Abstract
Neoliberalism describes the nexus of political, economic, and cultural forces that shape notions of subjectivity, agency, and community under globalization. It is both the context and content of transnational capitalism; both Ugly Betty (2006–2010) and RuPaul’s Drag Race (2009-present) are its products, and their success can partly be attributed to the ways in which both can be read as either postracial or multicultural televisual spaces. Mass media representations of race, class, gender, and sexuality matter to how we understand both the ways neoliberalism obscures its organizing structures, and conversely, the ways in which mass media representations can make those structures visible for critique. Both Ugly Betty and RuPaul’s Drag Race explicitly thematize self-fashioning, and Latina/o subjectivity is articulated in a Latina/o camp register in a way that presents challenges to neoliberal models of subjectivity and citizenship. These challenges, however, depend on humor. Drawing on queer Chicano and Latino theories of camp and utopia, I argue that Latina/o camp articulates the ironies and contingencies of resistance on television. Latina/o camp can operate as part of an oppositional consciousness that is differential and potentially generative of sites of contestation (Sandoval 1998).
Honey, I’m a Latina girl, and I only have two options in this country — being a housekeeper or being a stripper, bitches. And you all know I didn’t came here to clean toilets, baby.
—Alexis Mateo, RuPaul’s Drag Race
* Special thanks to Tanya Gonzalez. Many of my ideas here were initially developed in conversation with her in our collaboration and coauthorship of Funny Looking: Humor, Latina/o Camp, and Ugly Betty.
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© 2014 Ellie D. Hernández and Eliza Rodriguez y Gibson
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Gibson, E.R.y. (2014). Chapter 2 Drag Racing the Neoliberal Circuit: Latina/o Camp and the Contingencies of Resistance. In: Hernández, E.D., Gibson, E.R.y. (eds) The Un/Making of Latina/o Citizenship. Literatures of the Americas. Palgrave Macmillan, New York. https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137431080_3
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137431080_3
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