ABSTRACT

Concrete and Dust focuses on the performative nature of sexualized identity in Hollywood, the people that live in its underbelly and surrounding valleys, the sexual geographies of the place, and the ways in which sexual agency is mapped on the body and in consciousness. The cultural turn in ethnography has expanded the scope of ethnographic research methods, which now include innovative techniques that recognize and value sensuous scholarship (ethnographic works that incorporate visual, aural, and sensory texts). Hollywood has often been a focus in critical cultural theory; absent from the field is a holistic methodological perspective that collages visual image, arts-based ethnographic and autoethnographic narratives, experimental sound, poetry, and performative writing, in order to juxtapose the conflicting and complex performative nature of Hollywood, celebrity, glamour, and sexual agency.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

Los Angeles River 1

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

Los Angeles River, Revisited

chapter |14 pages

Burbank, Revisited

Arts-Based Autoethnographic (Re)membering

chapter |18 pages

Chatsworth, Revisited

The Commodification and Performance of Heteronormative Masculine Desire

chapter |16 pages

The Hollywood Hills, Revisited

The inside and outside Performance of the Plastique

chapter |12 pages

West Hollywood, Revisited

The Queer Performance of Limited Survivability

chapter |13 pages

Topanga Canyon, Revisited

A Sensuous Consciousness