Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Competing Narratives: Another look at the "Rosie the Riveter" of Gay Rights


In 2005, Helene Shugart analyzed “poster child” logic surrounding Rosie O’Donnell’s coming out and subsequent support of equal rights adoption. Shugart concluded that the mass-mediated interpretations of O’Donnell’s projected narratives—that of being simultaneously a maternal figurehead, as well as a childlike presence in popular culture—in conjunction with her politically charged stance on adoption, worked to reify an ideological division between heterosexual and homosexual parents. Shugart argues that the public’s understanding of O’Donnell as an outsider—a “misfit with a heart of gold”—who is concerned with the care and safety of similar misfit children, categorically marginalizes both these broken children and their gay (adoptive) parents. Essentially, because both are already in the margins of society, it establishes a view of gay parents as the only suitable “beasts of burden” capable of parenting troubled youth.
Shugart’s conclusion, however, relies on a particular reading of O’Donnell’s narratives. While I agree with Shugart’s analysis and conclusions, I feel compelled to voice my concern for the supposed totality of this reading. Personally, at some points in the article, I perceived a disconnect with the author’s interpretation, and my own recollections about O’Donnell. As Shugart noted, O’Donnell’s performance

“could be understood as presentational, in a mediated context, it, too, ultimately is rendered representational, available for consumption and interpretation … by multiple audiences.”

It is this flexibility in interpretation that allowed (apparently) a large portion of the American population to perceive O’Donnell as a kind and caring figure. Many of the adults by whom I was surrounded in my youth did not share this view. Constantly, I can remember Rosie being talked about as a “loud bitch” who “used her celebrity to butt into people’s lives.” Shugart was right in some respect here, in that O’Donnell’s sexuality was “absorbed” by the context of her coming out—very rarely was her sexuality mentioned in these critiques. These acquaintances and family members to which I am referring were more traditionally conservative, and so O’Donnell’s tireless efforts to increase governmental regulations, including gun control, did not sit well with them.
            As I read Shugart’s article, I found it eye-opening as I lacked the frame of reference necessary for this interpretation of Rosie O’Donnell. However, as I continued to read, I was able to follow—and agree with—Shugart’s analysis quite well. I feel it should be made apparent that although this analysis is sound, without the reading of O’Donnell’s narratives that Shugart describes, it changes her whole argument. When she claims that the

“characterizations of O’Donnell as opportunistic, greedy, and deceptive were so far afield from her mainstream persona … that they quickly fizzled as fodder for discourse,”

it must be understood that not everyone felt these characterizations were completely off the mark. Therefore, this then deconstructs the “misfits caring for misfits” marginalization Shugart had established. To people, consumers, who do not share in Shugart’s narrative interpretation of O’Donnell, this application of heteronormative logic does not ring so assuredly true. This results in a separation of O’Donnell, and the parents for which she was fighting in the first place. O’Donnell, to some, was marginalized because of her highly publicized, brash, exploitative and “opportunistic” behavior.
            Granted, this interpretation is very possibly the viewpoint of only a few, but it altered how I read this article from the onset. What is interesting to note is that in the seven years since Shugart penned this piece, the visibility of queer bodies in the mainstream media has increased. While Shugart expressed a very real concern for the secondary and diminishing nature of queerness as represented by the media, we are seeing growth today. A cursory Google News search for “gay parents” resulted in over 2,000 results that trended more towards the positive. Research supporting family units—regardless of any member’s sexuality—as the key to happiness and positive development is becoming more widespread. Public discourse, especially with recent debates about the institution of marriage, is giving more attention to queer issues. While this does not necessarily change the media’s representations of queer individuals, it provides room for change. Maybe now, seven years later, is when we need a “poster child” as Shugart established O’Donnell, to rally the troops.

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