UC Berkeley Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

UC Berkeley Electronic Theses and Dissertations UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title The Trouble with "Queerness": Drag and the Making of Two Cultures Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8jn2c44k Author Horowitz, Katie Rebecca Publication Date 2012 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California The Trouble with “Queerness”: Drag and the Making of Two Cultures By Katie Rebecca Horowitz A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Rhetoric in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in charge: Professor Linda Williams, Chair Professor Catherine Cole Professor Judith Butler Fall 2012 Abstract The Trouble with “Queerness”: Drag and the Making of Two Cultures by Katie Rebecca Horowitz Doctor of Philosophy in Rhetoric University of California, Berkeley Professor Linda Williams, Chair This dissertation responds to the frequent charge within academic and activist circles that queer theory is simply gay male theory cloaked in more inclusive language. Taking as its starting point an ethnographic case study of drag king and queen performance cultures, it challenges the efficaciousness of an everything and the kitchen sink approach to queer theorizing and organizing. This work constitutes the first academic monograph centered on queer life in Cleveland, Ohio and is also the first to focus simultaneously on kinging and queening, a lacuna at once explained by and demanding interrogation of the fact that these practices have almost nothing in common with each other. Despite the shared heading of drag, these iconically queer institutions overlap little with respect to audience, movement vocabulary, stage persona, and treatment of gender, class, race, and sexuality. The radical (in)difference between these genres serves as a microcosmic representation of the perennial rift between lesbians and gay men and highlights the heteronormativity of the assumption that all of the identity categories subsumed under (and often eclipsed by) the queer umbrella ought a priori to have anything in common culturally, politically, or otherwise. I argue instead for the legitimacy of studies that focus exclusively on e.g., gay men or lesbians or transsexuals, free from the intersectional compulsion to extrapolate one’s claims to the rest of the queer spectrum. The first two chapters detail the generic constitutions of queening and kinging, arguing that the ideal of femininity operating in the former is far more fixed and hegemonic than the ideal of masculinity produced in the latter. Chapter 3 uses archival images to locate these contemporary performances within a gestural lineage dating as far back as the late nineteenth century. Such genealogical evidence contextualizes the development of kinging and queening as distinct performance practices and foregrounds their respective roles in producing the discrete and relatively coherent cultural iterations we conventionally label “lesbian” and “gay male.” Synthesizing these ethnographic and archival findings, Chapter 4 suggests that contemporary U.S. drag queens rely on the invisibility of real world social structures (e.g. race, gender, sexuality, class) to reinforce the illusion of their own celebrity. I attribute this tendency to the imbrication of gay male kinship rituals with colonialist discourse, a rhetorical paradigm popularized over the last half-century by the gay service 1 organization the International Court System (ICS). Drawing on recent critiques of gay urbanism, homonormativity, and homonationalism, I problematize the ICS’s mobilization of imperialism as a rhetoric of community-building. Such rhetoric exemplifies the exclusionary uses of “queer” described above, and in the final chapter I propose a theory of omniperformance, a relational metaphysics of identity performance, as a solution to the paradox that queer discourse simultaneously seeks to erase differences (by insisting on the inclusion of an ever-expanding array of non-normative genders and sexualities) and to maintain differences (by framing some bodies and lives as queerer than others). The most significant conclusion of this work is that there is no difference between performance and performativity, that the rhetorical distinction between the two has exhausted its utility, and that omniperformance, a paradigm based on an ontology of bodily intra-action, accounts for both the theoretical fluidity and the apparent fixity of individual identity. Consequently, my theory decentralizes language as the sole or primary arbiter of subjecthood and affirms that bodies share in the work of identity formation. As such, it transports us across the critical impasse that performativity grants language limitless power to make, break, and subvert identities while glossing over the material conditions and consequences of having a (particularly gendered, sexed, raced, and classed) body. 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS List of Figures ............................................................................................................... ii Acknowledgments ......................................................................................................... v Introduction “Radically Different Agendas” ...................................................................................... 1 Chapter 1 Kinging ......................................................................................................................... 9 Performing subordinate masculinities .............................................................................. 13 Performing marginalized masculinities ............................................................................ 20 Conclusion ........................................................................................................................ 24 Chapter 2 Queening .................................................................................................................... 27 A class apart: drag queens, celebrity, and the abstraction of wealth ................................ 28 Iconic sexuality and the impossibility of race ................................................................... 30 Poetics of earnestness, poetics of camp: drag and genre .................................................. 36 Conclusion ........................................................................................................................ 38 Chapter 3 Gesturing Back: A Phenomenology of Drag Performance ............................................ 40 Gestures as gendered ........................................................................................................ 