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Gender, Sexuality, and Popular Culture (371-0-20)

Topic

Lesbian Representation in Popular Culture from the

Instructors

Hannah Molly Chaskin

Meeting Info

Kresge Centennial Hall 4-410: Mon, Wed 2:00PM - 3:20PM

Overview of class

Topic: Lesbian Representation in Popular Culture

This class will examine lesbian representation in film and television over the last four decades. "Representation" is a tricky word in politics and media: queer communities, communities of color, and disabled communities (and those categories overlap in important ways) have pushed for more representation in film, television, the music industry, and publishing. Lesbian women have long complained of the community's invisibility. At the same time, minoritized communities must grapple with the fact that simple representation can be a mixed bag. If the primary goal is visibility, is all representation good representation? Are lesbian villains, or lesbians who are narratively punished, still politically useful? Does the inclusion of a lesbian character (or lesbian characters) "count" if no one involved in the production of the object was themselves a lesbian? This course will explore these questions and more, discussing theoretical readings from cultural studies alongside our primary films, television, music, and print media. We will consider the difficult and derogatory tropes that are part and parcel of lesbian representation in the media, but we will engage most intensively with narratives that have attempted to expand the narrative potential of queer female life and to affirm lesbian identities—with complex results.

Teaching Method

Discussion, collaborative course building, in-class viewing of cultural objects.

Evaluation Method

Participation, pop culture journal, reflections, final paper (5-7 pages).

Class Materials (Required)

All materials will be provided through Canvas. -- Patricia Highsmith, The Price of Salt (1956); Rita Mae Brown, Rubyfruit Jungle (1973); Alison Bechdel, Dykes to Watch Out For (1987-2008). Films: Personal Best (1982); But I'm a Cheerleader (1999); Pariah (2011); Carol (2015). TV: episodes from Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1997-2003), The L Word (2004-2009), Orange is the New Black (2013- ). Students will be asked to keep up with lesbian and queer women's online magazines, including Autostraddle, Curve, Qwear, or others, based on student interest.

Class Attributes

Social & Behavioral Sciences Distro Area