Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/13570
Title: Mobilizing lesbian desire: the sexual kinaesthetics of Dorothy Arzner's 'The Wild Party'
Contributor(s): Potter, Susan  (author)
Publication Date: 2011
DOI: 10.1093/screen/hjr036
Handle Link: https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/13570
Abstract: Dorothy Arzner's 'The Wild Party' (1929) has been reclaimed for a lesbian cinematic canon, but it is only relatively recently that scholars have engaged more directly with the homoerotics of Arzner's films, and the question of the representability of female homosexuality in late 1920s Hollywood classical cinema. This essay frames its engagement with these concerns in terms of 'The Wild Party's generic history. Often claimed as instituting a new lesbian genre, the all-female college film, 'The Wild Party's innovations can be more persuasively traced to its subtle transformation of an older, nearly exhausted genre: the flapper film. Expanding the film's generic antecedents to consider the flapper as a discursive figure of 1920s American culture, I situate 'The Wild Party' within developing modern female kinaesthetics and spectatorships, during a period in which Hollywood was also systematizing its commodification of femininity and the production of heterosexual romance narratives. If, as Patricia White has convincingly claimed, the representation of female homosexuality in Hollywood film is more often veiled by 'the public sexualization of the female body', then in the case of 'The Wild Party' it is the excessively feminine and kinetic bodies of the flapper that screen - that is, both project and hide from view - lesbian desire as a new form of cinematic knowledge and pleasure. Rather than isolating certain scenes for their lesbian subtext or their resistance to a contemporary pathologized lesbian reading, I argue that the sexual intelligibility of such scenes is inseparable from the kinetic aesthetics of the flapper that Arzner harnesses to organisze the film's visual schema.
Publication Type: Journal Article
Source of Publication: Screen, 52(4), p. 442-460
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Place of Publication: United Kingdom
ISSN: 1460-2474
0036-9543
Fields of Research (FoR) 2008: 200212 Screen and Media Culture
190201 Cinema Studies
Socio-Economic Objective (SEO) 2008: 970120 Expanding Knowledge in Language, Communication and Culture
Peer Reviewed: Yes
HERDC Category Description: C1 Refereed Article in a Scholarly Journal
Publisher/associated links: http://screen.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/hjr036?ijkey=e1Q1cm4Aa5VBMjw&keytype=ref
Appears in Collections:Journal Article

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