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‘Oh you pretty thing!’: How David Bowie ‘unlocked everybody’s inner queen’ in spite of the music press

Glen, Patrick
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2016-12-29
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The 1967 Sexual Offence Act decriminalised homosexual acts between men allowing gay men to discuss their sexuality in public. Few prominent popular musicians came-out until 1972 when David Bowie claimed that he was bisexual in an interview with Melody Maker. Music papers and Bowie had substantial cultural power: Bowie was a rising star and music papers recruited journalists who discussed and perpetuated social change. The subsequent conversation, however, reinforced negative stereotypes in constructing the queer subject and tried to safeguard commercial concerns due to the assumption that the market for popular music avoided queer music. This undermined arguments that associate permissive legislation with a permissive media and society, but, to some, representation alone empowered people and destabilised preconceptions about queer identity.
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Glen, P. (2016) ‘Oh you pretty thing!’: How David Bowie ‘unlocked everybody’s inner queen’ in spite of the music press, Contemporary British History, 31(3), pp. 407-429.
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Journal article
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en
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This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Informa in Contemporary British History on 29/12/2016, available online: https://doi.org/10.1080/13619462.2016.1261696 The accepted version of the publication may differ from the final published version.
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1361-9462
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1743-7997
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