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Flaming Classics: Queering the Film Canon
 
 

Flaming Classics: Queering the Film Canon [Paperback]

Alexander Doty (Author)

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Book Description

041592345X 978-0415923453 May 2000 1
This lively, opinionated, and playful look at the movies is a must-read for film buffs, and for anyone interested in gender, sexuality, and popular culture. One thing's for sure. After reading Flaming Classics you'll know you're definitely not in Kansas anymore.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

In this penetrating and irreverent study, queer theorist Alexander Doty directs a gay gaze at six famous and well-loved films (The Wizard of Oz, The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, The Women, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, Psycho, and The Red Shoes), averring that "the coding of classic or otherwise 'mainstream' texts and personalities can often yield a wider range of non-straight readings because certain sexual things could not be stated baldly." Doty goes on to explain that he puts quotation marks around the term mainstream because he wants to position queerness inside texts and productions: "For me, any text is always already potentially queer." Once readers have gotten past Doty's argumentative and somewhat tortuous preemptive answers to queer critics of his work--some of which originally appeared as responses to criticism in an academic journal--they can luxuriate in his engaging, funny, and acute analyses of these films and his descriptions of the historical contexts in which they were made and first shown. His personal revelations are a joy to read, and his exasperation with uncomprehending others is no less potent a pleasure, as in his repeated complaint that he has been chastised for conducting readings that are "too queer," as if he were "recruiting" straight texts "as part of some nefarious or misguided plan for a queer takeover." In frustration, Doty blurts out that he can't possibly be "the only person who understands the Oz sequences of The Wizard of Oz as the fantasy of a teenaged girl on the road to dykedom." Anything is possible, of course, although Doty delivers a stylish and convincing argument. --Regina Marler

From Library Journal

Doty, author of Making Things Perfectly Queer and other works on lesbians/gays and mass culture, offers "queer readings" of six films that are not explicitly gay--The Wizard of Oz, The Red Shoes, The Women, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, and Psycho. Some of the essays are revisions of early articles, but much of the material is new, and Doty often takes a fresh approach to overexamined works. For example, rather than giving the standard gay iconographic reading of Wizard, Doty posits that the film is a lesbian fantasy. An interesting and often amusing queer deconstruction of classic films, this is recommended for film collections as a companion to the growing library of similar academic studies, including Harry M. Benshoff's Monsters in the Closet (LJ 2/1/98) and Chris Straayer's Deviant Eyes, Deviant Bodies (LJ 1/97).
-Anthony J. Adam, Prairie View A&M Univ. Lib., TX
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Let's begin with The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari's notorious framing story. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
butch witch, gay impresario, flaming classics, male buddy films, beautiful wickedness, anyone here for love, homosexual doubles, high culture forms, camp readings, popular culture texts, ruby slippers, asylum director, love goes wrong, heterosexual narrative, star cults, lesbian readings, queer readings, red shoes, fruit cellar, straight culture, queer cultures, framing story, fantasy narrative, other queers, straight women
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Wicked Witch, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, Michael Powell, George Cukor, Norman Bates, The Silence of the Lambs, Danny Peary, Howard Hawks, Miss Gulch, Judy Garland, Mike Budd, Robin Wood, Cowardly Lion, Emerald City, Little Billee, Little Rock, Dorothy Arzner, Gone With the Wind, Million-Dollar Movie, Sylvia Scarlett, Theodore Price, Two Little Girls, Conrad Veidt, Cult Movies
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