Pink herring & the fourth persona: J. Edgar Hoover's sex crime panic |
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Authors: | Charles E. Morris III |
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Affiliation: | Assistant Professor of Communication Studies , Vanderbilt University |
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Abstract: | During the 1930s, sexuality significantly shaped J. Edgar Hoover's public discourse. In response to a homosexual panic that plagued the nation's men and endangered his public persona, Hoover engaged in a passing performance. His masking rhetoric employed the pink herring, a tactic that manipulated a moral panic about sex crime to stabilize gender and sexual norms, divert attention from his private life, and silence an invisible audience that I term the fourth persona. |
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Keywords: | J. Edgar Hoover passing persona homosexual panic sex crime |
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