TagLGBT

“Remarkable Boy … I Think I’ll Eat Your Heart”: Revisiting Hannibal

A film still. A middle-aged white man in a black overcoat embraces by the neck a younger, scruffy-bearded white man wearing a tweed blazer. They appear to be standing in a backlit hallway.

This week, we return to the archive for a post by Molly Cavanaugh, where she discusses the non-traditional erotics of the relationship between Hannibal Lecter and Will Graham. In the same vein as Mark’s posts, which have considered representations of gay relationships in film and television, Molly’s post contemplates the homoerotic tension created between predator and investigator within the...

No True Coming Out: Queer Life in “Please Like Me”

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A promo photo of a young man with ginger hair, wearing a blue-checked button-up and a khaki blazer with an orange carnation in the buttonhole. Behind him, in front of a salmon pink backdrop, stand in a row several people of mixed ages and races, presumably his family, friends, and colleagues. Yellow text, "PLEASE LIKE ME," overs beside his head.

Unlike My Beautiful Launderette, whose narrative refused our identification with Omar and Johnny’s romantic life, the 2013 Australian TV show Please Like Me is structured almost solely around relationships. Queer love and intimacy are a complete spectacle, where most of the narrative (and much of the comedy) comes from Josh’s (Josh Thomas) sometimes awkward —and other times heartedly tepid —...

Dirty Laundry in “My Beautiful Launderette”

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A still from a film: the blue neon sign "POWDERS" on a brick building dominates the image. On man climbs a ladder up to it, and another man is just visible at the bottom of the image.

What does queer media beyond mere representation look like? This week, Mark Muster begins to answer the question that he posed in last week’s post. In a 1986 New York Times interview regarding My Beautiful Launderette (1985), director Stephen Frears notes, “It’s a completely ironic film, isn’t it? We wanted people to have a wonderful time, but to make the film provocative, turning...

What is Wrong with “Gay TV”?

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6 stills of same-sex couples in scenes of intimacy (love or sympathy) from film and television, arranged in a 2x3 grid and overlaid with the rainbow colors of the six-color gay pride flag

Recently, there has been an uptick in the amount of “gay-centric” media created by the mainstream film and television industry. Movies like Call Me by Your Name (2017), Moonlight (2016), Carol (2015), Bohemian Rhapsody (2018), etc. mark a notable shift in LGBT narratives to being not only more mainstream—more desired—but actively produced for recognition among the Hollywood award circuit. In the...

Facebook and Uncanny Identity

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I’m sitting in a meeting at the LGBT Resource Center. It’s Monday night, a few weeks past now. They have a large comfy couch, free pizza, brightly colored artwork on the walls, posters for other events. It’s only six in the evening, but I’m exhausted. Not the I-didn’t-get-enough-sleep-because-coursework kind of tired, but the soul-weary exhaustion that has been my constant companion since...

Sex on the (Game) Table

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I’m going to pivot here from the past two weeks, away from 2000 word theoretical arguments and critical close readings to something a little bit looser. In the process, I also hope to turn away from the world of video games for a little while and towards the cardboard world of the table top. If you’ve been into your local Barnes & Noble on any given day in the past few years, you may have...

PLAYING, WATCHING, WANTING: A SUMMER IN REVIEW

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PART 1 – ICKY WITCHER (4 Sept. 2015) By the time you read this it will have been September for at least a few days. This means, undoubtedly, an endless stream of friends asking what we did this summer. I, having been well trained in the art of back-to-school vacation reporting, dutifully explain that I spent the whole summer preparing for my qualifying exams. This entails reading through 20 books...

Coda: Asexual Awareness Week and the Future of Queer Theory

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Last week, I completed the Safer People, Safer Spaces training my university offers to learn better ways to be an ally, whether you’re a member or a supporter of the queer community. One of the activities we did involved matching vocabulary words (like lesbian, heteronormativity, drag, M2F) to their definitions and then discussing what we learned and what confused us. One of the words was...

Queering LGBT History: The Case of Sherlock Holmes Fanfic

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This summer, I fell for BBC’s “Sherlock” hard1 — hard enough to drive me back to fanfic. Fanfic has grown up in the past decade: it now has activists, “aca-fans” (academic fans), and copyright lawyers, and a nonprofit defending artists’ rights to disseminate transformative works, including fiction. My casual intention to fill the wait till next season with fanfic rapidly developed into academic...

Overwriting History: “Just Reading” and the Case of John Henry Newman

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A painting of John Henry Newman, an old white man in red cardinal's robes and white lace, sitting down

John Henry Newman has been in my Twitter feed a lot lately. Apparently, when this Victorian cardinal wasn’t writing his Apologia Pro Vita Sua, the nineteenth century’s longest and driest autobiography (sorry, Newman), he wrote religious commentary that some people still find instructive. But it wasn’t all that long ago that Newman was in the news for very different reasons. Just before his...

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