Preview

Queer as Folk

Powerful Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1493 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Queer as Folk
There should be a warning before purchasing Queer as Folk. Warning: What you are about to watch is extremely explicit or Warning: Naked bodies are guaranteed to be shown ever 3 minutes. Many gay advocates hate the series because they believe its obsession with sex overshadows other aspects of the gay community. Think about it though. Certain heterosexual television shows like Sex and The City are all about sex and sexuality, and it is accepted because ultimately the majority of the relationships filmed are those of a heterosexual nature. It the world of homosexuality, sex is just as prevalent, it is simply not something viewed as frequently as heterosexual relationships, thus we are not use to it. It is a huge part of our culture, yet we refuse to accept or view gay material, such as Queer as Folk. It is only shocking because it is ‘in your face’ for the first time. The series does not overly represent ‘gayness’, and when viewed closer, it subconsciously relates to masculinity and acceptance. The television series Queer as Folk constructs masculinity in a seemingly progressive way; due to the overtly sexual nature of the show, and to the homosexuality of the majority of the characters. In some ways, seen specifically through the actions and characteristics of Brian, Queer as Folk attempts to widen the category of “normative masculinity” to include gay men, but at the same time the series also flaunts and celebrates a non-normative masculinity. Thus far, through the viewing of two Queer as Folk episodes, the series constructs masculinity in two different ways. One which includes homosexuals in societies view of “normative masculinity,” the other depicting gays as a group of non-normative people. Both constructions of masculinity are neither right nor wrong, and they both build off each other in each episode. Specifically, the character Brian fuels the first depiction of masculinity, whereas Emmett and the scenes of Club Babylon celebrate the non-normative forms

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    “Boys will be boys,” a commonplace phrase that constitutes a diffusion of responsibility away from the male perpetrators of aggressive attitudes and behaviors, supports a dangerous rhetoric that a young male transitioning into adulthood will perform acts of aggression, display a detached and uncaring disposition, and develop attitudes of intense homophobia and sexism as part of a biological norm of that stage of adolescence, a stage of life comprising a larger and larger part of young man’s life, ages 16-29. Kimmel challenges this rhetoric, arguing that there is an underlying culture of entitlement (as the gaining of equality by other groups such as women and minorities are perceived as a threat to privileges that the white man “deserves,” a zero-sum game of status) that is supported by a culture of silence (of refusing to bear witness to other men’s transgressions, which is perceived as support) and a culture of protection (in which communities shield “their” guys from the harsh implications and accountability) which allows these behaviors and attitudes to persist. Kimmel argues that…

    • 598 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In chapter 1 of “Dude You’re A Fag: Masculinity and Sexuality in High School,” the author mentions that “one of the ways a queer theory approach can bring studies of masculinity in line with other feminist theorizing is to uncouple the male body from definitions of masculinity.” What he means by “uncouple the male body from definitions of masculinity” is that the word male is normally associated with masculinity and in order to fully understand these theories we must stop genderizing the word masculinity. Instead, we must see masculinity as an organizing principle of social life (Pascue). It is important to decu…

    • 102 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Anna Paquin is presently married to a man and has children; Larry King asks the young actress if she is a “non practicing bisexual (561).” This is a clear example of how someone’s sexuality isn’t taken seriously if you are not heterosexual. Being bisexual is looked at as a fad, just having fun because you cannot decide if you like men or women. Amy then mentions that being bisexual isn’t a button you can turn on and off, or a naughty habit that goes away once you find the right man (561). It is clear that television and film are not giving bisexual individuals the right exposure; considering all of the stereotypical roles given. Bisexuals are mostly portrayed as promiscuous, while female bisexuality is always shown to excite and satisfy men. This shows exactly why Larry King thought it was appropriate to ask Anna Paquin such a…

    • 1103 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Connell maps out a hierarchal structure of social relations to organize/define masculinity: hegemonic/subordinate/complicit/marginalized. How accurately do these tiers reflect masculinity as it is made manifest today? In politics? Sexual(ity) relations? Mass media/popular culture? For instance, is “gayness in patriarchal ideology” always to be considered what is “expelled from hegemonic masculinity”…

