CAMPING THE DOCUSOAP: A QUEER FEMINIST ANALYSIS OF THE DOCUSOAP GENRE OF REALITY TELEVISION
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Abstract
This dissertation addresses the lack of critical and academic attention to queer women’s
interpretive positionalities, particularly of the docusoap genre of reality television. By theorizing
camp as a queer interpretive method, I explore how resistant reading strategies from a queer
feminist perspective offer new ways to think about the possibilities of the docusoap and to theorize
queer audiences. The genre, which focuses on the lives of wealthy women, traffics in spectacle,
drama, and aesthetic excess. Using qualitative methods, I highlight some of the possible
resonances of the docusoap to the lives of queer women, including the focus on homosociality, the
narrative marginalization of heteronormative family structures, the denaturalization of femininity
through visible gender performance, and the destabilization of the domestic space as a site of public
conflict rather than private refuge. This dissertation also makes use of an audience study to provide
insights on the under-researched demographic of queer women reality television audiences,
revealing engaged viewers who read these texts actively and often oppositionally to create new
queer meanings. My analysis combined with this audience study demonstrates the diversity and
complexity of queer reading strategies, suggesting that there is no one way to understand the
docusoap queerly. The application of specifically queer thought—with an intersectional approach
which explicitly considers race, ethnicity, and class—to reality television studies results in vital
new insights into both the political and rhetorical implications of these prominent media texts and
the ways in which viewers who exist outside of the mainstream mediate these messages. My work
intervenes in this field as I redress the overwhelming focus on white gay men in queer television
studies. This project represents one small step in understanding how queer women interact with
popular culture—a critical step in recognizing the diversity and polysemy of queer audience
practices.