Queering Teen Culture

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A01=Jeffery P Dennis
adolescent sexuality
Author_Jeffery P Dennis
avalon
Beach Movie
Billy Gray
brat
Brat Pack
Category=JBSJ
darro
destiny
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
frankie
Frankie Avalon
Frankie Darro
gender nonconformity
heterosexual
Heterosexual Destiny
Ice Cream Sundaes
Ich Bin Ein Berliner
idol
Juvenile Delinquent
Karate Kid
Latchkey Kids
male same-sex desire in pop culture
masculinity representation
mash
media studies
monster
Monster Mash
Monster Movies
NBC Nightly News
pack
Pajama Party
queer theory analysis
Rocky Horror
Rocky Horror Picture Show
Salem's Lot
Salem’s Lot
Teen Hangout
Teen Idol
Teen Operator
television history
Tiger Beat
Tv Movie
Unnatural Attachment
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781560233497
  • Weight: 362g
  • Dimensions: 148 x 210mm
  • Publication Date: 22 May 2006
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Why did Fonzie hang around with all those high school boys?

Is the overwhelming boy-meets-girl content of popular teen movies, music, books, and TV just a cover for an undercurrent of same-sex desire? From the 1950s to the present, popular culture has involved teenage boys falling for, longing over, dreaming about, singing to, and fighting over, teenage girls. But Queering Teen Culture analyzes more than 200 movies and TV shows to uncover who Frankie Avalon’s character was really in love with in those beach movies and why Leif Garrett became a teen idol in the 1970s.

In Top 40 songs, teen magazines, movies, TV soap operas and sitcoms, teenagers are defined by their pubescent discovery of the opposite sex, universally and without exception. Queering Teen Culture looks beyond the litany to find out when adults became so insistent about teenage sexual desireand whyand finds evidence of same-sex desire, romantic interactions, and identities that, according to the dominant ideology, do not and cannot exist. This provocative book examines the careers of male performers whose teenage roles made them famous (including Ricky Nelson, Pat Boone, Fabian, and James Darren) and discusses examples of lesbian desire (including I Love Lucy and Laverne and Shirley).

Queering Teen Culture examines:

  • Ozzie and Harriet, Father Knows Best, and Leave It to Beaver: Were Ricky, Bud, and Wally sufficiently straight?
  • the juvenile delinquent films of the 1950s: Why weren’t the rebel-without-a-cause bad boys interested in girls?
  • horror, sci-fi, and zombies from outer space: Body of a boy! Mind of a monster! Soul of an unearthly thing!
  • teen idolspretty, androgynous, and feminine: No wonder they were rumored to be funny
  • beach movies: She wants to plan their wedding but he wants to surf, sky-dive and go drag racing with the guys
  • Biker-hippies boys of the late 1960s: I know your scenedon’t think I don’t!
  • the 1950s nostalgia of the 1970s: Why does Fonzie spend all his time with high school boys?
  • teen gore: What makes the psycho-killer angry?
  • and much more, including Gidget, the Brat Pack, buddy dramas, nerds and operators, Saved by the Bell, The Real World, and the incredible shrinking teenager

Queering Teen Culture is an essential read for academics working in cultural and gay studies, and for anyone else with an interest in popular culture.

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