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"A View from the Bottom" offers a major critical reassessment of
male effeminacy and its racialization in visual culture. Examining
portrayals of Asian and Asian American men in Hollywood cinema,
European art film, gay pornography, and experimental documentary,
Nguyen Tan Hoang explores the cultural meanings that accrue to
sexual positions. He shows how cultural fantasies around the
position of the sexual "bottom" overdetermine and refract the
meanings of race, gender, sexuality, and nationality in American
culture in ways that both enable and constrain Asian masculinity.
Challenging the association of bottoming with passivity and
abjection, Nguyen suggests ways of thinking about the bottom
position that afford agency and pleasure. A more capacious
conception of bottomhood--as a sexual position, a social alliance,
an affective bond, and an aesthetic form--has the potential to
destabilize sexual, gender, and racial norms, suggesting an ethical
mode of relation organized not around dominance and mastery but
around the risk of vulnerability and shame. Thus reconceived,
bottomhood as a critical category creates new possibilities for
arousal, receptiveness, and recognition, and offers a new framework
for analyzing sexual representations in cinema as well as
understanding their relation to oppositional political projects.
"A View from the Bottom" offers a major critical reassessment of
male effeminacy and its racialization in visual culture. Examining
portrayals of Asian and Asian American men in Hollywood cinema,
European art film, gay pornography, and experimental documentary,
Nguyen Tan Hoang explores the cultural meanings that accrue to
sexual positions. He shows how cultural fantasies around the
position of the sexual "bottom" overdetermine and refract the
meanings of race, gender, sexuality, and nationality in American
culture in ways that both enable and constrain Asian masculinity.
Challenging the association of bottoming with passivity and
abjection, Nguyen suggests ways of thinking about the bottom
position that afford agency and pleasure. A more capacious
conception of bottomhood--as a sexual position, a social alliance,
an affective bond, and an aesthetic form--has the potential to
destabilize sexual, gender, and racial norms, suggesting an ethical
mode of relation organized not around dominance and mastery but
around the risk of vulnerability and shame. Thus reconceived,
bottomhood as a critical category creates new possibilities for
arousal, receptiveness, and recognition, and offers a new framework
for analyzing sexual representations in cinema as well as
understanding their relation to oppositional political projects.
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