,
Recruitment, 6, 26, 2829, 323, 462n23 142, 147, 179, 188189, 208, 228, 267, 275277,
Renault, Mary, The Charioteer, 47 279280, 291, 326
Ren, Norman, Longtime Companion, 307 September 11th terrorist attacks, 284
Rent, 76, 112, 345 1776, 296
Reperformance, 152, 174, 183184, 280 Sex and the City, 112, 417418
Repression, 39, 95 Sexism, 89, 184, 208, 232, 308, 376, 383, 395, 397,
Republican Party, 3, 2628 411, 440
Resistance, 8, 24, 48, 80, 122, 179, 181182, 217 Sexology, 11, 4345
Index 547
Sophocles: Antigone, 297; Electra, 261262; 1415, 31, 51, 56, 62, 66, 69, 7475, 77, 82, 85
Oedipus Rex, 261 86, 88, 90, 9394, 96, 100, 102103, 105106,
Sound of Music, The, 346 115, 122, 124125, 181, 199, 205, 209210, 212,
South Pacific, 9596, 112, 305 319320, 323, 327, 349350, 376, 402, 405407,
Specificity, 8, 15, 37, 64, 74, 129, 137, 249, 257, 422, 448, 457; and gender, 8, 62, 307, 319
354, 405, 416, 448, 454 320, 328, 332335; and sexuality, 13, 43, 71, 94,
Spender, Stephen, 290291 205, 330331, 335, 353354, 356; distinct from
Spirituality, 304, 330331 psychology, 1415, 100, 125, 250, 258, 320
Sports, 9, 59, 243246, 349, 367370, 372374, 321, 325, 337338, 407, 460n16, 481n7, 498n18;
396, 500n6, 516n14 and culture, 31, 56, 74, 102, 124, 129, 136, 181,
Staggs, Sam, 484n7, 501n1 209, 323324, 336, 350, 405407, 422, 456457;
Stanley, David, 145 and identity, 51, 6972, 75, 78, 90, 94, 96, 103,
Star Is Born, A, 28 105, 124, 210, 247248, 350; straight, 125, 334,
Steel Magnolias, 110111 456457; and aesthetics, 226, 228
Stefani, Gwen, 14 Suffering, 70, 7980, 180, 182183, 184, 186188,
Stereotypes, 9, 14, 26, 48, 5661, 6365, 9091, 192, 200, 219, 224, 274, 279280, 289, 291,
130, 141, 234, 305306, 314, 328, 374, 381, 397 326, 378, 384, 405406, 408
Stevenson, Edward Irenaeus, Imre, 460n9, Sullivan, Andrew, 118119, 258, 432, 447
468n20 Sumac, Yma, 235
Stigma, 46, 7273, 88, 113, 115, 119, 181, 192, 195 Sunset Boulevard, 28
196, 207, 219, 247, 283, 311, 345, 380, 410, 430, Superiority, 133, 192, 208, 226228, 238239,
443, 489n21 277279, 443
Stonewall riots, 38, 253254, 295, 297, 305, 331, Supreme Court, U.S., 29
501n3, 506n18; post-, 4748, 5152, 5455, 57, Sydney, Australia, 23, 25, 484n24
5960, 62, 64, 66, 91, 9395, 99, 109, 122, 257, Sydney Star Observer, 2021, 2325, 146
292, 304, 306, 308, 328329, 334, 349, 409, 417,
425, 427428, 477n9; pre-, 56, 64, 81, 9192, Take a Chance on Me, 135
95, 105, 121, 123, 208, 418, 477n9 Tamassia, Arrigo, 43
Straight-acting and -appearing gay men, 46 Taste, 1011, 15, 3940, 188, 235, 237239, 277,
47, 49, 5859, 196197, 205 279, 304, 310, 316, 326, 349, 357359, 365, 513n1
Strait-Jacket, 149 Taylor, Elizabeth, 21
Strauss, Richard, Der Rosenkavalier, 16 Techno music, 113114
Streisand, Barbra, 98 Theatricality, 53, 181, 184, 187, 195, 199, 210,
Stuff White People Like website, 396 218, 225, 243, 246, 248, 251, 256, 264, 266
Style, 10, 12, 15, 3638, 53, 77, 105, 148, 198, 206, 269, 274, 279280, 284, 291, 325, 373, 384, 457
231, 253, 256, 282, 302, 310, 326, 349, 351352, Thelma and Louise, 174
423, 457, 498n18; meaning of, 3738, 148, Third sex. See Intermediate (third) sex
193199, 235237, 282, 355, 357, 359367, 370 Thomas, June, 435, 439440, 459n4, 524n10
375, 407, 465n2, 513n2, 514n3, 515nn6,7; gen- Thorne, Beowulf ( Jack Henry Foster), 143,
der, 44, 4851, 5758, 62, 86, 205, 307, 328, 182, 186, 203
355, 416, 435437; masculine, 44, 194, 196, Time Out New York, 401, 408409, 412, 416419,
436; sexual, 51, 5455, 355; and camp, 193 426427
