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The Annual Queer Studies Easter Symposium in Mexico

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Behind the Rainbow

Queer Studies Easter Symposium

Simposio de Estudios Queer de la Pascua

Mexico City/Ciudad de México

Abstracts/Resúmenes de ponencias

 

Queering the Other: Gender trouble and post-colonial French cinema 

Brigitte Rollet 

French Department

(ULIP )University of London Institute in Paris)

The tradition of universalism inherited from the French Revolution which denies the existence of differences based either on sex, social or ethnic background, religion, age, or sexual orientation (‘all citizens are equal’ without these considerations), is one of the main reasons for the reluctance in recognising variety within French society and culture. Unlike in Britain and the USA, minorities are –almost constitutionally- problematic within a French context and French mainstream/commercial cinema have introduced or acknowledged very few characters with other sexual orientations than the dominant and compulsory heterosexuality. Similarly, questions of ethnicity are not often considered and represented the way they can be in other national cinemas.

This does not mean however, that minorities are absent in French films. However gays, lesbians and ethnic others are regularly portrayed as caricatures or stereotypes both in popular and non commercial (auteur) cinema, and indirectly comfort the norms of the majority in terms of sexuality and ethnicity. In both end of the French filmic spectrum, homosexuality as a whole is always constructed in opposition to the dominant norms regarding sexual identity and orientation. Gays and lesbians are therefore the “others” of the male and female straight characters (and audience alike) and everything in the films is made to show and to maintain the boundaries between the norm and the margins. Gay (and some ethnic minorities) directors themselves do not escape this tendency and often internalise dominant constructions, reproducing binary opposition man/woman, heterosexuality/homosexuality or white/non-white. Similarly, the figure of the transvestite is regularly constructed as a ridiculous character, someone to le laughed at and mocked, a human being which far from offering a “third way” contributes to reinforce dominant assumptions regarding sexual identity and orientation.

In such a context, my use of the word “queer” might sound rather surprising, not to say inappropriate. I will employ it nonetheless in my analysis of a handful of films and characters which seem to transcend the boundaries between gender, sexuality and ethnicity. Made by French directors of North-African descent, these pictures are therefore considered as “beur” films (i.e. films made from the mid-1980s by second-generation immigrants from North African former French colonies). However, unlike most “beur” films which repeatedly offer chauvinistic straight young males who explicitly defend traditional conceptions of virility, these films challenge dominant representations of masculinity, heterosexuality and ethnicity by creating characters in drag, who transcend the usual boundaries of sex, gender and sexuality. Therefore, they often reject the issue of binary oppositions mentioned above and create characters and situation sometimes verging on queer, in the way they resist norms and classifications. Hence, Mehdi Charef in Miss Mona (1986), Karim Dridi in Pigalle (1994) and Merzak Allouache in Chouchou (2002), escape the sexual and textual rules of “beur” –and French- films by questioning sexual as well as national and ethnic identities. This paper will address their attempt to create new identities by trying to blur categories and to offer another variety of “queer” characters.

 

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