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(Click on above photos for larger
image)
Photos from the book courtesy of the author. From left to right they
show how team pics started as very affectionate, then became more
rigid.
When It Was OK to
Show Affection
By
Eric “Gumby” Anderson
For Outsports.com
John Ibson, American
Cultural Studies Professor at California State University Fullerton,
has written a provocative pictorial history of the relationship
between men and the modern construct of homosexual identity.
In
"Picturing Men: A Century of Male Relationships in Everyday American
Photography,"
Ibson uses photographs of men (from his
collection of more than 5,000) from the Civil War until post World War
II in order to illustrate the changing nature of male-to-male
intimacy. The book contains hundreds of images of men striking warm
poses, whether they are taken from within a studio or by a personal
camera.
In contrast to a
modern perspective, the male athletes, friends, servicemen, brothers,
collegiate and prep school boys strike a strong, and often highly
homoerotic pose. Ibson warns that, although it is impossible to know
what the relationship of the men truly was, notions of male intimacy
were markedly different 100 years ago than they were today. In such,
Ibson provides photographic evidence for what Michele Foucault has
described as the changing meaning of homosexuality from the sodomite
(which was viewed as a temporary aberration) to the homosexual as a
species.
From an academic
perspective, Ibson offers a fine critique of the restrictive gender
roles that emerge with the modern version of our dichotomously
oriented society, but from a more easily digested angle,. He clearly
shows that prior to the increased awareness of homosexuality as a
deviant identity, men were free to be intimate with each other. His
photographs show men lavishly dressed, provocatively undressed, arms
wrapped around each other, embracing, lying in piles, sleeping in the
same beds, holding hands, and sitting on each other’s laps. From a
modern lens it is easy to see how we would mistake the photographs for
ancient photographic gay pornography, but they are not.
Rather, Ibson’s
collection shows that as American culture increasingly became aware of
homosexuality, and particularly the notion of the homosexual as a
distinct kind of person, that the resultant fear of being thought “one
of those” (homophobia) put a wedge in-between the intimacy that men
once used to cherish as the ultimate – fraternal bonding. Ibson’s
photographs are compelling: Whole teams lying atop each other, sailors
dancing arm-in-arm, men dressed in drag. But his convincing argument
is synergized with the addition of literary proof of the bond that men
used to share before homophobia hit American society hard at the end
of World War II.
He illustrates
romantic, sexual, and endearing friendships and love between men. He
references scholars in American masculinity to compliment his
collection of photographs, to show that before the word “homosexual”
maintained cultural currency, men were much more free to emote, be
close to, and engage in sex with each other. His argument beckons the
question of whether identity politics have truly helped liberate the
modern day homosexual, or whether we would have been better off never
classifying same-sex attraction in the first place.
Holding Hands and Hugging
From an athletics
example, Chapter 5--“Straightening Up: The Evolution of the Team
Portrait”--highlights the growing rigidity that athletes displayed in
team portraits. Athletes prior to around the 1920s hugged each other,
putting their heads in each other’s laps, holding hands, or draping
their arms around each other. It wasn’t long after that the team photo
took on the now familiar structure of rows, with men first standing
with their hands at their side, and then across their chest. The
photographs clearly show that “space” has been added between males,
something that has continued into the 21st century. (Note the
evolution of the team pose in the four photographs accompanying this
review for an illustrative example of the affect that homophobia had
on male intimacy.)
Although Ibson’s book
ends on a somber note, the loss of intimacy, he reminds us that things
are again bound to change. In fact, my own work picks up on where
Ibson leaves off. Although not represented through photographs, my
research on masculine identity suggests that perhaps the worst is
over. Where the symbolic space between men seems to have grown from
the beginning of the century until the 1980’s, masculinity since the
mid-1990’s seems to be softening.
For example, while
conducting research at a recent cheerleading competition, I watched
teams pose for their portraits. The men would take to the back row
(women in front) and put each other’s hands onto the shoulders of the
men in front of them. They often mocked same-sex attraction by
thrusting their hips into the guy in front of them, rousing laughter
without the all-to-familiar retaliation of “knock if off fag.” But as
these young men posed in this more intimate way, the photographer, in
his mid-40s came by the men and prompted them to fold their arms
across their chests, inflating their musculature. The boys, so
trained in masculine demeanor, always immediately responded and
imitated the elder male. Yet, after telling of the actions of the
photographer to the team I was researching, the boys (all
heterosexual) said, “No way.”
When it was their
turn to be pictured, they took to the back row, and put their hands
across each other. When the photographer prompted them to “straighten
up” they refused, flexing not their muscles, but their individual
ability to change an ugly culture of homophobia. The photographer
walked away visibly upset that the boys refused to pose in the
hyper-macho style he desired, as a rather large smile cracked across
my face. If these boys represent the future of American masculinity,
we have much to look forward to.
Eric "Gumby"
Anderson is a longtime track coach and now teaches at the
University of California Irvine. His last
last
article for Outsports was about a gay high school basketball
player in Indiana.
Order
"Picturing Men"
March 3, 2003 |