How To Be Gay
豆瓣
David M. Halperin
简介
No one raises an eyebrow if you suggest that a guy who arranges his furniture just so, rolls his eyes in exaggerated disbelief, likes techno music or show tunes, and knows all of Bette Davis’s best lines by heart might, just possibly, be gay. But if you assert that male homosexuality is a cultural practice, expressive of a unique subjectivity and a distinctive relation to mainstream society, people will immediately protest. Such an idea, they will say, is just a stereotype—ridiculously simplistic, politically irresponsible, and morally suspect. The world acknowledges gay male culture as a fact but denies it as a truth.
David Halperin, a pioneer of LGBTQ studies, dares to suggest that gayness is a specific way of being that gay men must learn from one another in order to become who they are. Inspired by the notorious undergraduate course of the same title that Halperin taught at the University of Michigan, provoking cries of outrage from both the right-wing media and the gay press, How To Be Gay traces gay men’s cultural difference to the social meaning of style.
Far from being deterred by stereotypes, Halperin concludes that the genius of gay culture resides in some of its most despised features: its aestheticism, snobbery, melodrama, adoration of glamour, caricatures of women, and obsession with mothers. The insights, impertinence, and unfazed critical intelligence displayed by gay culture, Halperin argues, have much to offer the heterosexual mainstream.
contents
Part One: B+ Could Try Harder
1. Diary of a Scandal
2. History of an Error
Part Two: American Falsettos
3. Gay Identity and Its Discontents
4. Homosexuality’s Closet
5. What’s Gayer Than Gay?
6. The Queen Is Not Dead
Part Three: Why Are the Drag Queens Laughing?
7. Culture and Genre
8. The Passion of the Crawford
9. Suffering in Quotation Marks
10. The Beauty and the Camp
Part Four: Mommie Queerest
11. Gay Family Romance
12. Men Act, Women Appear
13. The Sexual Politics of Genre
14. Tragedy into Melodrama
Part Five: Bitch Baskets
15. Gay Femininity
16. Gender and Genre
17. The Meaning of Style
18. Irony and Misogyny
Part Six: What Is Gay Culture?
19. Judy Garland versus Identity Art
20. Culture versus Subculture
21. Queer Forever
Notes
Acknowledgments
Index