Manuscript / 2011
Country of Origin:
Title | Girls will be boys : cross-dressed women and the legitimation of American silent cinema |
Item type | Manuscript |
Author(s) | Horak, Laura |
Imprint | 2011 |
Language | English |
URL | Link to original record |
Notes |
|
Physical description | 275 p. : ill. ; 28 cm. |
Languages:
Date text:
2011Publisher:
Subject headings:
Item Type:
Oskicat subjects:
Millenium MARC Record:
LEADER 00000ctm a2200337Ka 4500
001 794845387
003 OCoLC
005 20140225045554.0
008 120606s2011 caua bm 000 0 eng d
040 MMX|beng|cMMX|dMMX|dCUY
043 n-us---
050 4 PN1995.9.T69|bH67 2011
090 PN1995.9.T69|bH67 2011
100 1 Horak, Laura.
245 10 Girls will be boys :|bcross-dressed women and the
legitimation of American silent cinema /|cby Laura Evelyn
Horak.
260 |c2011.
300 275 p. :|bill. ;|c28 cm.
502 Thesis (Ph.D. in Film and Media)--University of California,
Berkeley, 2011.
504 Includes bibliographical references (p. 254-275).
506 Pacific Film Archive collection; non-circulating.|5CBPF.
520 3 Recent scholars tend to describe cross-dressing as
inherently transgressive. Cross-dressing, they explain,
shows us that there is no natural link between physical
sex and social roles. It shows us that we cannot trust our
own vision, or even, as Marjorie Garber argues, the very
notion of categories. Furthermore, scholars argue that
early-twentieth-century Americans viewed female
masculinity as unattractive and pathological, associated
with shrewish suffragettes and sexual inverts. It may seem
strange then, that the emerging American moving picture
industry produced over three hundred films featuring cross
-dressed women during the silent era. More than seventy
percent of these films were released between 1908 and 1919,
American cinema's "transitional era," when moving picture
makers struggled to "uplift" their products in order to
win over middle-class audiences and avoid censorship.
These films and their complex cultural functions are
largely missing from existing film historical accounts of
this period. In this dissertation, I demonstrate that the
circulation of an interpretive strategy that would read
cross-dressing or "mannishness" as a sign of sexual
inversion was much more limited than scholars have
acknowledged. In fact, cross-dressed women helped moving
pictures secure greater respectability by evoking a range
of established, socially privileged representational
traditions, thereby expanding the medium's appeal to broad
audiences. Over the course of the transitional era, moving
pictures developed strategies to make performers' gender
more consistently legible, adapting techniques from police
detection, protean artists, sister acts, and newspaper
photographs of men discovered to be female-bodied. At the
same time, filmmakers cast women and girls in boy roles
such as Oliver Twist in order to align the medium with
genteel Anglo-American children's theater and Victorian
sentimentalism. Cross-dressed women in frontier films, in
contrast, provided an opportunity to see a capable,
usually white, female body interacting with--and
triumphing over--varied American natural landscapes. Their
presence also helped as defuse the homoeroticism between
men cultivated in sex-imbalanced frontier spaces. The
"innocent" readings of cross-dressed women were so
prominent during the transitional era that critics
received even a seemingly obvious depiction of sexual
inversion like A FLORIDA ENCHANTMENT (Vitagraph, August
1914) as wholesome, respectable comedy. Only in the 1920s
and early 1930s did American moving pictures begin to
connect cross-dressing and lesbianism, a shift that
disrupted the practice's relationship to respectability.
650 0 Silent films|zUnited States|xHistory and criticism.
650 0 Women in motion pictures.
650 0 Cross-dressing in motion pictures.
655 7 Dissertations.|2aat
956 20140225 |bpfmcq|cCC
957 OCLC xref loaded 20170910
994 C0|bCUY