Though (and perhaps because) Albert Nobbs does not identify
as queer, I think Judith Butler would consider her (Nobbs’s) situation as the
result of a gendered society that relies on discourse to display an
exclusionary gender binary: “[…] the construction of gender operates through
exclusionary means, such as the human is not only produced over and against the
inhuman, but through a set of foreclosures, radical erasures, that are,
strictly speaking, refused the possibility of cultural articulation. […] These
excluded sites come to bound the “human” as its constructive outside, and to
haunt those boundaries as the persistent possibility of their disruption and
rearticulation” (Bodies that Matter, 8). Thus, the very existence of Nobbs as a
gendered subject illuminates the boundaries to which she has been forced to
outside of, marginalized and therefore “erased” as a woman.
Jumping back in time a little (or forward, depending on how
you’re looking at it) I also want to point out a 1961 movie starring Audrey
Hepburn and Shirley MacLaine called “The Children’s Hour;” not because this
movie deconstructs gender (it doesn’t) but because it was rather courageous (if
not melodramatic) in its presentation of lesbianism, though in a context of
heteronormative institutions, as the two starring actors are portrayed as
sympathetic and pitiable, wronged because of their presumptive sexualities. Also,
it’s a really fantastic movie and I think everyone should watch it.
The Children's Hour is a cult classic. It is a perfect exemplification of discourses surrounding lesbianism since the late nineteenth century: that lesbian lives can be presented in print, and then movies, as long as the story ends with a death resulting from a wayward lifestyle, a hetero marriage, insanity, or a combination. The pulp fiction novels of the 1950s by Ann Bannon are good print examples. Here's a link to a cover. http://www.google.com/imgres?q=lesbian+pulp+fiction+cover&hl=en&biw=1364&bih=697&gbv=2&tbm=isch&tbnid=tULn6KfCOiHOSM:&imgrefurl
ReplyDeleteI think it is appropriate you reference Butler and also contextualize Albert Nobbs historically. Any queer or feminist reading is one we give to it.