41 A gestural genealogy of drag ............................................................................................. 46 Conclusion ........................................................................................................................ 51 Chapter 4 Manifest Faggotry: The Imperial Court System and the Queer Jingoism of the Western Metropole ............................................................................................................... 53 Origin stories .................................................................................................................... 54 Metropo-telos .................................................................................................................... 56 Manifest destiny? ............................................................................................................... 59 Homonorm, homonation: Nicole Murray-Rodriguez and the “real” politics of “faux” empire ....................................................................................................................... 62 Conclusion ........................................................................................................................ 67 Chapter 5 Toward a Theory of Omniperformance ....................................................................... 69 Works Cited ............................................................................................................... 82 Appendix: Images ....................................................................................................... 86 i LIST OF FIGURES Figure 1 a. William Lingard cabinet card, Portrait miscellany [graphic], BANC PIC 1976.002— POR, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley. b. Advertisement for Finocchio’s, Box 17, Folder 9, World War II Project Papers, 1995-16, Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Historical Society, San Francisco, California. c. Photograph of Empress Shirley, Coronation Ball, 1971 program, Sexuality and gender collection, CU-BANC, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley. Figure 2 a. Photograph of Julian Eltinge as “The Gibson Girl,” Julian Eltinge Photographs and Printed Materials, Ralph W. Judd Collection on Cross-Dressing in the Performing Arts, Coll2007-020, ONE National Gay and Lesbian Archives, Los Angeles, California. b. Photograph of unidentified drag queen, Coronation Ball, 1971 program, Sexuality and gender collection, CU-BANC, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley. Figure 3 a. Photograph of Julian Eltinge as “The Fascinating Widow,” Julian Eltinge Photographs and Printed Materials, Ralph W. Judd Collection on Cross-Dressing in the Performing Arts, Coll2007-020, ONE National Gay and Lesbian Archives, Los Angeles, California. b. Photograph of Jean La Monte,
Recommended publications
  • The Sound of an Album Cover: Probabilistic Multimedia and IR
    The Sound of an Album Cover: Probabilistic Multimedia and IR Eric Brochu Nando de Freitas Kejie Bao Department of Computer Science Department of Computer Science Department of Computer Science University of British Columbia University of British Columbia University of British Columbia Vancouver, BC, Canada Vancouver, BC, Canada Vancouver, BC, Canada [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] Abstract We present a novel, flexible, statistical approach to modeling music, images and text jointly. The technique is based on multi-modal mixture mod- els and efficient computation using online EM. The learned models can be used to browse mul- timedia databases, to query on a multimedia database using any combination of music, im- ages and text (lyrics and other contextual infor- mation), to annotate documents with music and images, and to find documents in a database sim- ilar to input text, music and/or graphics files. 1 INTRODUCTION An essential part of human psychology is the ability to Figure 1: The CD cover art for “Singles” by The Smiths. identify music, text, images or other information based on Using this image as input, our querying method returns associations provided by contextual information of differ- the songs “How Soon is Now?” and “Bigmouth Strikes ent media. Think no further than a well-chosen image on Again” – also by The Smiths – by probabilistically cluster- a book cover, which can instantly establish for the reader ing the query image, finding database images with similar the contents of the book, or how the lyrics to a familiar histograms, and returning songs associated with those im- song can instantly bring the song’s melody to mind.
    [Show full text]
  • STOP AIDS Project Records, 1985-2011M1463
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8v125bx Online items available Guide to the STOP AIDS Project records, 1985-2011M1463 Laura Williams and Rebecca McNulty, October 2012 Department of Special Collections and University Archives October 2012; updated March 2019 Green Library 557 Escondido Mall Stanford 94305-6064 [email protected] URL: http://library.stanford.edu/spc Guide to the STOP AIDS Project M1463 1 records, 1985-2011M1463 Language of Material: English Contributing Institution: Department of Special Collections and University Archives Title: STOP AIDS Project records, creator: STOP AIDS Project Identifier/Call Number: M1463 Physical Description: 373.25 Linear Feet(443 manuscript boxes; 136 record storage boxes; 9 flat boxes; 3 card boxes; 21 map folders and 10 rolls) Date (inclusive): 1985-2011 Special Collections and University Archives materials are stored offsite and must be paged 36-48 hours in advance. For more information on paging collections, see the department's website: http://library.stanford.edu/depts/spc/spc.html. Abstract: Founded in 1984 (non-profit status attained, 1985), the STOP AIDS Project is a community-based organization dedicated to the prevention of HIV transmission among gay, bisexual and transgender men in San Francisco. Throughout its history, the STOP AIDS Project has been overwhelmingly successful in meeting its goal of reducing HIV transmission rates within the San Francisco Gay community through innovative outreach and education programs. The STOP AIDS Project has also served as a model for community-based HIV/AIDS education and support, both across the nation and around the world. The STOP AIDS Project records are comprised of behavioral risk assessment surveys; social marketing campaign materials, including HIV/AIDS prevention posters and flyers; community outreach and workshop materials; volunteer training materials; correspondence; grant proposals; fund development materials; administrative records; photographs; audio and video recordings; and computer files.
