Murder Most Queer

The Homicidal Homosexual in the American Theater

Subjects: Theater and Performance, Sexuality Studies
Hardcover : 9780472072323, 268 pages, 8 illustrations, 6 x 9, October 2014
Open Access : 9780472904112, 268 pages, 8 illustrations, 6 x 9, June 2023
Audiobook : 9780472003785, 268 pages, 6 x 9, May 2021
Paperback : 9780472052325, 268 pages, 8 illustrations, 6 x 9, October 2014

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A fascinating look at the shifting meanings of murderous gay characters in American theater over a century

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Description

The “villainous homosexual” has long stalked America’s cultural imagination, most explicitly in the figure of the queer murderer, a character in dozens of plays. But as society’s understanding of homosexuality has changed, so has the significance of these controversial characters, especially when employed by LGBT theater artists themselves to explore darker fears and desires. Murder Most Queer examines the shifting meanings of murderous LGBT characters in American theater over a century, showing how these representations wrestle with and ultimately subvert notions of gay villainy.
Murder Most Queer works to expose the forces that create the homophobic paradigm that imagines sexual and gender nonconformity as dangerous and destructive and to show how theater artists—and for the most part LGBT theater artists—have rewritten and radically altered the significance of the homicidal homosexual. Jordan Schildcrout argues that these figures, far from being simple reiterations of a homophobic archetype, are complex and challenging characters who enact trenchant fantasies of empowerment, replacing the shame and stigma of the abject with the defiance and freedom of the outlaw, giving voice to rage and resistance.  These bold characters also probe the darker anxieties and fears that can affect queer lives and relationships.  Instead of sentencing them to the prison of negative representations, this book analyzes the meanings in their acts of murder, confronting the real fears and desires condensed in those dramatic acts.

Jordan Schildcrout is Assistant Professor of Theatre and Performance at Purchase College, State University of New York.