Spectacles of shame: Ryan Murphy as curator of queer cultural memory

In the anthology Queer Shame, edited by David M. Halperin and Valerie Traub, 'the personal and the social shame attached to eroticism' is taken to task in relation to the larger contemporary discourse surrounding gay pride (understood in terms of activism and cultural production), while be...

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Main Author: Stepić Nikola N.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Philosophy, Kosovska Mitrovica 2017-01-01
Series:Zbornik Radova Filozofskog Fakulteta u Prištini
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/0354-3293/2017/0354-32931703071S.pdf
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author Stepić Nikola N.
author_facet Stepić Nikola N.
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description In the anthology Queer Shame, edited by David M. Halperin and Valerie Traub, 'the personal and the social shame attached to eroticism' is taken to task in relation to the larger contemporary discourse surrounding gay pride (understood in terms of activism and cultural production), while being seen as a defining characteristic of queer history, culture and identity. Shame, as theorized by Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Halperin and others, is predicated on a larger issue of queer people's access to discursive power, which Sedgwick herself had theorized in The Epistemology of the Closet. Such a conceptualizing of queer culture and queer politics begs the interrogation of how queer shame is contained and negotiated in contemporary popular culture. One of the most successful auteurs working in film and television today, Ryan Murphy's opus is marked by a constant dialogue with queer cultural artifacts. The excitement that his productions generate is typically predicated on his use of queer cultural objects, especially as they are rearticulated for mainstream audiences. This paper investigates the inherent shame of queer memory as embodied in Murphy's show American Horror Story through reference and negotiation of queer icons, filmic traditions and on-screen bodies. Utilizing queer and film theory as its framework, this paper treats Murphy's queer vernacular as the uncanny that destabilizes conventions of both the horror genre and mainstream television, in turn legitimizing and exploiting 'shameful' queer categories such as trauma, excess, diva worship and camp through the language of popular television and the bodies that populate it. Finally, this essay evaluates the productive power of Murphy's repository of 'disgraceful' bodily images-allegorical and literal-in furthering a critical remediation of the vernacular of queer shame.
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spelling doaj.art-376923b54d754ac587abd5ba0bb598b22022-12-21T20:11:35ZengFaculty of Philosophy, Kosovska MitrovicaZbornik Radova Filozofskog Fakulteta u Prištini0354-32932217-80822017-01-01201747-3718610.5937/ZRFFP47-148670354-32931703071SSpectacles of shame: Ryan Murphy as curator of queer cultural memoryStepić Nikola N.0Concordia University, Centre for Interdisciplinary Studies in Society and Culture, CanadaIn the anthology Queer Shame, edited by David M. Halperin and Valerie Traub, 'the personal and the social shame attached to eroticism' is taken to task in relation to the larger contemporary discourse surrounding gay pride (understood in terms of activism and cultural production), while being seen as a defining characteristic of queer history, culture and identity. Shame, as theorized by Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Halperin and others, is predicated on a larger issue of queer people's access to discursive power, which Sedgwick herself had theorized in The Epistemology of the Closet. Such a conceptualizing of queer culture and queer politics begs the interrogation of how queer shame is contained and negotiated in contemporary popular culture. One of the most successful auteurs working in film and television today, Ryan Murphy's opus is marked by a constant dialogue with queer cultural artifacts. The excitement that his productions generate is typically predicated on his use of queer cultural objects, especially as they are rearticulated for mainstream audiences. This paper investigates the inherent shame of queer memory as embodied in Murphy's show American Horror Story through reference and negotiation of queer icons, filmic traditions and on-screen bodies. Utilizing queer and film theory as its framework, this paper treats Murphy's queer vernacular as the uncanny that destabilizes conventions of both the horror genre and mainstream television, in turn legitimizing and exploiting 'shameful' queer categories such as trauma, excess, diva worship and camp through the language of popular television and the bodies that populate it. Finally, this essay evaluates the productive power of Murphy's repository of 'disgraceful' bodily images-allegorical and literal-in furthering a critical remediation of the vernacular of queer shame.http://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/0354-3293/2017/0354-32931703071S.pdfAmerican Horror Storycampdiva worshiphorrorLady GagaMarlene Dietrichpopular culturequeer memoryqueer shameRyan Murphytelevisionthe uncanny
spellingShingle Stepić Nikola N.
Spectacles of shame: Ryan Murphy as curator of queer cultural memory
Zbornik Radova Filozofskog Fakulteta u Prištini
American Horror Story
camp
diva worship
horror
Lady Gaga
Marlene Dietrich
popular culture
queer memory
queer shame
Ryan Murphy
television
the uncanny
title Spectacles of shame: Ryan Murphy as curator of queer cultural memory
title_full Spectacles of shame: Ryan Murphy as curator of queer cultural memory
title_fullStr Spectacles of shame: Ryan Murphy as curator of queer cultural memory
title_full_unstemmed Spectacles of shame: Ryan Murphy as curator of queer cultural memory
title_short Spectacles of shame: Ryan Murphy as curator of queer cultural memory
title_sort spectacles of shame ryan murphy as curator of queer cultural memory
topic American Horror Story
camp
diva worship
horror
Lady Gaga
Marlene Dietrich
popular culture
queer memory
queer shame
Ryan Murphy
television
the uncanny
url http://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/0354-3293/2017/0354-32931703071S.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT stepicnikolan spectaclesofshameryanmurphyascuratorofqueerculturalmemory