    [Show full text]
  • Article Under Her Eye: Digital Drag As Obfuscation and Countersurveillance
    Under Her Eye: Digital Drag as Obfuscation Article and Countersurveillance Harris Kornstein New York University, USA [email protected] Abstract Among drag queens, it is common to post screenshots comically highlighting moments in which Facebook incorrectly tags their photos as one another, suggesting that drag makeup offers a unique method for confusing facial recognition algorithms. Drawing on queer, trans, and new media theories, this article considers the ways in which drag serves as a form of informational obfuscation, by adding “noise” in the form of over-the-top makeup and social media profiles that feature semi-fictional names, histories, and personal information. Further, by performing identities that are highly visible, are constantly changing, and engage complex forms of authenticity through modes of camp and realness, drag queens disrupt many common understandings about the users and uses of popular technologies, assumptions of the integrity of data, and even approaches to ensuring privacy. In this way, drag offers both a culturally specific framework for conceptualizing queer and trans responses to surveillance and a potential toolkit for avoiding, thwarting, or mitigating digital observation. Introduction When particular surveillance technologies, in their development and design, leave out some subjects and communities for optimum usage, this leaves open the possibility of reproducing existing inequalities… [But] could there be some potential in going about unknown or unremarkable, and perhaps unbothered, where CCTV, camera-enabled devices, facial recognition, and other computer vision technologies are in use? —Simone Browne, Dark Matters: On the Surveillance of Blackness (2015: 162–63) Around late 2014, I began to take note of a curious social media phenomenon: drag queens were posting screenshots to Facebook to highlight instances in which the platform’s predictive facial recognition algorithms incorrectly tagged their photos as one another.
    [Show full text]
  • Nine Inch Nails Things Falling Apart Lyrics
    Nine inch nails things falling apart lyrics click here to download NINE INCH NAILS lyrics - "Things Falling Apart" () EP, including "10 Miles High (Version)", "Metal", "Where Is Everybody? (Version)". Things Falling Apart. Nine Inch Nails. Released K. Things Falling Apart Tracklist. 1 Starfuckers, Inc. (Version - Sherwood) Lyrics. 5. Nine Inch Nails song lyrics for album Things Falling Apart. Tracks: Slipping Away, The Great Collapse, The Wretched, Starfuckers, Inc., The Frail, Starfuckers Inc., ​The Wretched · ​Starfuckers, Inc. · ​Starfuckers Inc. · ​Where Is Everybody? All lyrics for the album Things Falling Apart by Nine Inch Nails. Tracklist with lyrics of the album THINGS FALLING APART [] from Nine Inch Nails: Slipping Away - The Great Collapse - The Wretched - Starfuckers, Inc. I. Features Song Lyrics for Nine Inch Nails's Things Falling Apart album. Includes Album Cover, Release Year, and User Reviews. Lyrics Depot is your source of lyrics to Nine Inch Nails Things Falling Apart songs. Please check back for new Nine Inch Nails Things Falling Apart music lyrics. Slipping Away, The Great Collapse, Starfuckers, Version A, The Wretched (Version), The Frail. Nine Inch Nails - Things Falling Apart Lyrics - Full Album. Things Falling Apart is the second remix album by American industrial rock band Nine Inch Nails, released on November 21, by Nothing Records and. Nine Inch Nails - Things Falling Apart (Remix EP) - www.doorway.ru Music. Things Falling Apart, a collection of severely remixed songs from The Fragile, adds . of Discs: 1; Format: Explicit Lyrics, EP; Label: Nothing; ASIN: BZB9L. Things Falling Apart album by Nine Inch Nails. Find all Nine Inch Nails lyrics in music lyrics database.
