研究生课程论文 Overcoming sexual prejudice: A consequence of 题 目: stigmatization of AIDS patients in Dallas Buyers Club (2013) 姓 名: 郑欣然 学 院: 外国语学院 专 业: 英语语言文学 学 号: 121114011366 任课教师: 韩琦珺 职称:副教授 2022 年 5 月 13 日 1 Abstract: Dallas Buyers Club screened in 2013 is a film depicting a true-life story of a heterosexual cowboy being diagnosed with AIDS in 1980s. Since AIDS is greatly stigmatized and closely related to homosexual at that time, the protagonist experienced the stigmatization of both AIDS and homosexual. In the process of being labeled, stereotyped, separated, and discriminated, the protagonist not only realizes those sufferings the society constructed for AIDS patients, but also passively placed himself in the place of homosexual to understand them and overcome his homophobia and sexual prejudice. The depiction of stigmatization of AIDS in historical background provides the audience a chance to rethink AIDS, homosexual and relevant stigmas with a modern view, and serves as a new way of destigmatization. Keywords: AIDS Dallas Buyers Club homosexual stigmatization 1 Introduction Screened on 1 November 2013, Dallas Buyers Club is a biographical drama film based on a true-life story. The film tells the story of Ron Woodroof, an electrician as well as a rodeo cowboy who lives in Dallas, Texas. Ron is diagnosed with AIDS and only has thirty days left. In order to live longer, Ron smuggles unapproved drugs from Mexico and later sells them to people with AIDS. People with AIDS have been the targets of stigma ever since the first cases of AIDS were detected in the United States in 1980s (Herek 1106). As a heterosexual white man with strong masculinity, Ron naturally discriminates against AIDS and takes it as the disease of homosexual. After being diagnosed with AIDS, Ron thus experiences the stigmatization of AIDS, and he is forced to stand with those people with AIDS, who are mostly gay men. In the process of struggling with AIDS, he gradually overcomes his sexual prejudice and makes friends with queers. This paper will analyze the text of this epidemic film, and intend to figure out how stigmatization of people with AIDS is represented by depicting the story of Ron, and how his personal experience of stigmatization helps him overcome sexual prejudice and homophobia. 2 Literature review and theoretical framework The origin of the word “stigma” may date back the ancient Greek with the meaning of something unusual or someone morally corrupt. It has been widely studied for modern social science, and it is Erving Goffman’s book Stigma: Notes on the Management of Spoiled Identity published in 1963 has systematically put up with natures, sources, and consequences of stigma (Gao 26). According to Goffman, stigma refers to disparaging and insulting labels of individuals or certain groups given by the society (1). Those being labeled usually own attributes, qualities, characteristics, behaviors, or in certain conditions that other cultures cannot accept (ibid. 3). Therefore, these attributes, behaviors, etc., make labeled people feel shame and guilt (ibid. 6). In other words, stigma can be regarded as a tainted and discounted attribute or a shortcoming. Stigmatization is the process of being stigmatized. According to Elliott et al., once a person has been classified as illegitimate for participation in an interaction, he or she is beyond the protection of social norms and may be excluded or ignored (289-291). Jones et al. suggested that a person is stigmatized when a mark, which is a deviation from a prototype or a norm, discredit the bearer of the mark. And Crocker, Major, and Steele considered that stigma arises from one’s membership in a group which is negatively valued in a specific situation (545). Kurzban and Leary 2 concluded that stigmatization occurs when an individual is negatively evaluated, including discrediting, negative attributions, perceived illegitimacy, or a devalued social identity (187-189). Later, Link and Phelan has proposed 4 concurrent components of stigmatization, which are labeling, stereotype, separation, and discrimination (367). This paper will combine Link and Phelan’s conceptualization of stigmatization and Dallas Buyers Club, in order to analyze how the protagonist Ron is stigmatized in film as other people with AIDS has suffered before. 3 Stigmatization of AIDS patients The very first cases of AIDS were found in American in 1981, and AIDS was later being stigmatized due to its high contagion, high fatality rate and lack of accurate information about the disease (Crandall 165-167), that is, AIDS-related stigma come from illness sources at the beginning. Developing from illness sources, social stigmatization of AIDS has come into being since then. Because of the fear of being infected with AIDS and fear of death, healthy people consequently reached a social consensus for people with HIV/AIDS as shame, untouchables or witch (Herek 1106-1107). AIDS is stigmatized not only for the nature of AIDS, but also owing to social responses to the disease. AIDS-related stigma is constructed by the society. In Dallas Buyers Club, the protagonist Ron switches from a healthy, strong man to AIDS patient with poor health, he has confronted the process of being stigmatized as AIDS patient while he is struggling for life. This part will explore how stigmatization is performed by analyzing its process of