Sunday 31 October 2010

LADY GAGA AND THE DEATH OF SEX



Sunday Times Magazine  
September 13th, 2010
By Camile Paglia 

An erotic breaker of taboos or an asexual copycat? Camille Paglia, America's foremost cultural critic, demolishes an icon

 

Lady Gaga is the first major star of the digital age. Since her rise, she has remained almost continually on tour. Hence, she is a moving target who has escaped serious scrutiny. She is often pictured tottering down the street in some outlandish get-up and fright wig. Most of what she has said about herself has not been independently corroborated… “Music is a lie”, “Art is a lie”, “Gaga is a lie”, and “I profusely lie” have been among Gaga’s pronouncements, but her fans swallow her line whole…

She constantly touts her symbiotic bond with her fans, the “little monsters”, who she inspires to “love themselves” as if they are damaged goods in need of her therapeutic repair. “You’re a superstar, no matter who you are!” She earnestly tells them from the stage, while their cash ends up in her pockets. 

She told a magazine with messianic fervour: “I love my fans more than any artist who has ever lived.” She claims to have changed the lives of the disabled, thrilled by her jewelled parody crutches in the Paparazzi video.



Although she presents herself as the clarion voice of all the freaks and misfits of life, there is little evidence that she ever was one. Her upbringing was comfortable and eventually affluent, and she attended the same upscale Manhattan private school as Paris and Nicky Hilton. 


There is a monumental disconnect between Gaga’s melodramatic self-portrayal as a lonely, rebellious, marginalized artist and the powerful corporate apparatus that bankrolled her makeover and has steamrollered her songs into heavy rotation on radio stations everywhere.

For two years, I have spent an irritating amount of time trying to avoid Gaga’s catchy but depthless hits. Lady Gaga is a manufactured personality, and a recent one at that. 

Photos of Stefani Germanotta just a few years ago show a bubbly brunette with a glowing complexion. 

The Gaga of world fame, however, with her heavy wigs and giant sunglasses (rudely worn during interviews) looks either simperingly doll-like or ghoulish, without a trace of spontaneity. 


Every public appearance, even absurdly at airports where most celebrities want to pass incognito, has been lavishly scripted in advance with a flamboyant outfit and bizarre hairdo assembled by an invisible company of elves.
Marilyn, sexy, an original, imitated by many, but always a lady.

Furthermore, despite showing acres of pallid flesh in the fetish-bondage garb of urban prostitution, Gaga isn’t sexy at all ~ she’s like a gangly marionette or plasticized android. 

How could a figure so calculated and artificial, so clinical and strangely antiseptic, so stripped of genuine eroticism have become the icon of her generation? 

Can it be that Gaga represents the exhausted end of the sexual revolution?

In Gaga’s manic miming of persona after persona, over-conceptualised and claustrophobic, we may have reached the limit of an era…

Gaga imitating Madonna who was imitating Marilyn!
Gaga has borrowed so heavily from Madonna (as in her latest video-Alejandro) that it must be asked, at what point does homage become theft? 

However, the main point is that the young Madonna was on fire. 

This is NOT fire!!!

She was indeed the imperious Marlene Dietrich’s true heir. 

For Gaga, sex is mainly decor and surface; 
she’s like a laminated piece of ersatz rococo furniture. 

Alarmingly, Generation Gaga can’t tell the difference. 

 Meat? Sexy? Dead meat? Sexier? Huh?

Is it the death of sex? 

Perhaps the symbolic status 
that sex had for a century has gone kaput; 
that blazing trajectory is over…

Gaga seems comet-like, a stimulating burst of novelty, 
even though she is a ruthless recycler of other people’s work. 


Imitating Jane Fonda in Barbaralla

She is the diva of déjà vu. Gaga has glibly appropriated from performers like Cher, Jane Fonda as Barbarella, Gwen Stefani and Pink, as well as from fashion muses like Isabella Blow and Daphne Guinness. 

Drag queens, whom Gaga professes to admire, are usually far sexier in many of her over-the-top outfits than she is.



Peeping dourly through all that tat is Gaga’s limited range of facial expressions. 

Her videos repeatedly thrust that blank, 
lugubrious face at the camera and us;
it’s creepy and coercive. 

Marlene and Madonna gave the impression, true or false, of being pansexual. 


Another original aped ~ poorly.

Gaga, for all her writhing and posturing, is asexual. Going off to the gym in broad daylight, as Gaga recently did, dressed in a black bustier, fishnet stockings and stiletto heels isn’t sexy ~ it’s sexually dysfunctional.

Compare Gaga’s insipid songs, with their nursery-rhyme nonsense syllables, to the title and hypnotic refrain of the first Madonna song and video to bring her attention on MTV, Burning Up, with its elemental fire imagery and its then-shocking offer of fellatio. In place of Madonna’s valiant life force, what we find in Gaga is a disturbing trend towards mutilation and death… 

Gaga is in way over her head with her avant-garde pretensions… She wants to have it both ways ~ to be hip and avant-garde and yet popular and universal, a practitioner of gung-ho “show biz”. Most of her worshippers seem to have had little or no contact with such powerful performers as Tina Turner or Janis Joplin, with their huge personalities and deep wells of passion

 Even over 70, Tina Turner,
puts Beyonce through her paces and is one sexy woman.

Generation Gaga doesn’t identify with powerful vocal styles because their own voices have atrophied: they communicate mutely via a constant stream of atomised, telegraphic text messages. Gaga’s flat affect doesn’t bother them because they’re not attuned to facial expressions.


Gaga’s fans are marooned in a global technocracy of fancy gadgets but emotional poverty.
 Even the normally vibrant Beyonce has become a sexless nothing beside her, both of them in front of a pussy wagon! Amazing feat Ms. Gaga.

Borderlines have been blurred between public and private: reality TV shows multiply, cell phone conversations blare everywhere; secrets are heedlessly blabbed on Facebook and Twitter.

Hence, Gaga gratuitously natters on about her vagina…

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