"Opacity and the Closet" interrogates the viability of the metaphor of "the closet" when applied to three important queer figures in postwar American and French culture: the philosopher Michel Foucault, the literary critic Roland Barthes, and the pop artist Andy Warhol. Nicholas de Villiers proposes a new approach to these cultural icons that accounts for the queerness of their works and public personas. Rather than reading their self-presentations as "closeted," de Villiers suggests that they invent and deploy productive strategies of "opacity" that resist the closet and the confessional discourse associated with it. Deconstructing binaries linked with the closet that have continued to influence both gay and straight receptions of these intellectual and pop celebrities, de Villiers illuminates the philosophical implications of this displacement for queer theory and introduces new ways to think about the space they make for queerness. Using the works of Foucault, Barthes, and Warhol to engage each other while exploring their shared historical context, de Villiers also shows their queer appropriations of the interview, the autobiography, the diary, and the documentary--forms typically linked to truth telling and authenticity.
0 有用 古雨 2015-06-26 20:05:10
勉强算读过,并不敢说读懂了,更多还是不明觉厉。说几个最深的感想:性向和性别不该成为给某人下定义和分类的唯一标准;沉默不一定是否定,有时沉默比话语能表达同样多的内容;closet与其说是保护和被迫害的象征,不如说是一种强迫性的分类,出与不出都被变成一种privilege;最理想的情况大概是不需要柜子。