“The Dress-Clad, Out Loud Singer of Queer Punks”: Bradford Cox and the Performance of Disability

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

“The Dress-Clad, Out Loud Singer of Queer Punks”: Bradford Cox and the Performance of Disability. / Holmes, Jessica Allison.

In: Journal of the Society for American Music, Vol. 14, No. 3, 08.2020, p. 250 - 279.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Holmes, JA 2020, '“The Dress-Clad, Out Loud Singer of Queer Punks”: Bradford Cox and the Performance of Disability', Journal of the Society for American Music, vol. 14, no. 3, pp. 250 - 279. https://doi.org/10.1017/s175219632000019x

APA

Holmes, J. A. (2020). “The Dress-Clad, Out Loud Singer of Queer Punks”: Bradford Cox and the Performance of Disability. Journal of the Society for American Music, 14(3), 250 - 279. https://doi.org/10.1017/s175219632000019x

Vancouver

Holmes JA. “The Dress-Clad, Out Loud Singer of Queer Punks”: Bradford Cox and the Performance of Disability. Journal of the Society for American Music. 2020 Aug;14(3):250 - 279. https://doi.org/10.1017/s175219632000019x

Author

Holmes, Jessica Allison. / “The Dress-Clad, Out Loud Singer of Queer Punks”: Bradford Cox and the Performance of Disability. In: Journal of the Society for American Music. 2020 ; Vol. 14, No. 3. pp. 250 - 279.

Bibtex

@article{aacd440e13c245109d1ea0e14951e2fe,
title = "“The Dress-Clad, Out Loud Singer of Queer Punks”: Bradford Cox and the Performance of Disability",
abstract = "Bradford Cox's physical appearance has mystified audiences, critics, and fans since the inception of his American indie rock band Deerhunter in the early 2000s. As the band's frontman, Cox is 6{\textquoteright}4” with an exceptionally thin, angular frame, physical effects associated with Marfan syndrome. Yet many critics and fans do not recognize that he has a disability per se, instead speculating about possible anorexia, drug abuse, mental illness, and even his gender and sexual orientation. Through analysis of Cox's reception and creative output, I argue that the simultaneous fetishization and normalization of his body is due to its resonance with two overlapping countercultural discourses: the current idealization of thinness in indie rock as it both extends and departs from an earlier tradition of freakery and androgyny in punk. I show that Cox resists what he views as the masculine heteronormativity and performative apathy of indie rock through “freakish” sartorial reference to his androgynous punk idols PJ Harvey, Joey Ramone, and Patti Smith, an aesthetic that for Cox is vitally queer. Cox uses his solo musical output to further convey his alienation as a queer-disabled male artist: through his lyrics, album art, and specific vocal affectations and production techniques, he establishes a continuity across the visual and sonic registers of his identity to ultimately achieve a sense of belonging.",
author = "Holmes, {Jessica Allison}",
year = "2020",
month = aug,
doi = "10.1017/s175219632000019x",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
pages = "250 -- 279",
journal = "Journal of the Society for American Music",
issn = "1752-1963",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - “The Dress-Clad, Out Loud Singer of Queer Punks”: Bradford Cox and the Performance of Disability

AU - Holmes, Jessica Allison

PY - 2020/8

Y1 - 2020/8

N2 - Bradford Cox's physical appearance has mystified audiences, critics, and fans since the inception of his American indie rock band Deerhunter in the early 2000s. As the band's frontman, Cox is 6’4” with an exceptionally thin, angular frame, physical effects associated with Marfan syndrome. Yet many critics and fans do not recognize that he has a disability per se, instead speculating about possible anorexia, drug abuse, mental illness, and even his gender and sexual orientation. Through analysis of Cox's reception and creative output, I argue that the simultaneous fetishization and normalization of his body is due to its resonance with two overlapping countercultural discourses: the current idealization of thinness in indie rock as it both extends and departs from an earlier tradition of freakery and androgyny in punk. I show that Cox resists what he views as the masculine heteronormativity and performative apathy of indie rock through “freakish” sartorial reference to his androgynous punk idols PJ Harvey, Joey Ramone, and Patti Smith, an aesthetic that for Cox is vitally queer. Cox uses his solo musical output to further convey his alienation as a queer-disabled male artist: through his lyrics, album art, and specific vocal affectations and production techniques, he establishes a continuity across the visual and sonic registers of his identity to ultimately achieve a sense of belonging.

AB - Bradford Cox's physical appearance has mystified audiences, critics, and fans since the inception of his American indie rock band Deerhunter in the early 2000s. As the band's frontman, Cox is 6’4” with an exceptionally thin, angular frame, physical effects associated with Marfan syndrome. Yet many critics and fans do not recognize that he has a disability per se, instead speculating about possible anorexia, drug abuse, mental illness, and even his gender and sexual orientation. Through analysis of Cox's reception and creative output, I argue that the simultaneous fetishization and normalization of his body is due to its resonance with two overlapping countercultural discourses: the current idealization of thinness in indie rock as it both extends and departs from an earlier tradition of freakery and androgyny in punk. I show that Cox resists what he views as the masculine heteronormativity and performative apathy of indie rock through “freakish” sartorial reference to his androgynous punk idols PJ Harvey, Joey Ramone, and Patti Smith, an aesthetic that for Cox is vitally queer. Cox uses his solo musical output to further convey his alienation as a queer-disabled male artist: through his lyrics, album art, and specific vocal affectations and production techniques, he establishes a continuity across the visual and sonic registers of his identity to ultimately achieve a sense of belonging.

U2 - 10.1017/s175219632000019x

DO - 10.1017/s175219632000019x

M3 - Journal article

VL - 14

SP - 250

EP - 279

JO - Journal of the Society for American Music

JF - Journal of the Society for American Music

SN - 1752-1963

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 285451398