    [Show full text]
  • TOEJAMANDEARL - Round 2
    TOEJAMANDEARL - Round 2 1. The audio of the 1995 game Quest for Fame is based on works by these people. Members of the New Order Nation, including Helga, kidnap these people in a game whose projectiles include compact discs. These people are unlocked as playable characters as part of the Nipmuc High School level, which also includes a cover of Mott the Hoople’s “All the Young Dudes.” That game, which includes Tom Hamilton and all other people of this type, is the first dedicated spin-off of the Guitar Hero series. The rail shooter Revolution X stars, for 10 points, what group of musicians that includes Joe Perry and Steven Tyler? ANSWER: the members of Aerosmith 2. One activity in this game ideally requires waiting for a certain number on-screen to reach 1,484 and ignoring the player character entirely. Completing one task in this game causes a mole to appear if it’s done on the last possible attempt. A special controller for playing this game on the Atari 2600 has no joystick and just three buttons, which echoes its arcade control scheme. One object in this game can be deliberately thrown off the screen, which will kill a bird. Several activities in this game have between 42 and 45 degrees as optimal launch angles. For 10 points, name this Konami game that begins with a button-mashing 100-yard-dash. ANSWER: Track & Field 3. A trilogy of light-gun shooters whose titles start with this word center on “Rage” and “Smarty,” a pair of police officers.
    [Show full text]
  • Reznor Reveals Individuality Cd Review Coolest Guys in the World
    SIGNAL Tuesday. April L, Features 25 Reznor reveals individuality Cd review coolest guys in the world. add to his long list of achieve­ Trent Reznor, Producer He has done work on ments. He has compiled an­ "Lost Highway" Oliver Stone's soundtrack, re­ other movie soundtrack for soundtrack leased CDs of artistically epic David Lynch's movie, "Lost proportions, and sparked a Highway." By Tommy Lee (ones, III music revolution towards in­ Reznor changes his Staff writer dustrial music as well as in­ ways a bit on this soundtrack. spired artists like Poe to do The music is a little more re­ Trent Reznor has come a what Reznor does. fined and a little less in-the- long way from playing the He composes his music dark erratic. Reznor has spo­ tuba in his high school using the computer, by him­ ken about deviating from his marching band. Reznor was self, then hires people to per­ project known as Nine Inch once the dorkiest kid in form with his onstage. Nails. school. Now, he is among the Reznor has a new honor to On this soundtrack, Reznor sings several songs under lason Kay (bottom left) and fellow lamiroquai members worked his own name rather than together to release latest album. "Travelling Without Moving.' the pseudonym Nine Inch Nails. Jamiroquai does some soul Reznor's soundtrack re­ minds those more familiar travelling on "Moving" with classical music, of the energy and passion as well as Cd review ets in the path of smooth gui­ creative ingenuity which is Jamiroquai tar and bass grooves on "Vir­ characterized with old school "Travelling Without tual Insanity" and "You Are composers.
    [Show full text]
  • Artist Song Weird Al Yankovic My Own Eyes .38 Special Caught up in You .38 Special Hold on Loosely 3 Doors Down Here Without
    Artist Song Weird Al Yankovic My Own Eyes .38 Special Caught Up in You .38 Special Hold On Loosely 3 Doors Down Here Without You 3 Doors Down It's Not My Time 3 Doors Down Kryptonite 3 Doors Down When I'm Gone 3 Doors Down When You're Young 30 Seconds to Mars Attack 30 Seconds to Mars Closer to the Edge 30 Seconds to Mars The Kill 30 Seconds to Mars Kings and Queens 30 Seconds to Mars This is War 311 Amber 311 Beautiful Disaster 311 Down 4 Non Blondes What's Up? 5 Seconds of Summer She Looks So Perfect The 88 Sons and Daughters a-ha Take on Me Abnormality Visions AC/DC Back in Black (Live) AC/DC Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap (Live) AC/DC Fire Your Guns (Live) AC/DC For Those About to Rock (We Salute You) (Live) AC/DC Heatseeker (Live) AC/DC Hell Ain't a Bad Place to Be (Live) AC/DC Hells Bells (Live) AC/DC Highway to Hell (Live) AC/DC The Jack (Live) AC/DC Moneytalks (Live) AC/DC Shoot to Thrill (Live) AC/DC T.N.T. (Live) AC/DC Thunderstruck (Live) AC/DC Whole Lotta Rosie (Live) AC/DC You Shook Me All Night Long (Live) Ace Frehley Outer Space Ace of Base The Sign The Acro-Brats Day Late, Dollar Short The Acro-Brats Hair Trigger Aerosmith Angel Aerosmith Back in the Saddle Aerosmith Crazy Aerosmith Cryin' Aerosmith Dream On (Live) Aerosmith Dude (Looks Like a Lady) Aerosmith Eat the Rich Aerosmith I Don't Want to Miss a Thing Aerosmith Janie's Got a Gun Aerosmith Legendary Child Aerosmith Livin' On the Edge Aerosmith Love in an Elevator Aerosmith Lover Alot Aerosmith Rag Doll Aerosmith Rats in the Cellar Aerosmith Seasons of Wither Aerosmith Sweet Emotion Aerosmith Toys in the Attic Aerosmith Train Kept A Rollin' Aerosmith Walk This Way AFI Beautiful Thieves AFI End Transmission AFI Girl's Not Grey AFI The Leaving Song, Pt.