labeling, stereotype, separation, and discrimination. To be clear, only people with AIDS will be discussed because the film mainly talks about diagnosed AIDS patient with physical symptoms of AIDS, rather than people with HIV. 3.1 Labeling Labeling requires categorization. People are firstly divided into groups according to their differences, such as skin color or sexual orientation. Then different groups are labeled, while their labels are usually oversimplified and different related to time and space variations (Link and Phelan 2001). People with AIDS are spontaneously categorized into the group of AIDS patients when they are diagnosed, while others are healthy and normal. AIDS patients who are in the early phase or asymptomatic period of AIDS looked indistinguishable from others, and they are still one of those healthy people, for example, Ron works normally and enjoys his life as his healthy friend without realization of being infected with AIDS for a long time. Though medical researchers have found out transmissions of AIDS. Daily contacts with AIDS patients remain to be regarded as possible way of being infected. However, once people are declared to be AIDS patients, they are distinguished and labeled, being oversimplified as infected, contagious, and dying, while others are healthy. In scene 13, Ron “freezes” and “smiles incredulous” for being told he has infected with AIDS (Borten and Wallack 9-11). His incredibility, denial, and fury vividly reflect the repulsion and discrimination of AIDS at that time. After decades of extensive public education about AIDS, one could hope that AIDS-related discrimination are now relics of the past, but in 1980s, the time Ron’s story has happened, unfortunately, the situation is still unfriendly to AIDS patients. 3.2 Stereotype Stereotypes associated with labeled differences is the second part of stigmatization. Stereotype is highlighted in stigmatization, as Crocker et al. defined that stigma is an attribute or a characteristic that conveys a social identity that is devalued in a particular context (519-521). In other words, with 3 the label linking people to a set of negative and undesirable characteristics, stereotypes thus occur and is included in the process of stigmatization. One of the major sources of AIDS-related stigma is the association of AIDS in the United States with already stigmatized gay men group (Herek and Glunt 886). Four major routes of transmitting HIV at that time were homosexual behavior, intravenous drug use, blood transfusions, health care workers’ contact with infected blood products (Crandall 169). However, if people with AIDS belong to the latter two types, they could be regarded as innocent victim for they are threaten by other patients rather than their own risky behaviors. And AIDS patients who have homosexual behavior and intravenous drug use are villains, they not only suffer from their unproper behaviors, but also threat the public and bring health crisis (Hart 35). Thus, AIDS-related stigma usually focuses on the former two, homosexual behavior and intravenous drug use. Among those two, it was assumed by the general public that gay men, as the most prominent patients of the disease, were the only people who could contract it. In fact, health care professionals originally labeled AIDS as the “gay related immune deficiency,” or GRID for short (Herek and Capitanio 1126). Heterosexual behavior is invisible in AIDS to some extent. Though unprotected heterosexual behavior is risky as well, that is how Ron got infected several years ago, when he was “younger and heavier” in scene 18 (Borten and Wallack 13). AIDS is closely connected with homosexual, especially homosexual behavior. Epidemic seems to be the punishment to certain group from God, just like syphilis is regarded as the moral judgement from heaven (Sontag 42), AIDS is the punish for male sex, that is why AIDS patients are mostly gay men. In scene 2, when Ron got the news that Rock Hudson has got AIDS, he immediately relates Hudson with “cock sucker” (Borten and Wallack 1) in a gloat tone. And when Ron is diagnosed with AIDS in hospital in scene 13, he again thinks about “Rock cock sucking Hudson bullshit” (ibid. 9). As a white straight man full of masculinity, Ron has a strong disgust with homosexual, which is expressed by his words describing gay men, like cock sucker, faggot, pussy, and ironical Nancy boy, Tinkerbell for Rayon, a crossdresser, and AIDS patient. When Ron’s friends, who are also cowboys, straight and masculine, get to know the state of Ron’s illness, they ironically call Ron “sweetheart” “cupcake” as they call girls and refers Ron’s blood as “faggot blood” in scene 22 (ibid. 17). Once those cowboys hear AIDS, they connect AIDS with homosexual, and then link homosexual with sissy men. The logic of them heterosexual libertine is finally applied to Ron himself. It is after being diagnosed with AIDS, the so-called homosexual plague, has Ron personally experienced how the stereotype bothers. 