    • 451 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Masculinity is a theme that has been addressed in society for many years the issue of masculinity is expressed in the texts All new people and Streetcar named desire, the men are seen as brutal forces of society but from different perspectives; One of the 1950’s post war reality and the other reflects the modern freedoms .In the play A Streetcar named Desire, masculinity means aggression, control, physical dominance, and even violence. Accompanying these traits is a general lack of refinement, manners, and sensitivity. One point of view expressed in the play is that this sort of brute masculinity is primitive and sub-human another is that it is attractive and sexually appealing, alternatively freedom and liberalism has left the men in All New People as victims of society, and it has left them without strong role models, power, community, faith or rules.…

    • 2014 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Masculinity and the ideals of manhood are not universal; place and time are factors of masculinity and hegemonic masculinity is no different. According to R.W Connell hegemonic masculinity is the one form of masculinity in society that has the most authority and influence on boys and men of that society. This form of masculinity sits at the top of the masculinity hierarchy and as a result those who attempt conform to hegemonic masculinity not only gain an advantage and privilege over other forms manhood but also over both genders (Connell, 171). However, because hegemonic masculinity is an unattainable ideal, men often go to extremes to confirm their masculinity to themselves and other men in their lives. Using the articles "’Talk About Strenuous…

    • 1009 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    This is a divisive strategy that aims to produce a consumable queer, fit for a mainstream audience. Subsequently, this strategy risks straight culture subsuming both lesbians and the queer community (Moody 2011). To subsume lesbian and queer culture would erode the common political identity that allows for community organization against heterosexism. Like bell hooks (1992) contends, “Communities of resistance are replaced by communities of consumption” (33). Effectively, the apolitical representation of lesbianism obliterates the movement’s historical allegiance to working class culture, butches, interracial socializing and feminism (Moody 2011). Both productions exemplify this shift from queer sexuality to homonomative-domestic lesbian, although The Kids Are All Right epitomizes this because it fails to acknowledge the oppressive culture and diverse identities. Homonormative representations normalized the broader lesbian community and foster…

    • 720 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Exploring the construction of hegemonic masculinity, we go through a contradicting state of the definition of manhood. Although contradictions appear, it is socially adapted and able to reside without conflict. Take manhood as this, “We think of manhood as a transcendent tangible property that each man must manifest in the world” (Kimmel, 1994). Meaning that manhood is merely an idea which is drilled into a man’s head by society, “Gender, we said, was an achieved status” (West and Zimmerman, 2015) in other terms, manhood is a socially agreed upon idealization of how men should act or who they should be. In West and Zimmerman’s “Doing Gender”, Hegemonic masculinity is accomplished by the unavoidable categories of sex and gender and ways we act upon them; collaborating together in a socially constructed standard of how to be.…

    • 1536 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Gender Roles In Moonlight

    • 865 Words
    • 4 Pages

    By showing why Chiron falls into the hegemonic ideal of a man and concealing his sexual identity and then showing his eventual realization of this, the audience is painted a picture of a man whose personality is severely corrupted by the dominant view of masculinity. As a result, Barry Jenkins succeeds in presenting a heartbreaking yet important argument advocating for changing the status quo of gender and sexuality…

