ABSTRACT

This book traces the uneven history of queer media visibility through crucial turning points including the Hollywood Production Code era, the AIDS crisis of the 1980s, the so-called explosion of gay visibility on television during the1990s, and the re-imagination of queer representations on TV after the events of 9/11. Kohnen intervenes in previous academic and popular accounts that paint the increase in queer visibility over the past four decades as a largely progressive development. She examines how and why a limited and limiting concept of queer visibility structured around white gay and lesbian characters in committed relationships has become the embodiment of progressive LGBT media representations. She also investigates queer visibility across film, TV, and print media, and highlights previously unexplored connections, such as the lingering traces of classical Hollywood cinema's queer tropes in the X-Men franchise. Across all chapters, narratives and arguments emerge that demonstrate how queer visibility shapes and reflects not only media representations, but the real and imagined geographies, histories, and people of the American nation.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

chapter |32 pages

Visions of History

Queerness and Race in Hollywood Cinema from the Production Code to X-Men

chapter |40 pages

Toward the “Gay 90s”

Redefining Queer Visibility through the Lens of AIDS

chapter |37 pages

Outside Space and Time

Screening Queerness in Brokeback Mountain and Boys Don't Cry

chapter |30 pages

Kevin and Scotty Get Married (and Hardly Anyone is Watching)

Queer Visibility, Privacy, and the Boundaries of Everyday Life on Television

chapter |4 pages

Concluding Remarks