
August 2006 Cover
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Teen stars as queer constructs
By
Michael Bronski
Queering Teen Culture: All American Boys and Same-Sex Desire in Film & Television
by Jeffrey P. Dennis Harrington Park Press
How to order
Queering Teen Culture: All American
Boys and Same-Sex Desire in Film &
Television, by Jeffrey P. Dennis (Harrington
Park Press, 221 pages, $16.95)
Cute boys are always news. And apparently in
plentiful supply in American culture. In early
colonial times they pop up in the diaries of Michael
Wigglesworth, the 17th-century Harvard minister
who berated himself for his
lustful thoughts about his young charges. And in
the late 19th, they begin appearing everywhere,
from the swimmers-on-the-rocks in Thomas
Eakins's paintings to the sturdy, if forlorn,
newsboys and bootblacks of Horatio Alger
novels. By the 1920s, Hollywood has invented
Jackie Coogan and Jackie Cooper and a host of
other cute little boys and adolescents (now mostly
forgotten), such as Jack Coleman, Robert Gordon,
and Jack Pickford (Mary's
brother). Hell, people loved cute boys so much they
even had girls play them-- Marguerite Clark played
in a 1917 film of
Prince and the Pauper, and Joyce
Templeton played the younger version of the
eponymous character in the
1916 film of Tom Brown's School Days.
I>And from the 1920s to the present, the boys just
tumble out on the silver and TV screens. From
Frankie Thomas (who just died a few months ago)
as Ted Nickerson in Bonita Granville's
Nancy Drew film series in the 1930s, to
Wally, Beaver, Bud, and my three sons in 1950s
television, to today's Justin Timberlake and his ilk.
In Queering Teen Culture, Jeffery
Dennis, sociologist at Lakeland College, in
Sheboygan, Wisconsin, has charted boy glamour--
mostly from the 1950s, 60s, and early 70s-- in an
engaging survey that aims at a
scholarly range and appeal but often falls into teen
fanzine squawk.
There's nothing wrong with Dennis's basic
premise: youths in popular culture in the 50s and
60s were certainly objects of sexual desire-- for
women and men; girls and boys. And often,
especially in light of
today's understanding of gender and desire, they
are often alarmingly and alluringly homoerotic.
"The teenage boy," Dennis
writes, "trapped in the liminal space, caught
in that moment of freedom between innocence and
experience, between a presumably sexless boyhood
and a presumably heterosexual
adulthood, could not be silent."
Dennis, certainly, richly illustrates his point,
discussing the homoerotics of TV shows and films
such as
Leave it To Beaver (Tony Dow), The
Many Loves of Dobie
Gillis (Dwayne Hickman), Rebel Without a
Cause
(Sal Mineo and James Dean), The Wild One
(Marlon Brando), and Journey to the Center
of the Earth
(Pat Boone). How many have heard of Arch
Hall, Jr.
(The Choppers, 1961), John Ashley
(Dragstrip
Girl, 1959), Rod Loren (Terrified,
1962), or Gary Conway (I Was a Teenage
Frankenstein)? Well, actually some people may
have heard of Conway, who was also featured in
Physique Pictorial.
There's some great gossip: Tommy Kirk was
outed in 1963 by a boyfriend's irate mother. But
after 187 pages it begins to feel more like a list of
who looks/acts/performs queer than a sustained
analysis of why all
this is happening.
Dennis's bottom line is identifying and
describing these homoeroticized male performers.
And he does describe them rather vividly--
repeatedly noting their "beautifully sculpted
bodies" or how they were "shoved into
tight jeans and t-shirts." Dennis's
breathlessness moves his book closer to fan culture
than serious scholarship. This is compounded by
his sweep-- how he moves from 1950s TV, to teen
beach movies, pop-star musicals, the
teen gore films of the 1970s such as
Friday the
13th, to teen soap operas, and reality TV
shows. Along the way, the differences between
these genres and time-periods are almost
obliterated. While there's a cultural line-- not
always very straight-- running from the 1940s to
the present, the milieu that produced James Dean is
extraordinarily different from that giving us "
Dawson's Creek" and "The Real
World." The homoerotic auras of teen idols
may
not be the best thread for finding the inner
connection.
Queering Teen Culture doesn't
always hold together as a cohesive, persuasive
argument. But as a gossipy Baedeker to the pop boy
idol across-the-decades, Dennis gives us a great
view.
| Author Profile: Michael Bronski |
|
Michael Bronski is the author of
Culture Clash: The Making of Gay
Sensibility and The Pleasure
Principle: Sex, Backlash, and the
Struggle for Gay Freedom. He writes
frequently on sex, books, movies, and
culture, and lives in Cambridge,
Massachusetts. |
| Email: |
mabronski@aol.com |
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