    • 865 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Boys n the band

    • 575 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Foremost, the film Boys in the Band, is the first major-studio production to deal frankly with homosexuality; a breakthrough film in the gay film genre. This film centers around a birthday party at an apartment in the city, where a group of closely knit friends are invited but a straight man surprisingly arrives, making the already unbearable tension even worse. What starts out as an entertaining evening plummets into a rollercoaster ride of emotion, infused with wit, and self-loathing, where there is humor one minute, and then it nosedives into a few gay friends ripping each other to pieces. At moments I cringed at the screen, then I laughed and I even felt awful. I felt as if the entire time I viewed this film I was doing so as an outsider, out of pure curiosity of the lives homosexual men lead and the awkward situations they encompass. Boys in the Band is directed to the 1970’s society, which at the time was blind to the homosexuality that had been going on around them for decades. It focuses on the ability to place a few dysfunctional people in a room together and force out great and awkward dialogue, and ultimately some characters' "evil" sides. While watching the movie I was astonished by how these men treated each other. For example Harold says, “beware of the hostile fag, when he’s sober he’s dangerous, when he drinks he’s lethal”, to Michael, who organized Harold’s party at his apartment. However, Michael was the bluntest character in the movie, he always spoke his mind (mainly because he was drinking) and at times he would brutally degrade the other men at the party. Even worse, violence is ignited throughout the movie from colliding homosexual personalities and the presence of a straight man at the party. At moments the cruelty of this film, whether physical or verbal abuse, makes you wonder how these men could of been friends before and how could they still be friends after this party. I believe the point of this…

    • 575 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    robs paper

    • 958 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The American culture embraces masculinity through many aspects of their everyday lives. The way they conduct work in the work place, the principles of teaching young adolescents in school, and the largest factor, the mass medias pervasive involvement. Masculinity is defined by physical capability, financial independence, authoritarian values, and male dominance. These qualities are not completely supported by all men, but a large amount of society do embody these masculine ideals and notions. These notions do not embody the homosexual male community; they have an entirely different perception on what notions capture the essence of masculinity in the U.S society. In the institution of family, a masculine man is the bread winner, the engineer of a home, a strong provider, and a father. In the current U.S society, some of these standards have drastically changed. Many men are no longer the financial provider, but are “househusbands”, a new terminology being used to describe a husband who is a stay at home father while the wife works.…

    • 958 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Intimate Partner Violence

    • 1099 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Financial success and sexual prowess determines man masculinity. Society views men that has a lot of money, can provide for his family successfully, and has a lot of sex partners as masculine. If a man lacks these particular factors, he would think his masculinity is being threatened. The ideal man is represented through television, where African American men are portrayed to be tough, strong and a “player” and athletes such as Wilt Chamberlain who is looked at as masculine all because he has money and more importantly, he slept with almost 20,000 different women. Therefore, the young men and women who watches television and…

    • 1099 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Queers Read This

    • 408 Words
    • 2 Pages

    “Queers Read This” presents gayness as anti-straight; the straights are othered and the two communities, cultures and identities are set-up to be irreconcilably different from one another, where straightness is understood as a lack of queerness. “We must look at our lives and see what’s best in them, see the queer and what is straight and let that straight chaff fall away.” Both the term “queer” and its function of inventing desire and lust are reclaimed and the rhetoric calls for an ownership of the queer identity.…

    • 408 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    When someone hears the word “gay” or “queer”, they most often think of the middle class, Caucasian gay male. For my research proposal, I plan on studying what is very often overlooked in queer identity: the struggle of queer identity in the African American gay male. I am interested in studying this because I grew up knowing I was gay in a small, middle class town in rural America. I wish to argue how gay African Americans are restricted by Black stereotypes, gay stereotypes, acceptance with stipulations in the gay community and black community, racism in the gay community, homophobia in the Black community, perceptions of blackness and masculinity attitudes toward homosexuality and their effect on gay Black men living openly, homosexuality and religion (the black church), and media perceptions of Black homosexuality. The majority of the black community stated they wished to live restriction free lives. They are not able to fully be themselves in their daily lives and often have to assimilate to be accepted.…

    • 2948 Words
    • 12 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Essay On Queer Baiting

    • 881 Words
    • 4 Pages

    In recent years, the portrayal of LGBTQA folks on TV has increased. Shows like Glee and Orange is the New Black are inclusive of LGBTQA characters, fulfilling a social demand for representation. The way that canonically LGBTQA characters and their relationships are portrayed is a vastly complicated topic, that I will not be touching on. Instead, I'm going to focus on a different issue that comes up in discussions about LGBTQA representation in the media, queer-baiting.…

    • 881 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics