Department of Drama and Theatre, Royal Holloway, University of London, Egham, UK.
J Homosex. 2011;58(5):608-25. doi: 10.1080/00918369.2011.563660.
This article adopts an interdisciplinary approach to understanding the intersections of gender, sexuality, and dance. It examines the expressions of sexuality among gay males through culturally popular forms of club dancing. Drawing on political and musical history, I outline an account of how gay men's gendered choreographies changed throughout the 1970s, 80s, and 90s. Through a notion of "technologies of the body," I situate these developments in relation to cultural levels of homophobia, exploring how masculine expressions are entangled with and regulated by musical structures. My driving hypothesis is that as perceptions of cultural homophobia decrease, popular choreographies of gay men's dance have become more feminine in expression. Exploring this idea in the context of the first decade of the new millennium, I present a case study of TigerHeat, one of the largest weekly gay dance club events in the United States.
本文采用跨学科的方法来理解性别、性和舞蹈的交叉点。它通过在文化上流行的俱乐部舞蹈形式来考察男同性恋者的性行为表现。本文借鉴了政治和音乐史,概述了同性恋男性的性别舞蹈编排如何在 20 世纪 70 年代、80 年代和 90 年代发生变化。通过“身体技术”的概念,我将这些发展与文化层面的恐同现象联系起来,探讨了男性化的表达如何与音乐结构交织在一起,并受到其约束。我的主要假设是,随着对文化恐同的看法的减少,男同性恋者舞蹈的流行编排在表达上变得更加女性化。在新千年的第一个十年的背景下探讨这个想法,我提出了美国最大的每周同性恋舞蹈俱乐部活动之一 TigerHeat 的案例研究。