{"title":"From Jailhouse Rock to Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go: George Michael and the New Man","authors":"Ailsa Weaver","doi":"10.1386/csmf_00065_1","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This article looks at the intersection between men’s fashion, ambiguous masculine identities and the emerging media form of music video in the AIDS-darkened early 1980s. It asks two questions: firstly, what enabled sartorial features in masculine fashion and grooming previously associated with queer-identifying men to cross over into the mainstream fashion culture of the 1980s? Secondly, how was it that in the startlingly homophobic climate of this ‘age of AIDS’, sexually ambiguous figures such as Wham!’s George Michael became such popular style role models? The article addresses these questions by arguing that Elvis Presley’s Jailhouse Rock (1957) – a strong stylistic influence on Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go by Wham! in 1984 – is an example of the Camp trace that remains when Camp aesthetics are removed from explicitly queer contexts. It argues that Jailhouse Rock is a dramatization of situational homosexuality, a mid-twentieth-century understanding of same-sex attraction between straight-identifying men, a precedent that permits the homoerotic group dynamic of Wham!. The article then explains how fashion worn by Michael in Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go – namely British designer Katherine Hamnett’s CHOOSE LIFE slogan T-shirt, and an alternative costume in which the colour pink is most prominent – demonstrates an intersection between fashion and politics for gay men in the 1980s. It also discusses Michael as an example of the New Man, an advertising and media trope of the 1980s that represented a blurring between queer masculine style and a new straight stereotype.","PeriodicalId":40987,"journal":{"name":"Critical Studies in Mens Fashion","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2023-04-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Critical Studies in Mens Fashion","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1386/csmf_00065_1","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
This article looks at the intersection between men’s fashion, ambiguous masculine identities and the emerging media form of music video in the AIDS-darkened early 1980s. It asks two questions: firstly, what enabled sartorial features in masculine fashion and grooming previously associated with queer-identifying men to cross over into the mainstream fashion culture of the 1980s? Secondly, how was it that in the startlingly homophobic climate of this ‘age of AIDS’, sexually ambiguous figures such as Wham!’s George Michael became such popular style role models? The article addresses these questions by arguing that Elvis Presley’s Jailhouse Rock (1957) – a strong stylistic influence on Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go by Wham! in 1984 – is an example of the Camp trace that remains when Camp aesthetics are removed from explicitly queer contexts. It argues that Jailhouse Rock is a dramatization of situational homosexuality, a mid-twentieth-century understanding of same-sex attraction between straight-identifying men, a precedent that permits the homoerotic group dynamic of Wham!. The article then explains how fashion worn by Michael in Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go – namely British designer Katherine Hamnett’s CHOOSE LIFE slogan T-shirt, and an alternative costume in which the colour pink is most prominent – demonstrates an intersection between fashion and politics for gay men in the 1980s. It also discusses Michael as an example of the New Man, an advertising and media trope of the 1980s that represented a blurring between queer masculine style and a new straight stereotype.
这篇文章着眼于在艾滋病肆虐的80年代早期,男性时尚、模糊的男性身份和新兴的音乐视频媒体形式之间的交集。它提出了两个问题:首先,是什么让男性时尚和修饰中的服装特征,以前与酷儿认同的男性联系在一起,进入了20世纪80年代的主流时尚文化?其次,在这个“艾滋病时代”令人震惊的恐同氛围中,像威猛乐队(Wham!乔治·迈克尔成为如此流行风格的榜样?本文通过论证埃尔维斯·普雷斯利的《监狱摇滚》(1957)——对威猛乐队的《Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go》产生了强烈的风格影响,来解决这些问题。这是坎普美学从明确的酷儿语境中移除后留下的坎普痕迹的一个例子。它认为,监狱摇滚是一种情境性同性恋的戏剧化,是二十世纪中期对异性恋男性之间同性吸引力的理解,是威猛乐队(Wham!)的同性恋群体动态的一个先例。这篇文章接着解释了迈克尔在《Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go》中所穿的时装——即英国设计师凯瑟琳·哈姆内特(Katherine Hamnett)设计的“选择生活”(CHOOSE LIFE)标语t恤,以及一套以粉红色为最突出颜色的另类服装——如何展示了20世纪80年代男同性恋者的时尚与政治的交集。它还讨论了迈克尔作为新男人的一个例子,这是20世纪80年代广告和媒体的比喻,代表了酷儿男性风格和新直男刻板印象之间的模糊。