Obviously, glamour is queer. But has this always been true? This article offers queer histories of capitalism and interwar glamour through an analysis of George Platt Lynes's photographic work. Lynes, an American photographer for Condé Nast publications, was one of numerous queer photographers, including Baron de Meyer, Cecil Beaton, George Hoyningen-Huene, and Horst P. Horst, who defined a queer aesthetics of fashion photography in New York, Paris, London, and Hollywood in the years before World War II. I historicize what Lynes called the “amorous regard” of his fashion photography through an analysis of his male nudes and the sexual history for which they are a visual record. In this article, I show how both Lynes's fashion images and his male nudes emerged from a market-imbricated queer kinship network to produce a discourse of interwar glamour that accommodated both dominant readings of heteronormativity and resistant readings of queer, white, belonging.
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Research Article|
June 01 2017
Queering Glamour in Interwar Fashion Photography: The “Amorous Regard” of George Platt Lynes
GLQ (2017) 23 (3): 289–326.
Citation
Elspeth H. Brown; Queering Glamour in Interwar Fashion Photography: The “Amorous Regard” of George Platt Lynes. GLQ 1 June 2017; 23 (3): 289–326. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/10642684-3818429
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