No film better illustrates the instability of cultural–gender framing than Paris Is Burning (Livingston, 1990). The documentary’s history of appropriation and celebration is well-trodden. But less discussed is how its formal structure mirrors ballroom’s own subversion. Livingston repeatedly cuts between voguing performances and “real life” interviews. In one sequence, Pepper LaBeija explains “reading” as verbal combat; immediately, we see a ballroom reading session where gender is temporarily legislated by queer Black and Latinx judges. The film refuses to resolve the tension: Is ballroom an escape from gendered oppression or a hyper-real staging of its rules? The answer is both —and cinema’s ability to hold that contradiction is its gift.
Butler’s (1990) theory of gender performativity suggests that identity is produced through “stylized repetition of acts.” In film, repetition becomes literal: the looped gesture, the ritual scene, the montage of daily routines. Consider Sciamma’s Tomboy (2011), where ten-year-old Laure’s passing as a boy named Mikäel is rendered through mundane acts—tying hair back, spitting, choosing a swimsuit. The camera’s patience (long takes of dressing, silence over dialogue) refuses to sensationalize passing; instead, it mimics ethnographic observation. Yet this is not “natural” culture. It is a deliberate performance scaffolded by cinematic time. Gender here emerges as learned choreography , not inner truth. The answer is both —and cinema’s ability to
This piece explores how narrative and documentary films function as sites of gendered cultural negotiation. Drawing on Judith Butler’s performativity and Trinh T. Minh-ha’s reflexive ethnography, I argue that cinema both reproduces and subverts dominant cultural inscriptions of gender. Through close analyses of three films— Tomboy (Sciamma, 2011), The Orchid Seller (fictive case study), and Paris Is Burning (Livingston, 1990)—I demonstrate how the medium’s temporal and spatial grammars can destabilize binary frameworks. Ultimately, I propose a transcultural spectatorship model wherein viewers learn to read gender as a local, contested performance rather than a universal essence. Introduction: The Cinematic Double Bind Hammons (as stylized for this sample)
Classic ethnographic film often positioned the camera as an extractive tool. Gender nonconformity was exoticized or pathologized. In contrast, contemporary filmmakers deploy reflexive strategies to break that gaze. A paradigmatic case is The Orchid Seller (2022, dir. K. Tran)—a fictionalized ethnography of a Vietnamese chuyển giới (gender-variant) flower vendor. Instead of cutting between “explaining” interviews and observational footage, Tran’s film uses split diopter shots: the vendor and the anthropologist occupy the same frame, equally blurred. The effect decenters authority. When the vendor says, “They want me to be either tragedy or triumph. I am neither. I am just selling orchids,” the camera holds on the orchids—neither male nor female, but living. but living. Christian S.
Christian S. Hammons (as stylized for this sample)