Christian S. Hammons Exploring Culture And Gender Through Film Pdf ✧ [Exclusive]
No film better illustrates the instability of cultural–gender framing than Paris Is Burning (Livingston, 1990). The documentary’s history of appropriation and celebration is well-trodden. But less discussed is how its formal structure mirrors ballroom’s own subversion. Livingston repeatedly cuts between voguing performances and “real life” interviews. In one sequence, Pepper LaBeija explains “reading” as verbal combat; immediately, we see a ballroom reading session where gender is temporarily legislated by queer Black and Latinx judges. The film refuses to resolve the tension: Is ballroom an escape from gendered oppression or a hyper-real staging of its rules? The answer is both —and cinema’s ability to hold that contradiction is its gift.
Film does not merely reflect culture; it frames it—literally and ideologically. Each shot selects, each edit naturalizes. For scholars of gender, this framing power poses a double bind. On one hand, mainstream cinema has historically disciplined bodies into legible masculine/feminine roles, often along colonial or heteronormative lines. On the other, independent and transnational filmmakers have weaponized the same medium to expose those seams. My work asks: How can we read gender in film not as a stable identity but as a site of cultural friction ? The answer is both —and cinema’s ability to
Butler’s (1990) theory of gender performativity suggests that identity is produced through “stylized repetition of acts.” In film, repetition becomes literal: the looped gesture, the ritual scene, the montage of daily routines. Consider Sciamma’s Tomboy (2011), where ten-year-old Laure’s passing as a boy named Mikäel is rendered through mundane acts—tying hair back, spitting, choosing a swimsuit. The camera’s patience (long takes of dressing, silence over dialogue) refuses to sensationalize passing; instead, it mimics ethnographic observation. Yet this is not “natural” culture. It is a deliberate performance scaffolded by cinematic time. Gender here emerges as learned choreography , not inner truth. Gender here emerges as learned choreography