Hardcore Style, Queer Heteroeroticism, and After Dark

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During the early to mid-1970s, when feature-length hardcore films became a popular cultural phenomenon in the United States, hardcore came to designate more than just a genre or an industry—it became a ubiquitous mode of performance, an ethos, and a style. This article explores how hardcore as a style was taken up by the popular gay-marketed entertainment magazine After Dark. Through a close descriptive analysis of three photo spreads from 1975–76, it illuminates how female, gay male, and otherwise non-straight-identifying performers participated in a hardcore stylistic that, paradoxically, worked to shape queer elaborations of heteroeroticism. Within these vital images of singers, dancers, models, and performance artists, created at the height of hardcore's newfound cultural influence, performances of female-male coupling and group-centered socio-sexual activity both worked with and moved to dissolve normative heterosexist configurations of sex and gender.

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This record is for a(n) offprint of an article published in Feminisit Media Histories in 2019; the version of record is available at https://doi.org/10.1525/fmh.2019.5.2.111.

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Powell, Ryan Patrick. "Hardcore Style, Queer Heteroeroticism, and After Dark." Feminisit Media Histories, vol. 5, no. 2, pp. 111-147, April 15 2019, https://doi.org/10.1525/fmh.2019.5.2.111.

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Feminisit Media Histories

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