Post-Feminism’s “New Sexual Contract” and Electronic Dance Music’s Queered Femme Voices

Angela McRobbie argues that post-feminism’s “new sexual contract” grants otherwise privileged white women the things traditionally denied women as a class, namely, economic success and self-ownership of their bodies as sexual property (McRobbie 2004). Because voice is commonly used as a metaphor for...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Robin James
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Huddersfield, Department of Music 2017-11-01
Series:Dancecult: Journal of Electronic Dance Music Culture
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dj.dancecult.net/index.php/dancecult/article/view/918
Description
Summary:Angela McRobbie argues that post-feminism’s “new sexual contract” grants otherwise privileged white women the things traditionally denied women as a class, namely, economic success and self-ownership of their bodies as sexual property (McRobbie 2004). Because voice is commonly used as a metaphor for self-possessed agency, this article considers three ways white women and femme musicians across EDMC use vocal and authorial voices to reimagine post-feminist practices of self-ownership and property-in-person. Brooklyn band bottoms, Berlin techno collective Decon/Recon and Australian-American pop star Sia, all use voice to craft femininities that deviate from post-feminist gender norms and its “new sexual contract”: bottoms perform femininity as self-dispossession, Decon/Recon’s anonymous collective authorship centers women and femmes while de-centering private property, and Sia disconnects her voice from her person so that her performances of sonic resilience (James 2015) don’t labor upon her body and turn it into private property.
ISSN:1947-5403