Abstract
Guys and Dolls, a BBC documentary premiering in 2007 sketches out the lives of four men in relationships with silicone-fleshed, anatomically correct Real Dolls (RDs). The men in the documentary treat their RDs as if they are alive-they dress their dolls, rub their feet, and discuss what sex and the relationship with their dolls is like. In relating with their RDs, the men respond to concerns of having "no female company" at all. In this essay, combining Stein's (Sexualities and society: a reader, Polity Press, Oxford, pp 132-142, 2003) notion of "be-coming out," with Deleuze and Guattari's (A thousand plateaus: capitalism and schizophrenia, University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, 1987) theory of becoming, we contend that the documentary actively represents the men's pasts in order to make sense of, justify, and construct the dynamics of their current sexual selves. Because the idollator's be-coming narratives illuminate their heteronormative shortcomings, these sexual origin stories take a confessional tone. Although confessions regarding sexuality are not soul cleansing acts but are approval seeking performances that reify normative social boundaries, we argue for a queer reading of the Guys and Dolls text which subverts the dominant logic of heteronormativity. © 2013 The Author(s).
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Burr-Miller, A., & Aoki, E. (2013). Becoming (Hetero) Sexual? The Hetero-Spectacle of Idollators and their Real Dolls. Sexuality and Culture, 17(3), 384–400. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12119-013-9187-0
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