BOOK DESCRIPTION
Beginning
in the late 1950s, representations of and narratives about sex
proliferated on French and U.S. movie screens. Cinema began to display
forms of sexuality that were no longer strictly associated with
domesticity nor limited to heterosexual relations between loving
couples. Women’s bodies and queer sexualities became intensely charged
figures of political contestation, aspiration, and allegory, central to
new ways of imagining sexuality and to new liberal understandings of
individual freedom and social responsibility. In Making Sex Public
Damon R. Young tracks the emergence of two conflicting narratives: on
the one hand, a new model of sex as harmoniously integrated into civic
existence; on the other, an idea of women’s and queer sexuality as
corrosive to the very fabric of social life. Taking a transatlantic
perspective from the late '50s through the present, from And God Created Woman and Barbarella to Cruising and Shortbus,
Young argues that cinema participated in the transformation of the
sexual subject while showing how women and queers were both agents and
objects of that transformation.
Damon R. Young. Making Sex Public and Other Cinematic Fantasies. Durham and London: Duke University Press, 12/2018. Softcover. 320 pp. 128 illus. ISBN-13: 978-1-4780-0167-6.
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