    [Show full text]
  • Arbiter, March 5 Students of Boise State University
    Boise State University ScholarWorks Student Newspapers (UP 4.15) University Documents 3-5-1997 Arbiter, March 5 Students of Boise State University Although this file was scanned from the highest-quality microfilm held by Boise State University, it reveals the limitations of the source microfilm. It is possible to perform a text search of much of this material; however, there are sections where the source microfilm was too faint or unreadable to allow for text scanning. For assistance with this collection of student newspapers, please contact Special Collections and Archives at [email protected]. �. I nth 2 INSIDE , - WEDNESDAY, MARCH 5, 1997THEARBITER The legislature techni- There are too many of us as it is, and who needs cally approved pay two of Jack Kevorkian or Macualay Culkin running increases for BSU around? faculty, but did not Recall the tale of a man who jolted life into a -- ... ~-"~Q.pinion appropriate new monster whose limbs were collected from various Cloning isn't a good idea. money to fund dead people, then stitched together. Frankenstein , . them. They say was the scientist, not the monster, and he was a taxes would rise man who played God. Of course, it was only a if they increased work of Mary Shelley's imagination, but the moral salaries, and all of the.story is: messing with life, attempting to the while Idaho's make it better and even creating it will backfire. '''''''''''"''S- "",'- ': '~, d~kiL~it:<,·. state employees arc Life doesn't get any better or more advanced than News working hard for less Censorship symposium compliments exhibit at humanity.
    [Show full text]
  • Legacy Business Registry Staff Report
    CITY AND COUNTY OF SAN FRANCISCO EDWIN M. LEE, MAYOR OFFICE OF SMALL BUSINESS REGINA DICK-ENDRIZZI, DIRECTOR Legacy Business Registry Staff Report HEARING DATE DECEMBER 11, 2017 BECK’S MOTOR LODGE Application No.: LBR-2017-18-017 Business Name: Beck’s Motor Lodge Business Address: 2222 Market Street District: District 8 Applicant: Brittney Beck, Owner Nomination Date: October 2, 2017 Nominated By: Supervisor Jeff Sheehy Staff Contact: Richard Kurylo [email protected] BUSINESS DESCRIPTION Beck’s Motor Lodge is a local, family-owned motel located in the Castro neighborhood. Constructed in 1958 from the ground up by original owner and founder Will (“Bill”) Beck, Beck’s Motor Lodge was a small motel offering stays for 5 dollars per night in the quiet, working-class Irish neighborhood at the time. Beck saw an opportunity to create a car-centered motel along the Market Street. As the neighborhood progressed and underwent changes, the motel grew with it and eventually became embedded in the heart of the LGBT community in the Castro as a safe place for LGBT individuals who wanted to escape the confines of homes that were holding them back and did not understand them. Apart from hosting tourists and out-of-towners, the motel also opened its doors to patients at nearby hospitals visiting for special procedures and people visiting loved ones who are patients at nearby hospitals. In May 2010, Brittney Beck, granddaughter of Will Back, officially took over operations and management of the hotel, and she officially purchased it from her parents in 2011. Since then, Beck’s Motor Lodge has undergone a tremendous amount of renovations and improvements.
