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The “Manic Pixie Dream Girl of the Synth-Pop World” and Her “Baby Doll Lisp”: Grimes and the Disabling Logics of the Feminization and Infantilization of Lisping

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Type de ressource
Article de revue
Auteur/contributeur
  • Holmes, Jessica A. (Auteur)
Titre
The “Manic Pixie Dream Girl of the Synth-Pop World” and Her “Baby Doll Lisp”: Grimes and the Disabling Logics of the Feminization and Infantilization of Lisping
Résumé
Audible in speech and song, electro-pop singer Grimes’s so-called “baby doll” lisp generates endless buzz online, ranging from light-hearted adoration, to infantilization, to sexual fetish and even to ableist, misogynist anti-fandom. This article uses the reception of her lisp to build an intersectional theory of lisping across its medical and socio-cultural constructions, bridging work in disability studies, dysfluency studies, voice studies, and popular music studies in the process. I situate the slippage between adoring, infantilizing, fetishistic, and violent characterizations of Grimes’s lisp as reflective of the infantilization of “communicative disorders” in speech language pathology, and the dysfunction associated with feminine coded-speech patterns (e.g. vocal fry and up talk) in the popular imaginary. Lisping is profitably understood as an audible form of “liminal” difference relative to visible physical disabilities (St. Pierre), and to certain ableist, gendered, and racialized conceptions of normative vocality. Ultimately, in the English-speaking world, the lisp is symbolically-coded feminine while exceeding the norms of female vocality, thereby giving rise to a polarizing set of associations that work against female authority and, by extension in Grimes’s case, female musical authorship. Grimes’s reception thus offers a valuable case study for interrogating how misogynist fantasies regarding femininity are thought localized in the female voice, and the symbolic ties between disability and femininity.
Publication
Journal of Popular Music Studies
Volume
31
Numéro
1
Pages
131-156
Date
2019
Abrév. de revue
Journal of Popular Music Studies
Langue
en
DOI
10.1525/jpms.2019.311011
URL
https://online.ucpress.edu/jpms/article/31/1/131/51027/The-Manic-Pixie-Dream-Girl-of-the-Synth-Pop-World
Catalogue de bibl.
online.ucpress.edu
Extra
Publisher: University of California Press
Référence
Holmes, J. A. (2019). The “Manic Pixie Dream Girl of the Synth-Pop World” and Her “Baby Doll Lisp”: Grimes and the Disabling Logics of the Feminization and Infantilization of Lisping. Journal of Popular Music Studies, 31(1), 131–156. https://doi.org/10.1525/jpms.2019.311011
Enjeux
  • Micro-agressions, abus, violences
  • Représentations des genres
Genres musicaux
  • EDM (Electronic dance music)
Identités
  • Femmes*
  • Handicap & sourditude
Lien vers cette notice
https://bibliographies.uqam.ca/bibliodig/bibliographie/97IENRVI

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