Graduation Year
2011
Document Type
Thesis
Degree
M.A.
Degree Granting Department
Communication
Major Professor
Stacy Holman Jones, Ph.D.
Committee Member
Elizabeth Bell, Ph.D.
Committee Member
Carolyn Ellis, Ph.D.
Keywords
utopian performative, autoethnography, performance ethnography, ethnomusicology, performing social resistance
Abstract
This study explores the historic relationship between pop music divas and gay male fandom. It charts fan experiences from the early 60s with Judy Garland to contemporary times with pop diva Lady Gaga. This project also gives a description of the embodied experience of Brett Farmer’s “queer sublimity of diva reception.” Farmer (2005) argues that diva worship among gay men has become a queer sublimity, “the transcendence of a limiting heteronormative materiality and the sublime reconstruction, at least in fantasy, of a more capacious, kinder, queerer world” (p. 170). Using the methods of participant observation in drag performance and karaoke singing, performance ethnography, and autoethnography, I attempt to understand how a diva’s performance can influence the lives of gay men and how it can inspire visions of a more perfect world for everyone.
Scholar Commons Citation
Paxton, Blake, "My Bad Romance: Exploring the Queer Sublimity of Diva Reception" (2011). USF Tampa Graduate Theses and Dissertations.
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/etd/3285
Included in
American Studies Commons, Communication Commons, Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Commons