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Even
more telling is the author's highly exploitive use of
language. From the article's opening statement--"The sexual
secrets of Dusty Springfield are to be brushed back into the closet
in a Hollywood film about Britain's greatest white soul singer"--Harlow
gleefully sensationalizes homosexuality, while pretending to report
objectively on the topic.
The
use of the phrase "sexual secrets" is unnecessarily
inflammatory, as is using the word "lust" in the title
as shorthand for lesbian sexuality. If
the studio execs had decided to brush out the singer's relationships
with men, would the author have used the title, "Biopic
plans to take the lust out of Dusty"? Probably not.
Because describing lesbian relationships with words like "secrets,"
"affairs," and "lust", while reserving words
like "relationships" and "love" for heterosexual
relationships, reinforces the idea that gay and lesbian relationships
are just about sex, and allows the heterosexual majority to continue
to view them as lesser-than.
Not
content just to inflame the fire of his anti-gay
readers, the author also wants to tap into the
frustration many lesbians feel with the practice of de-gaying
historical figures in movies and books. "Ladyslipper, a record
label that recently distributed a tribute album of Dusty songs
performed by lesbian singers, says it is horrified by the prospect
of a sexless Dusty," writes Harlow. "
He
goes on to quote a Ladyslipper executive who says, "[Springfield]
agonised before coming out in 1975 and it cost her a lot. Those
who say one should concentrate on her extraordinary voice want
to hide the pain that drove that talent."
So
now, in addition to sexualizing and sensationalizing lesbianism,
Harlow's article also manages to associate it with "pain"
and "agony," and to remind viewers that coming out "costs
a lot." Don't
worry, straight folks, those lesbian and bisexual women might
be having great sex, but it's all one big Well
of Loneliness for them on the inside.
If
you're wondering how all of this somehow
managed to make it past the newspaper's editor and fact-checker,
look no further than the newspaper's owner: the ultra-conservative
Rupert Murdoch empire, home of Fox News and propagator of all
things unfair and imbalanced.
But
Murdoch and company aren't the only ones at fault here. Several
other publications, like ContactMusic.com and Gay.com UK, have
jumped on the bandwagon in the last day or two, reprinting and
thereby ensuring the wide dissemination of Harlow's homophobic,
sensationalistic and unsubstantiated claims.
It's
a smaller-scale version of the Marcia
Cross debacle, with a single unverifiable source becoming
the basis for a growing avalanche of press, as the article begins
showing up on message boards across the Internet, stirring up
angry reactions among lesbians and fans of Dusty Springfield.
If
you think too much is being made of language and its
discontents, witness this week's national debate over the fact
that black Hurricane Katrina survivors carrying food have tended
to be described in photo captions as "looters," while
white survivors carrying food have more often been described as
"finders."
It's
only a difference of a single word, but that difference is significant
enough to warrant a national discussion.
Meanwhile,
gay and bisexual men and women are subjected to similar double-standards
in the language used by reporters every day to describe them,
and few heterosexuals even notice, let alone protest.
It
is this kind of overt display of prejudice that is truly wearisome.
Read
our profile
of Dusty Springfield
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