Queer spies in British Cold War culture: literature, film, theatre and television
dc.contributor.advisor
Sorfa, David
dc.contributor.advisor
Cooke, Simon
dc.contributor.author
Mita, Saori
dc.contributor.sponsor
other
en
dc.date.accessioned
2022-02-23T11:29:52Z
dc.date.available
2022-02-23T11:29:52Z
dc.date.issued
2022-02-23
dc.description.abstract
This PhD thesis investigates how male homosexuality has been represented in British spy
fiction from the 1950s to the 2010s in multiple media: literature, film, television and
theatre. Due mainly to the betrayal of the Cambridge Spy ring around the middle of the
century, British culture has associated spies with homosexuality, while the wider
Anglophone world was in the grip of a homophobic atmosphere created by McCarthy's
Red Scare. My thesis explores how this history is reflected in the spy genre from the Cold
War to the present, in which male homosexuality and secret agency intersect as “queer”,
in so far as they were both considered to be discreet and criminal, existing outside of the
heteronormative order. By following multiple texts across media and time, I discuss how
some writers, television and film directors and actors update queer identity in spy fiction,
creating a shifting image of queer spies through decades. I refer to the findings of
adaptation studies and queer studies, along with numerous studies on spy fiction.
I conclude that the interrelation of different media has contributed to the re-drawing of queer identity in spy fiction. These developments have enabled the spies'
queer identity to transcend its pejorative history in British culture, towards its more
flexible and pliant sense which is designated by the term's modern usage. I also discuss
that spies’ homosexuality has been represented as a fleeting ghost in most of the texts
examined, hovering on the margins of pages and screen. Although homosexuality is not
“the love that dare not speak its name” anymore, clandestine queer spies have been
preserved as spectral others in the genre for many years. Spy fiction is a cultural
repository retaining the memory of violence inflicted against those who have been called
“queer” in twentieth century Britain, and the spectral nature of queer spies narrates this
history reaching back to the Oscar Wilde trial in 1895, from which point British queer
identity as we know now developed.
This thesis benefits the study of spy fiction by filling a gap in the investigation of
homosexual representation. It also contributes to the field of gender studies of literature,
film, television, and theatre by illustrating queer history in a genre which has not received
a great deal of focus on its representation of homosexuality. Spy fiction occupies a
central position in British popular culture, and by exploring this genre in terms of
homosexuality, this research will identify the role which same-sex desire has historically
played in the British cultural imagination.
en
dc.identifier.uri
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/38620
dc.identifier.uri
http://dx.doi.org/10.7488/era/1883
dc.language.iso
en
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
en
dc.subject
British spy fiction
en
dc.subject
spy fiction
en
dc.subject
homosexuality
en
dc.subject
Cold War sexual politics
en
dc.subject
gender politics
en
dc.subject
sexual representation
en
dc.subject
British queer history
en
dc.subject
British popular culture
en
dc.subject
British cultural imagination
en
dc.title
Queer spies in British Cold War culture: literature, film, theatre and television
en
dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
en
dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
en
dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en
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