ABSTRACT

Ryan Murphy is a self-described "gay boy from Indiana," who has grown up to forge a media empire. With an extraordinary list of credits and successful television shows, movies, and documentaries to his name, Murphy can now boast one of the broadest and most successful careers in Hollywood. Serving as writer, producer, and director, his creative output includes limited-run dramas (such as Feud, Ratched, and Halston), procedural dramas (such as 9-1-1 and 9-1-1 Lonestar), anthology series (such as American Crime Story, American Horror Story, and American Horror Stories), sit-coms (such as The New Normal) and long-running serial narratives (such as Glee, Nip/Tuck, and Pose). Each of these is infused in different ways with a distinctive form of queer energy and erotics, animating their narratives with both campy excess and poignant longing and giving new meaning to the American story.

This collection takes up Murphy as auteur and showrunner, considering the gendered and sexual politics of Murphy’s wide body of work. Using an intersectional framework throughout, an impressive list of well-known and emerging scholars engages with Murphy’s diverse output, while also making the case for Murphy’s version of a queer sensibility, a revised notion of queer time, cultural memory, and the contributions his own production company makes to a politics of LGBTQ+ representation and evolving gender identities.

This book is suitable for students of Gender and Media, LGBTQ+ Studies, Media Studies, and Communication Studies.

chapter |23 pages

Introduction

Touching Queerness: Ryan Murphy's Queer America

part I|61 pages

Queer Sensibilities

chapter 1|14 pages

Posing as Normal?

The Televisual and the Queer, The New Normal and Pose

chapter 2|15 pages

“You're Sexual, Right?”

Ryan Murphy and the Eroticization of Straight Masculinity

chapter 3|17 pages

Hagsploitation

Or the Queer Sublimity of Feud: Bette and Joan

chapter 4|13 pages

American Twink Story

part II|82 pages

What Was, Is, and Might Be

chapter 5|16 pages

Remediating the 1990s with Ryan Murphy

Gender, Race and (Inter)Generational Cultural Politics in The People Vs. OJ Simpson

chapter 6|14 pages

What If Golden Age Hollywood Had Been Inclusive?

Ryan Murphy's Hollywood as Queer Utopian Uchronia

chapter 7|17 pages

The Weight of Queer Emptiness

The Politician and Twenty-First-Century Queerness

chapter 8|17 pages

Rescuing Paternity

Masculinity, the Child, and Queer Futurity in 9-1-1

chapter 9|16 pages

Into the Gleetocracy

The Contours and Contradictions of a Queered American Dream

part III|42 pages

Remembering Those Lost: HIV/AIDS and Cultural Memory

chapter 10|14 pages

Normal?

The Normal Heart in Abnormal Times

chapter 11|12 pages

“I Always Knew I Wasn't Gonna Be Long on This Earth”

Pose and the AIDS Crisis

chapter 12|14 pages

Memorial Acts

Remembering Mart Crowley and The Boys in the Band

part IV|43 pages

Ryan Murphy Productions

chapter 13|14 pages

The End of the “Best Actor” Discourse?

Pose and the Queer of Color Politics of Casting Trans Roles

chapter 14|14 pages

Fused Muse

Sarah Paulson as Ryan Murphy's Partner in (American) Crime

chapter 15|13 pages

Showrunning Activism

Embodying Race, Gender, and Sexuality in the Work of Ryan Murphy