    [Show full text]
  • The Trouble with “Queerness”: Drag and the Making of Two Cultures by Katie Rebecca Horowitz a Dissertation Submitted in Part
    The Trouble with “Queerness”: Drag and the Making of Two Cultures By Katie Rebecca Horowitz A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Rhetoric in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in charge: Professor Linda Williams, Chair Professor Catherine Cole Professor Judith Butler Fall 2012 Abstract The Trouble with “Queerness”: Drag and the Making of Two Cultures by Katie Rebecca Horowitz Doctor of Philosophy in Rhetoric University of California, Berkeley Professor Linda Williams, Chair This dissertation responds to the frequent charge within academic and activist circles that queer theory is simply gay male theory cloaked in more inclusive language. Taking as its starting point an ethnographic case study of drag king and queen performance cultures, it challenges the efficaciousness of an everything and the kitchen sink approach to queer theorizing and organizing. This work constitutes the first academic monograph centered on queer life in Cleveland, Ohio and is also the first to focus simultaneously on kinging and queening, a lacuna at once explained by and demanding interrogation of the fact that these practices have almost nothing in common with each other. Despite the shared heading of drag, these iconically queer institutions overlap little with respect to audience, movement vocabulary, stage persona, and treatment of gender, class, race, and sexuality. The radical (in)difference between these genres serves as a microcosmic representation of the perennial rift between lesbians and gay men and highlights the heteronormativity of the assumption that all of the identity categories subsumed under (and often eclipsed by) the queer umbrella ought a priori to have anything in common culturally, politically, or otherwise.
    [Show full text]
  • E Past, Present and Future of Drag in Los Angeles
    Rap Duo 88Glam embrace Hip-Hop’s fearlessness • Museum Spotlights Ernie Barnes, Artist and Athlete ® MAY 24-30, 2019 / VOL. 41 / NO. 27 / LAWEEKLY.COM Q e Past,UEENDOM Present and Future of Drag in Los Angeles BY MICHAEL COOPER AND LINA LECARO 2 WWW.LAWEEKLY.COM | - , | LA WEEKLY L May 24 - May 30, 2019 // Vol. 41 // No. 27 // laweekly.com 3 LA WEEKLY LA Explore the Country’s Premier School of Archetypal and Depth Psychology Contents - , | | Join us on campus in Santa Barbara WWW.LAWEEKLY.COM Friday, June 7, 2019 The Pacifica Experience A Comprehensive One-Day Introduction to Pacifica’s Master’s and Doctoral Degree Programs Join us for our Information Day and learn about our various degree programs. Faculty from each of the programs will be hosting program-specific information sessions throughout the day. Don't miss out on this event! Pacifica is an accredited graduate school offering degrees in Clinical Psychology, Counseling Psychology, the Humanities and Mythological Studies. The Institute has two beautiful campuses in Santa Barbara nestled between the foothills and the Pacific Ocean. All of Pacifica’s degree programs are offered through monthly three-day learning sessions that take into account vocational, family, and other commitments. Students come to Pacifica from diverse backgrounds in pursuit of an expansive mix of accademic, professional, and personal goals. 7 Experience Pacifica’s unique interdisciplinary degree programs GO LA...4 FILM...16 led by our renowned faculty. Celebrate punk history, explore the NATHANIEL BELL explores the movies opening Tour both of our beautiful campuses including the Joseph Campbell Archives and the Research Library.
    [Show full text]
  • 'Utmost Bliss'
    Chicago heroin scene [Article ‘Utmost Bliss’ - Chicago Tribune 2-26-2006] ‘Utmost Bliss’ To troubled youths like Nate Korbal, heroin can seem like the perfect drug: cheap, plentiful and a sure way to tame their demons. Then it becomes a demon. Then they do. By John Keilman Tribune staff reporter Published February 26, 2006 Nate Korbal wanted to die. Heavy drinking and pot smoking hadn’t made him feel any better about being a 17-year-old misfit in Hinckley, a small town 50 miles west of Chicago. He was bored with school, angry with his parents, exhausted by life itself.Late one spring night in 2002, after leaving his dismal part-time job at a discount clothing store, he drunkenly confided his misery to a friend. The friend suggested a way out.”You can try this,” he said, shaking an inch-long line of powder onto a CD case. “It’s like dying.” The powder, white as flour and glinting with silvery specks, was heroin, a drug that over the last 10 years has grown from a novelty to a plague in suburban Chicago. The young especially are drawn to its cheap price, its easy availability and its reputation as the atom bomb of narcotics. “It’s a numbing drug but it makes you feel like a million dollars,” says a 23-year-old addict from Bolingbrook, jittery and sweating, craving the bag of dope he drove to the West Side to buy. “You do it and you get a rush-you feel good, your body’s numb, you get no aches and pains.
    [Show full text]