This book investigates the phenomenon of queering in popular music and video, interpreting the music of numerous pop artists, styles, and idioms. The focus falls on artists, such as Lady Gaga, Madonna, Boy George, Diana Ross, Rufus Wainwright, David Bowie, Azealia Banks, Zebra Katz, Freddie Mercury, the Pet Shop Boys, George Michael, and many others. Hawkins builds his concept of queerness upon existing theories of opacity and temporality, which involves a creative interdisciplinary approach to musical interpretation. He advocates a model of analysis that involves both temporal-specific listening and biographic-oriented viewing. Music analysis is woven into this, illuminating aspects of parody, nostalgia, camp, naivety, masquerade, irony, and mimesis in pop music. One of the principal aims is to uncover the subversive strategies of pop artists through a wide range of audiovisual texts that situate the debates on gender and sexuality within an aesthetic context that is highly stylized and ritualized. Queerness in Pop Music also addresses the playfulness of much pop music, offering insights into how discourses of resistance are mediated through pleasure. Given that pop artists, songwriters, producers, directors, choreographers, and engineers all contribute to the final composite of the pop recording, it is argued that the staging of any pop act is a collective project. The implications of this are addressed through structures of gender, ethnicity, nationality, class, and sexuality. Ultimately, Hawkins contends that queerness is a performative force that connotes futurity and utopian promise.
Georgia Graham, “Introducing the Multitalented Queer Artist Going on Tour with Radiohead,” Milk, May 31, 2016, milk.xyz/feature/meet-the -multitalented-queer-artist-going-on-tour-with-radiohead/. 11. GOD IS GAY 1.
This book begins with a comprehensive survey and critical evaluation of relevant literatures on queer identity and political debates as well as popular music, identity and (sub)cultural style.
It is therefore in this pragmatic and not in the semantic function that mocking irony becomes similar to satire.16 ... I want to emphasise again clearly that for a subversive form of irony, the politically sharp 'cutting edge' has to be ...
His dissertation (French Fries in the Tagine: Re-Imaging Moroccan Popular Music) examined alternative trends in Moroccan popular music. In 2002, he was awarded a Fulbright-Hayes fellowship to research popular music in Morocco.
Thank you for remembering. —Alexis Pauline Gumbs, “Evidence” Writer and critic Toni Morrison asserts that the “act of imagination is bound up with memory” (1995, 98). As a scholar primarily interested and invested in black narrative, ...
This book makes a distinctive contribution to studies of gender and sexuality in popular music, and will be of interest to fields including Popular Music Studies, Musicology/Ethnomusicology, Cultural Studies, Queer Studies, and Media ...
This timely collection of essays helps us make sense of our collective pop-culture past even as it points the way toward a joyous, uproarious, near—and very queer—future.
What can such musico-sexual iconography tell us about queer understandings of the human body before 1500? ... Although queer theory was applied to music relatively late in comparison to its adoption elsewhere in the humanities, ...
Lucid, important, and thought-provoking, this book is essential reading for students and scholars of American music, gender and sexuality, class, and pop culture.
"Is our love of pop music innately queer? That's the question Sasha Geffen answers--with a "yes," of course--in this book.