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This edited volume is an inquiry into the representation of
intimate relationships in a diverse array of media including
cinema, arts, literature, picture books, advertising and popular
music. It examines artistic portrayal of intimate relationships as
a subversion of the boundaries between the representable and the
non-representable, the real and the surreal, the visceral and the
ideal, the embodied and the abstracted, the configured and
transfigured. The essays focus on artistic mediation of intimacy in
diverse relationships, including heterosexual, same-sex, familial,
sibling' , political, and sadomasochistic. The collection offers
new interdisciplinary and multicultural perspectives on current
trends in the study of popular representations of intimacy;
representations that affect and formulate people's most personal
inspirations, desires, angsts, dreams and nightmares in an
increasingly alienated, industrialized world.
Queer Nostalgia in Cinema and Pop Culture explores popular
representations of queer nostalgia in films, animation and music
videos as means of empowerment, re-evaluating and recreating lost
gay youth, coming to terms with one's sexual otherness and
homoerotic desires, celebrating queer counterculture, and
creatively challenging homophobia, chauvinism, ageism and racism.
In particular, Queer Nostalgia engages in a critical discussion of
nostalgia-in-motion, the significance of 'femininostlagia' (gay
men's effeminate nostalgia), the intricate relationship between
queer nostalgia, martyrdom and emergent queer mythology, the
contribution of nostalgia to 'autoqueerography' (queer
autobiography inspired by women's dissident autobiography or
'autogynography'), and the interrelationship between ethnic and
queer nostalgias.
Straight Skin, Gay Masks and Pretending to Be Gay on Screen
examines cinematic depictions of pretending-to-be-gay, assessing
performances that not only reflect heteronormative and explicitly
homophobic attitudes, but also offer depictions of gay selfhood
with more nuanced multidirectional identifications. The case of
straight protagonists pretending to be gay on screen is the ideal
context in which to study unanticipated progressivity and
dissidence in regard to cultural construction of human sexualities
in the face of theatricalized epistemological collapse. Teasing
apart the dynamics of depictions of both sexual stability and
fluidity in cinematic images of men pretending to be gay offers new
insights into such salient issues as sexual vulnerability and
dynamics and long-term queer visibility in a politically
complicated mass culture which is mostly produced in a
heteronormative and even hostile cultural environment.
Additionally, this book initially examines queer uses of sexuality
masquerade in Alternate Gay World Cinema that allegorically
features a world pretending to be gay, in which straights are
harassed and persecuted, in order to expose the tragic consequences
of sexual intolerance. Films and TV series examined as part of the
analysis include The Gay Deceivers, Victor/Victoria, Happy Texas,
William Friedkin's Cruising and many other straight and gay
screens. This is a fascinating and important study relevant to
students and researchers in Film Studies, Media Studies, Gender
Studies, Queer Studies, Sexuality Studies, Communication Studies
and Cultural Studies.
Providing an inclusive, yet multi- layered perspective on leisure
cultures in dynamic hegemonic, subcultural, and countercultural
communities, this volume investigates the disciplinary and
interdisciplinary aspects of leisure studies in the age of mass
migration, nationalism, cultural wars, and conflicted societies in
Israel. Israeli society has struggled with complicated
geopolitical, intercultural, economic, and security conditions
since the establishment of the State of Israel. Consequently, the
emergent leisure cultures in Israel are vibrant, diversified,
exuberant, and multifaceted, oscillating between Western and Middle
Eastern tendencies. The chapters in this edited volume reflect
dramatic influences of globalization on Israeli traditions, on one
hand, and emergent local practices that reflect a communal quest of
originality and authenticity, on the other hand. This book opens up
a critical perspective on the tension between contested leisure
cultures that are interconnected with spatial and temporal changes
and interchanges. Examining leisure as a part of social,
interethnic, physical, gendered, and sexual changes, the volume is
a key text for scholars and students interested in leisure culture,
Israeli society, education, cultural and media studies, and the
Middle East.
Providing an inclusive, yet multi- layered perspective on leisure
cultures in dynamic hegemonic, subcultural, and countercultural
communities, this volume investigates the disciplinary and
interdisciplinary aspects of leisure studies in the age of mass
migration, nationalism, cultural wars, and conflicted societies in
Israel. Israeli society has struggled with complicated
geopolitical, intercultural, economic, and security conditions
since the establishment of the State of Israel. Consequently, the
emergent leisure cultures in Israel are vibrant, diversified,
exuberant, and multifaceted, oscillating between Western and Middle
Eastern tendencies. The chapters in this edited volume reflect
dramatic influences of globalization on Israeli traditions, on one
hand, and emergent local practices that reflect a communal quest of
originality and authenticity, on the other hand. This book opens up
a critical perspective on the tension between contested leisure
cultures that are interconnected with spatial and temporal changes
and interchanges. Examining leisure as a part of social,
interethnic, physical, gendered, and sexual changes, the volume is
a key text for scholars and students interested in leisure culture,
Israeli society, education, cultural and media studies, and the
Middle East.
Straight Skin, Gay Masks and Pretending to Be Gay on Screen
examines cinematic depictions of pretending-to-be-gay, assessing
performances that not only reflect heteronormative and explicitly
homophobic attitudes, but also offer depictions of gay selfhood
with more nuanced multidirectional identifications. The case of
straight protagonists pretending to be gay on screen is the ideal
context in which to study unanticipated progressivity and
dissidence in regard to cultural construction of human sexualities
in the face of theatricalized epistemological collapse. Teasing
apart the dynamics of depictions of both sexual stability and
fluidity in cinematic images of men pretending to be gay offers new
insights into such salient issues as sexual vulnerability and
dynamics and long-term queer visibility in a politically
complicated mass culture which is mostly produced in a
heteronormative and even hostile cultural environment.
Additionally, this book initially examines queer uses of sexuality
masquerade in Alternate Gay World Cinema that allegorically
features a world pretending to be gay, in which straights are
harassed and persecuted, in order to expose the tragic consequences
of sexual intolerance. Films and TV series examined as part of the
analysis include The Gay Deceivers, Victor/Victoria, Happy Texas,
William Friedkin's Cruising and many other straight and gay
screens. This is a fascinating and important study relevant to
students and researchers in Film Studies, Media Studies, Gender
Studies, Queer Studies, Sexuality Studies, Communication Studies
and Cultural Studies.
This edited volume is an inquiry into the representation of
intimate relationships in a diverse array of media including
cinema, arts, literature, picture books, advertising and popular
music. It examines artistic portrayal of intimate relationships as
a subversion of the boundaries between the representable and the
non-representable, the real and the surreal, the visceral and the
ideal, the embodied and the abstracted, the configured and
transfigured. The essays focus on artistic mediation of intimacy in
diverse relationships, including heterosexual, same-sex, familial,
sibling' , political, and sadomasochistic. The collection offers
new interdisciplinary and multicultural perspectives on current
trends in the study of popular representations of intimacy;
representations that affect and formulate people's most personal
inspirations, desires, angsts, dreams and nightmares in an
increasingly alienated, industrialized world.
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