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Madonna's Erotica
Madonna's Erotica
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Size: Paperback
Everyone wanted Madonna's 1992 album
to be a scandal. In the midst of a culture war, conservatives wanted it to be proof of the decline of family values. The target of conservative loathing, gay men reeling from the AIDS epidemic wanted it to be a celebration of a sexual culture that had rapidly slipped away. And Madonna herself wanted to sell scandal, which is why she released
in the same season as her erotic thriller
and her pornographic coffee-table book simply titled
.
But
is more sentimental than pornographic. This ambivalence over sex is what makes the album crucial both for understanding its time and for navigating culture a generation later. As queer politics were transitioning from sexual liberation to civil rights like same-sex marriage, Madonna tried to do both. Her songs proved formative for works of queer theory, which emerged in the academy at the same time as the album. And
was-and is-central to a developing consciousness about cultural appropriation. In this book, Michael Dango considers
and its legacy by drawing both on the intellectual traditions at the center of today's hysteria over critical race theory and “don't say gay” and on his own experiences as a gay man too young to know the original carnage of AIDS and too old to grow up assuming he could get married. Madonna offered up
as a key entry in the 1990s culture wars. Her album speaks all the more urgently to the culture wars of today