This essay aims to analyze Dennis Cooper's masterpiece The Sluts (2004) as an anticipatory representation of masculinity dynamics in contemporary digital communities. The novel, structured as an online forum where anonymous users share sexual reviews about Brad, a young escort with an uncertain identity, is here situated within the theoretical debate on marginal masculinity developed by Kaja Silverman and Raewyn Connell in the 1990s. The text also proposes to read The Sluts, through the analysis of the Nick Carter (from the Backstreet Boys) subplot, as a "digital necrophilic pornotopia," following Paul B. Preciado's theoretical framework, revealing how virtual spaces function as devices for producing sexual subjectivity. Cooper demonstrates how textual necrophilia becomes a metaphor for the impossibility of authentic relationships in the digital age, transforming collective writing into a form of social masturbation that exposes the paradoxes of contemporary online communication.
Il presente saggio intende analizzare il capolavoro di Dennis Cooper The Sluts (2004) come rappresentazione anticipatoria delle dinamiche di maschilità nelle comunità digitali contemporanee. Il romanzo, strutturato come un forum online dove utenti anonimi condividono recensioni sessuali su Brad, un giovane escort dall’identità incerta, è qui inserito nel dibattito teorico sulla maschilità marginale sviluppato da Kaja Silverman e Raewyn Connell negli anni Novanta. Il testo propone inoltre di leggere The Sluts, attraverso l’analisi della sotto-trama dedicata a Nick Carter (dei Backstreet Boys), come una “pornotopia necrofila digitale”, seguendo quanto elaborato da Paul B. Preciado, rivelando come gli spazi virtuali fungano da dispositivi di produzione della soggettività sessuale. Cooper mostra come la necrofilia testuale diventi metafora dell’impossibilità di relazioni autentiche nell’era digitale, trasformando la scrittura collettiva in forma di masturbazione sociale che espone i paradossi della comunicazione online contemporanea.
Pornotopie digitali per maschilità ai margini : "The Sluts" di Dennis Cooper
Corradino, Anna Chiara
2025
Abstract
This essay aims to analyze Dennis Cooper's masterpiece The Sluts (2004) as an anticipatory representation of masculinity dynamics in contemporary digital communities. The novel, structured as an online forum where anonymous users share sexual reviews about Brad, a young escort with an uncertain identity, is here situated within the theoretical debate on marginal masculinity developed by Kaja Silverman and Raewyn Connell in the 1990s. The text also proposes to read The Sluts, through the analysis of the Nick Carter (from the Backstreet Boys) subplot, as a "digital necrophilic pornotopia," following Paul B. Preciado's theoretical framework, revealing how virtual spaces function as devices for producing sexual subjectivity. Cooper demonstrates how textual necrophilia becomes a metaphor for the impossibility of authentic relationships in the digital age, transforming collective writing into a form of social masturbation that exposes the paradoxes of contemporary online communication.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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