Introduction: making sex public -- Autonomous pleasures: Bardot, Barbarella, and the liberal sexual subject -- Facing the body in 1975: Catherine Breillat and the antinomies of sex -- The form of the social: heterosexuality and homo-aesthetics in Plein Soleil -- Cruising and the fraternal social contract -- Word is out, or queer privacy -- Sex in public: through the window from Psycho to Shortbus -- Epilogue: postcinematic sexuality.
Summary:
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 this book, the author 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 1950s through the present, from "And God Created Woman" and "Barbarella" to "Cruising" and "Shortbus," the author 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.
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