1- Liberace, Television, and Female Fans: An Exploration in Queer Theory - Jessica Todd, York University
Partie de:
Quand:
4:00 PM, Samedi 25 Mai 2019
(2 heures)
Pauses:
Circuit guidé "Montréal en jazz" 06:00 PM à 08:00 PM (2 heures)
Où:
Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM) -
DS-1525
Comment:
In the fields of
popular music and gender studies, much scholarship has been produced that
deconstructs the normative gender binary by analyzing constructed images of
gender in popular media. Until recently, more scholarship has been produced on
constructed femininity than constructed masculinity. This exploration of the
American actor, singer, and pianist Liberace, a popular performer who rose to
fame due to his television series “The Liberace Show” (1952 - 1955) and was
perhaps best known for the flamboyant costumes during the later part of his
career in the 1970’s and 1980’s, discusses the relationships among the rise of
television as popular entertainment, how Liberace performed (and performed his
masculinity), and his predominantly female fan base, within the framework of
queer theory. Using five short video clips from “The Liberace Show” as
exemplars to support Ashbury Pyron’s substantial research on Liberace, in
conjunction with Freya Jarman-Ivens’ theories about queer masculinities in
popular music, I analyse television as a “feminine” entertainment medium
(against the rigid 1950’s masculine/feminine gender binary) and discuss how
this medium magnified Liberace’s unique masculinity to create an
attraction-identification balance with his heterosexual female fans.