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Article
Michelle Obama’s Arms: Race, Respectability, and Class Privilege
Comparative American Studies: An International Journal (2012)
  • Annette Madlock-Gatison, Liberty University
Abstract
The debate on Michelle Obama’s ‘right to bare arms’ illustrates that American cultural politics is far from ‘post-racial’. Through reading ‘Michelle O’ as a body out of place, at once exoticized, fetishized, and affective, this article shows the continuing location of the First Lady as white as well as exploring how stylization revisions the raced, gendered, and classed space of the First Lady’s body. It argues that, as a corporeal negation of the norms of both white upper/middle-class respectability and ‘the Black Venus’, Obama creates a space of resistance that enables a black First Lady to emerge through performativity.
Keywords
  • Black Venus,
  • First Lady,
  • Michelle Obama,
  • exoticism,
  • performativity,
  • fetishization
Publication Date
2012
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1179/1477570012Z.00000000017
Citation Information
Annette Madlock-Gatison. "Michelle Obama’s Arms: Race, Respectability, and Class Privilege" Comparative American Studies: An International Journal Vol. 10 Iss. 2-3 (2012) p. 226 - 238 ISSN: 1741-2676
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/annette-madlock-gatison/6/