195, 235, 316, 365, 397; and performance, Titanic, 324
196197; and beauty, 235237, 239; in gay Tommasini, Anthony, 8288, 100, 305
male culture, 235, 239, 315, 375; and aesthet- Torch songs, 9, 39, 123, 337, 423
ics, 356, 363365, 407; hipster, 394395; as its Torch Song Trilogy, 118
own thing, 514n3 To the Last Man, 216217, 494n26
Styne, Jule, 105 Trade, 51, 56, 205, 208209, 214, 292, 307, 372,
Subculture, 57, 72, 93, 202, 364, 394, 422424, 491n9
426427, 432, 437, 455456, 485n13 Tragedy/comedy aspects, 40, 175, 187, 263,
Subjectivity, 89, 99, 104, 158, 250, 257, 270, 302, 272, 282, 393, 503n1; laughing at tragic situa-
325, 327, 342343, 345, 377, 453; gay, 78, 12, tions, 138139, 141, 145, 147148, 152, 159, 186,
Index 549
188, 208, 218, 277, 326; of drag queens, 138 Walker, Kara, 146, 483n22
140, 143, 148, 217; of degraded femininity, Ward, Chris, 216217, 494n26
140, 181182, 212, 264; and camp, 141, 143, Warner, Michael: Fear of a Queer Planet, 63,
200, 202, 263; and pathos, 142143, 187, 279, 451452, 454, 524n24, 525n26; The Trouble
283, 291, 326, 375, 378; and HIV/AIDS, 143, with Normal, 73, 7677, 191192, 287, 449
145, 180; and Joan Crawford, 152, 181, 212, 452, 487n9
218, 263, 265, 288; and authenticity, 192, Warner Brothers, 22, 233
273275, 282284; classical background, Washington Times, 19
261262, 269, 273; and melodrama, 262, Weir, John, 310, 425
274276, 278280, 297, 338, 342343 Welch, Denton, 236, 493n22, 495nn4,5, 496n9,
Transcendence, 73, 93, 95, 207, 452 497n13
Transgender, 43, 49, 64, 86, 302, 305, 307308, Westphal, Carl Friedrich Otto, 4344
327329, 386, 409, 444447, 469n22 What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? 140, 149, 317,
Transnational, 1718 406
Transphobia, 62, 307 White, Edmund, 123, 305306, 418, 428, 454
Triangle Foundation, 26 455; The Gay Philosopher, 507n11; The Joy
Trivialization, 181, 187, 193195, 200, 292, 294, of Gay Sex, 5152, 424, 470n30
306, 383 Whitman, Walt, 53, 422
Tsiolkas, Christos, 425 Whittier-Ferguson, John, 31
Tully, Peter, 146, 483n21 Widows. See Italian widows
Turner, Lana, 339, 341342, 512n14 Wigstock, 168, 175
Turney, Catherine, 232233 Wigstock: The Movie, 169174
Wilde, Oscar, 140, 214, 216, 228, 277, 362, 405,
Ulrichs, Karl Heinrich, 43, 469n22 423424, 493n17, 504n3; The Picture of
University of Michigan, 35, 9, 16, 1920, 25 Dorian Gray, 230
34, 57, 109 Will and Grace, 76, 345
Upper class, 183, 207, 226, 228, 236, 238240, Williams, Raymond, 459n3
277278, 318, 326, 408, 416 Winfrey, Oprah, 405
U.S. News & World Report, 5 Winslet, Kate, 416
Women, 19, 43, 211, 235, 241, 256, 262, 306, 316,
Values. See Aesthetic values; Cultural values; 318, 325, 411; and gay men, 8, 38, 333, 377
Family values; Gender values; Sexual val- 386, 397; and Joan Crawford, 152, 174, 181
ues; Social values 182, 233, 252, 265, 301, 317; and melodrama,
Vanity Bear, 146 265, 274, 291, 298. See also Femininity; Les-
Verdi, Giuseppe: Aida, 369374, 396; La Tra- bians; Mother figures; Widows
viata, 142 Women, The, 40, 149, 418
Vermont, 29 Woolf, Virginia, 125, 422423
Versatile, 5354 Working class, 264, 409
Victimization, 7981, 152, 182, 234, 253 World War II, 47, 233
Vidal, Gore, The City and the Pillar, 47 Wright, Kai, 427
Vidor, King, 20
Village Voice, 444446 Xanadu, 427
Virility, 49, 53, 58, 205, 216217, 306307, 313,
328, 334 Yoshino, Kenji, 64, 410411, 473nn3,5
Young, Damon, 513n2
Wagner, Richard, 237 Youth culture, 135, 410
Wainwright, Rufus, 122, 314, 417418
Wald, Jerry, 232 Zero Patience, 145