The Drag King Anthology
Examine the phenomenon of female-to-male performance!
Edited by Donna Jean Troka, Kathleen LeBesco, and Jean Bobby
Noble.
(2003) Harrington Park Press - 346 Pages
About The Book:
Get a comprehensive perspective on women performing masculinity!
The Drag King Anthology examines the ?other side?
of the drag culture?female-to-male performers who embody
masculinity as a statement of queer identity. This unique book,
which is a Lambda Literary Award finalist and has garnered an
honorable mention in the competition for the Center of Lesbian
and Gay Studies' 2004 Sylvia Rivera Award in Transgender Studies,
dispels the myth that drag kings are simply ?women doing
drag.? The Drag King Anthology presents entertaining and
enlightening essays that address gender, sexuality, and feminism.
Using prose, poetry, and photographs, an eclectic mix of scholars,
performers, and fans offer cultural and political insights on
the international growth and development of drag king troupes
and communities
Mentioned in passing or neglected altogether in academic
writings on queer and feminist theory, ?kinging? has
emerged as a powerful cultural and political comment on gender
norms. The Drag King Anthology provides an alternative look at
how women?butches, trannyboys, femmes, and gender variants?perform
masculinity to cross the spectrum of sexual and gender categories
and the impact these performances have. Essays and visual images
combine with case studies on drag king troupes in the United States,
Canada, and Australia to reflect an aesthetic that is more than
the sum of its parts.
"As dykes, our choice to king it up and create arenas
for drag king culture is a political, liberatory move with deep
resonances for shaking up outdated, oppressive gender systems
and sexual codes, as well as our own potential for power. Queers
and trannies do more than survive (and live) at the margins of
society; through the exaggerations, perversions, and transmutations
we create, we push human behavior to a futuristic edge. Drag kinging
produces new erotics, new genders, and new forms and modes of
power."
?k. Bradford, from ?Grease Cowboy Fever or the Making
of Johnny T.?
The Drag King Anthology is an essential read for anyone
interested in drag or the performance of masculinity. A valuable
resource for academics working in sociology, anthropology, gender
studies, pop culture, and contemporary critical theory, the book
lends itself to coursework at the graduate and undergraduate levels.
Contents:
- Introduction
- KING ME: FIRST PERSON NARRATIVES
- Grease Cowboy Fever, or the Making of Johnny T.
- Me Boy
- ?I Am the Man!? Performing Gender and Other Incongruities
- ON LOCATION: DRAG KING SCENES
- Making Kings
- Lesbian Drag Kings and the Feminine Embodiment of the Masculine
- Capital Drag: Kinging in Washington, DC
- Kinging in the Heartland; or, the Power of Marginality
- Walk Like a Man: Enactments and Embodiments of Masculinity
and the Potential for Multiple Genders
- Drag Kings in the New Wave: Gender Performance and Participation
- DESIRE AND THE AUDIENCE
- A Voice from the Audience
- One Body, Some Genders: Drag Performances and Technologies
- Drag King Magic: Performing/Becoming the Other
- Erotic Arguments and Persuasive Acts: Discourses of Desire
and the Rhetoric of Female-to-Male Drag
- THEORIZING KINGS
- Seeing Double: Thinking Twice, The Toronto Drag Kings and
(Re-) Articulations of Masculinity
- Whose Drag Is It Anyway? Drag Kings and Monarchy in the UK
- Drag Kings ?Down Under?: An Archive and Introspective
of a Few Aussie Blokes
- PICTURE THIS: KING PHOTOS
- Personae
- Eugene Does His Nails
- Autoportrait
- Drag King Workshop Advertisement
- Performing Masculinities
- About the Contributors
- Index
- Reference Notes Included
Reviews:
?THIS FIRST-OF-ITS-KIND ANTHOLOGY EXAMINES THE 'OTHER
SIDE' OF DRAG CULTURE: women who are male impersonators. . . .
Makes a statement about gender roles and sexual identity in a
society that still tries to put males and females in neatly separate
categories. . . . In prose, poetry, and photographs, the contributors
introduce us to a brave new world of butches, trannyboys, femmes,
and gender variants.? - The Book Nook (GayToday.com,
TWN the weekly news, Boston Bay)
?RECOMMENDED FOR STUDENTS AND FACULTY IN FEMINIST AND
QUEER THEORY PROGRAMS. . . . OFFERS ENLIGHTENING DISCUSSIONS OF
KINGING, of its ability to parody and expose the artificiality
of gender and its ability to evoke desire. The essays examine
the vitality of kinging in such cities as Washington, Columbus
(Ohio), and Minneapolis. The drag king phenomenon has moved beyond
New York, London, and San Francisco. The book includes photographs,
and even questions and issues for discussion.? - Choice
Magazine
?If you did not know of an entire subculture of women
dressing, acting, and performing publicly as men who call themselves
drag kings, this collection of essays will bring you up to speed.
The lively, funny, first-hand reports, the descriptions of shows,
and the photographs enliven the debate on just what ?kinging?
is.? - Frontiers Magazine
?PRESENTS A WONDERFULLY DIVERSE RANGE OF NEW PERSPECTIVES
on drag king culture, drawing together the insights of participants
and fans, academic work by scholars from several disciplines,
and photographic images of drag performance. INNOVATIVE. . . .
Few academic projects have been as successful in striking just
the right balance between theory and practice; this anthology
should appeal both to the general reader and to cultural critics
of the body, sexuality, and gender.? - Laura Doan, Author
of Fashioning Sapphism: The Origins of a Modern English Lesbian
Culture; Director, Women's Studies Centre, University of Manchester
?OFFERS INSIDER REPORTS on the current state of several
drag kingdoms, including Columbus, Ohio and the Midwest in general,
Washington, DC, Montreal and Toronto, Canada, and Adelaide, Australia.
HIGHLY ACCESSIBLE . . . blends its gender theories into entertaining
personal narratives about performance and fandom. The contributors
address questions about embodiment, location, authenticity, and
desire, and they all express the passion and excitement generated
by these lively and provocative scenes.? - Judith Halberstam,
Professor of Literature and Cultural Studies, University of California
- San Diego; Author of Female Masculinity; Co-author of The Drag
King Book
?ALL UNIVERSITY COURSES ON MASCULINITY SHOULD USE THIS
BOOK . . . challenges preconceptions through the empirical richness
of direct experience. The contributors and editors have worked
together to produce cultural analysis that enhances our perception
of the dynamic uncertainty of gendered experience.? -
Sally R. Munt, DPhil, Subject Chair, Media Studies, University
of Sussex
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