Page 179 - Cultural Theory and Popular Culture an Introduction
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Queer theory 163
Butler (2009) gives the example of Aretha Franklin singing, ‘you make me feel like a
natural woman’: 37
she seems at first to suggest that some natural potential of her biological sex is actu-
alized by her participation in the cultural position of ‘woman’ as object of hetero-
sexual recognition. Something in her ‘sex’ is thus expressed by her ‘gender’ which
is then fully known and consecrated within the heterosexual scene. There is no
breakage, no discontinuity between ‘sex’ as biological facticity and essence, or
between gender and sexuality. Although Aretha appears to be all too glad to have
her naturalness confirmed, she also seems fully and paradoxically mindful that
that confirmation is never guaranteed, that the effect of naturalness is only
achieved as a consequence of that moment of heterosexual recognition. After all,
Aretha sings, you make me feel like a natural woman, suggesting that this is a kind
of metaphorical substitution, an act of imposture, a kind of sublime and momen-
tary participation in an ontological illusion produced by the mundane operation
of heterosexual drag (2009: 235; italics in original).
If, as Butler (1999) maintains, ‘gender reality is created through sustained social per-
formances’ (180), perhaps one of the principal theatres for its creation is consumption.
Michael Warner (1993) has noted a connection between gay culture and particular pat-
terns of consumption. Such a relationship, he argues, demands a rethinking of the
political economy of culture (see Chapter 10). As he explains, there is
the close connection between consumer culture and the most visible spaces of
gay culture: bars, discos, advertising, fashion, brand-name identification, mass
cultural-camp, ‘promiscuity’. Gay culture in this most visible mode is anything
but external to advanced capitalism and to precisely those features of advanced
capitalism that many on the left are most eager to disavow. Post-Stonewall urban
gay men reek of the commodity. We give off the smell of capitalism in rut, and
therefore demand of theory a more dialectical view of capitalism than many
people have imagination for (xxxi).
In a similar way, Corey K. Creekmur and Alexander Doty (1995) point out that ‘the
identity that we designate homosexual arose in tandem with capitalist consumer culture’
(1). They draw attention to the particular relationship that gays and lesbians have often
had with popular culture: ‘an alternative or negotiated, if not fully subversive, recep-
tion of the products and messages of popular culture, [wondering] how they might
have access to mainstream culture without denying or losing their oppositional iden-
tities, how they might participate without necessarily assimilating, how they might take
pleasure in, and make affirmative meanings out of, experiences and artefacts that they
have been told do not offer queer pleasures and meanings’ (1–2). In other words, ‘a
central issue is how to be “out in culture”: how to occupy a place in mass culture, yet
maintain a perspective on it that does not accept its homophobic and heterocentrist
definitions, images, and terms of analysis’ (2).