Aaron Travis' acclaimed, imaginative supernatural short story "Blue Light" was eventually included in John Preston's groundbreaking anthology of gay erotica The Flesh and the Word.
It gets a bit weird. Just FYI.
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Comments
"A bit weird" is a bit of an understatement.
The story is a great example of the convergence of fantasizing and the fantastic that has emerged here as a problematic grounded in the word's polysemy and the mode's polymorphousness.
I thought it was funny that the protagonist was way more upset to watch himself being castrated than to discover he had just been decapitated. (But then again, a "castration" scene in Fanny Fatale's "Phantom Knights" in On Our Backs had all the pomp of "he took his cock off, tossed it on the coffee table, and went to bed" -- so maybe the "horror" of it has to do with how regularly detachable cocks are written into your fantasizing to begin with.)
What I like about this one is how it plays around with dismemberment and objectification to make the fantasy-fantastic convergence so productive, and to indicate, with the story, how sexual representation can be read. The story is full of symbols that are a standard of BDSM fare; even the Victorian mansion tells you, more or less, how the rest of the story is going to go. But where it starts to get interesting is Michael's line to Bill, at the beginning of the role reversal scene, that "symbols are so important to both of us." He's referring directly to the leather arm band, but he's also summing up a series of prepatations to turn Bill into a head, a body, and a cock. Taken literally, it's a bit gory and objectifying, but by converting Bill's body to the symbolic Michael opens up multiple and simultaneous possible interpretations of his mind and sight, his body, his cock, multiple sites and forms of desire, and a whole host of possibilities for what it means to fuck. (I think we talked before about really weird contrasts between penises and dildos in lesbian literature, that essentially said dildos are open to interpretation while everybody knows penises are just that one thing, and I went hunting for better theorizations of 'the penis.' Well, here's one.)
And then it just gets wonderful. Bill's head's thought that he was masochist (his body), and sadist and voyeur (his head, watching his body) at once is a clue about how to look at porn, how to identify with and fantasize about the scenes (reminiscent of that Lisa Palac article I keep referring to, "How Dirty Pictures Changed My Life"). So Bill, thinking of himself as both voyeur and actor, gets to have this great experience eroticizing and admiring his own body:
I imagine that's what Travis intended his audiences to do, too: identify with the story in a way that helped them eroticize their own bodies. (This is also what I liked best about Pink Narcissus -- it eroticized male bodies in a way that I have not often seen in contemporary porn with men in it... Granted, I'm looking at straight porn on Porntube and stuff like Treasure Island Media, but those are what's making money right now, so I would guess that a lot of men are only ever seeing these relatively very flat and unfeeling images of themselves. [Unless I am missing something in contemporary pornographic images of men].)
What made me uncomfortable about this story, though, is that the men in it are impossibly built, like GI Joe action figures. So it eroticizes male bodies, which is great, but then idealizes them in a way that no actual human men can ever live up to.
Thoughts about eroticizing male bodies reminded me to chase down an excerpt from this excellent fat theory post from One Girl Rhumba earlier this year:
There is a lot of focus in current feminist activism on teaching individual men how to express their sexualities in consensual, non-violent ways (e.g., anti-rape education targeted directly to, say, post-secondary sports teams). I don't add this to devalue that kind of activism, because I'm as convinced as anyone that education for men is necessary and effective, much more so than yet another self-defence class for women anyway, but it is still interesting to contrast that individualized kind of message about how men should relate to their sexualities with the kinds of messages about male sexuality that are communal, institutional, dominant, etc.
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