Originally posted by eighthobstruction
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I have no wish to question those on this and the Bowie thread who hold him in high esteem - like Ian Thumwood on here I'm at a disadvantage in lacking the right critical wherewithals for assessing Bowie's achievement. What has one to go on other than the huge media reaction? Do people who welcomed his androgenous persona as reassurance for some under the shadow of their own difference see this reaction as some kind of collective apologia, redressing years of finger-poking at people for not, to judge by outward appearances, fitting the way the establishment and much of then-conservative public thinking deemed socially acceptable roles and lifestyles? If so one can understand not wanting to be left out (yet again!) in celebrating such a mindset turnaround in the mass opinion shaping media.
Contrary to what is sometimes being said in this discussion, when it came to using flamboyance to question gender-stereotyping Bowie was by no means the first, as anyone who has watched 1960s episodes of TOTP or footage of 1967 "the summer of love" will know. Much as been said in the most positive terms of his ability to change his persona as if this were some outer manifestation of inner spiritual development, but I have to say I find this questionable; Bowie was certainly never in hock to the fashion ephemera he lived through, and sartorially he never set general public trends - go to work looking like that? - but neither did he question the consumerist assumptions underlying the notions of personal change of the outward kind which as an elite rock star he could advocate for himself; and it is these aspects of the Bowie phenomenon that I find the most troubling.
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