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Queering the South on Screen [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 314 pages, height x width: 229x152 mm, weight: 462 g, 25 b&w photos
  • Sērija : The South on Screen
  • Izdošanas datums: 15-Apr-2020
  • Izdevniecība: University of Georgia Press
  • ISBN-10: 0820356727
  • ISBN-13: 9780820356723
  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 44,24 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 314 pages, height x width: 229x152 mm, weight: 462 g, 25 b&w photos
  • Sērija : The South on Screen
  • Izdošanas datums: 15-Apr-2020
  • Izdevniecība: University of Georgia Press
  • ISBN-10: 0820356727
  • ISBN-13: 9780820356723

Within the realm of American culture and its construction of its citizenry, geography, and ideology, who are southerners and who are queers, and what is the South and what is queerness? Queering the South on Screen addresses these questions by examining the intersections of queerness, regionalism, and identity depicted in film, television, and other visual media about the South during the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.

Southern queers on screen often reflect the fantasy of cultural stereotypes. Editor Tison Pugh contends that when southern queers appear in films and on television, and when southern queers watch these portrayals, the inherent contradictions of these cultural depictions reveal the fault lines of gender, geography, and desire. These underlying schisms point to the infinite, if infrequently portrayed, possibilities of actual queer southern life.

Examining a range of materials, including gothic horror films and drag queens on public-access television, the contributors show that queer southerners have always expressed desires for distinctiveness in the making and consumption of visual media. Read together, the introduction and twelve chapters deconstruct premeditated labels of identity such as queer and southern. In doing so, they expose the reflexive nature of these labels to construct ideological fantasies of southerners regardless of the complexity of their lives.

Introduction: Five Ways of Looking at the Queer South on Screen 1(18)
Tison Pugh
I Queer Adaptations of Southern Authors
Chapter 1 The Redneck Prince and the Queen of Sheba: Labor and Queer Desire in Martin Ritt's The Long, Hot Summer
19(24)
D. Matthew Ramsey
Chapter 2 "The Prison of Our Skin": Orpheus and Antinormativity in The Fugitive Kind
43(24)
David Markus
II The South's Queer Gothicisms
Chapter 3 "Mass Production of Degeneracy": Queer Genre-ship and Southern Gothic Film
67(21)
R. Bruce Brasell
Chapter 4 Revolting Queers: The Southern Gothic in Queer Horror Film and Television
88(25)
Darren Elliott-Smith
III Southern Homosociality and Queer Anxieties
Chapter 5 "We Getting Engaged?": Toxic Masculinity and the Louisiana Marriage in True Detective
113(22)
Jessica Walker
Chapter 6 Working toward a Southern Erostocracy: The Wages of Homosocial Labor in the Magic Mike Films
135(19)
Ted Atkinson
Chapter 7 Perversion on the Plantation: Quentin Tarantino's Django Unchained and Other Queer Antebellum Fantasies
154(21)
Scott Combs
IV Queer Families and Southern Kinship
Chapter 8 The Backward South: Temporal Traversals and Queer Necropolitical Kinships in Dallas Buyers Club
175(19)
Joe Edward Hatfield
Chapter 9 Queer Native Southern Transmissions in Randy Redroad's The Doe Boy
194(19)
Eric Gary Anderson
Chapter 10 Down South at Peckerwood: Mom, Anti-Mom, and Queer Pedagogy in Auntie Mame
213(28)
Jeff Solomon
V Camp and Comedy with Southern Queers
Chapter 11 Southern Manners and Camp Cannibalism in Tennessee Williams's Suddenly, Last Summer
241(18)
Tison Pugh
Chapter 12 "Vienners" at Odum's: DeAundra Peek and the Atlanta Televisual Drag Scene
259(24)
Margaret T. Mcgehee
Selected Bibliography 283(8)
Contributors 291(4)
Index 295
TISON PUGH is Pegasus Professor of English at the University of Central Florida. He is the author of Queer Chivalry: Medievalism and the Myth of White Masculinity in Southern Literature; Precious Perversions: Humor, Homosexuality, and the Southern Literary Canon; and Truman Capote: A Literary Life at the Movies (Georgia).