3.3 Separation A separation of “us” from “them” occurs after the formation of social labels and negative attributes; “they” are threats to “us” for their immorality, laziness, etc. (Morone 994-996). AIDS populations have been distinguished from the general population as risky and guilty groups, and contaminated blood, relative to groups not at risk, innocent victims, pure blood (Gamson, 359-360). That is to say, linking labels to undesirable attributes makes separation possible, because “they” are different. Ron used to have a circle of friend who are very like him and they drink liquors, snort cocaine, gamble, and flirt with girls together. As soon as they know Ron is diagnosed with AIDS, they kick Ron out of their brotherhood. In scene 22, Ron bursts through the bar’s door and shouts to the familiar bartender without response, and he pretends to be as usual, while his friends sitting around a round table as a solid group he cannot get into. They soon cause conflicts because Ron’s friends call him in the way they used to taunt homosexual as mentioned above, but it is his friends interrupt the coming fight for they seem to be afraid of Ron, “they are all scared of being touched” 4 (Borten and Wallack 17). Since metaphors of AIDS are always harmful, such as “the wrath of God,” “a plague brought to us by a minority of aberrant individuals,” and “poetic justice” (Pryor and Reeder 279), the separation of healthy people with AIDS patient like what Ron’s friends has done connotate not only the maintenance of social order and justice, but also the desire of preventing epidemic disease and breaking up with potential immoral behaviors. 3.4 Discrimination Discrimination is thus the simultaneous result of above steps in stigmatization. When people are labeled, linked to undesirable characteristics, and set apart as “them”, a rationale for devaluing, and rejecting them is thus constructed (Link and Phelan 371). Discrimination could be divided into individual discrimination, institutional and structural discrimination. As Ron is excluded from his white straight cowboy group, he is discriminated by individuals as Fiske suggests that their negative attitudes maybe the source of their actions of discrimination (359). Due to disgust and afraid of AIDS, individuals discriminate against AIDS patient. It could be seen later in the scene of bar, when Ron leaves the bar, everyone around takes a step back to keep a safe instance from him; one Ron’s friend ask for towel and soap for it is possible for Ron to spit on his face when they are talking faceto-face. In scene 35, Ron also finds that he is evicted by the house owner when he comes back to his trailer. His trailer is locked with an eviction notice even though all his belongings are still indoor (Borten and Wallack 26-27). And next comes to institutional discrimination, which refers to discriminatory behaviors embedded in social institutions and is carried out by dominant groups (Pincus 189-190). Members from dominant groups have consistently expressed negative attitudes toward AIDS patients will support punitive measures including quarantine and tattooing of infected individuals (Herek 1107). Ron loses his job as an electrician because of his colleagues standing together in a defensive stance which stops him from getting into their working area. Though not performed in the film, before Ron gets out, “the Foreman emerges through the crowd. Without a word, the guy just slowly shakes his head” in scene 27(Borten and Wallack 21). Ron has encountered AIDS discrimination and it is an unwritten rule in the workplace. The intent of institutional discrimination is to treat unequally and cause harm. Therefore, people with AIDS have to joint together as AIDS union to fight both the disease and the discrimination. The structural discrimination, however, is different from institutional discrimination because its intent is usually neutral (Pincus 190-191). Since stigma has affected the structure around one person, he or she will be exposed to discriminatory circumstance (Link and Phelan 373). AIDS patients are eager for specific medicine on account of high contagion and mortality rate of AIDS, while less capital is allocated to drug research because this disease is stigmatized as a punishment from God. Given the limited needs and huge costs in the process of drug development, it seems to be unnecessary and unworthy to develop drugs quickly for the minority AIDS patients. AIDS patients gather as a union and parade for useful drugs and later Ron engage in law suits for using unapproved drugs to save life. Even if Food and Drug Administration and court act in a neutral manner towards each American citizens no matter they are healthy or infected with AIDS, needs of AIDS patients would still be less likely to be take into consideration. The law of drug import and approval will not be changed simply for them. To conclude, being infected with AIDS makes Ron experiences the stigmatization of AIDS. He has been labeled and stereotyped as a dying patient, an infection source, excluded from his previous groups and discriminated from life to work. Struggling for life, he thus gets closer with 5 people with AIDS who are mostly homosexual, changing his life from rodeo, sexy girls and bars to AIDS union and buyers club. Therefore, he gradually overcomes his sexual prejudice towards homosexual in the process of getting along with Rayon and other club members. 4 Overcoming sexual prejudice The reason for Ron to overcome his deep-rooted masculinity and sexual prejudice is that Ron has realized or at least experienced the power relation behind stigmatization. It takes power to stigmatize; stigma will only occur in the circumstance of social, economic, and political powers (Link and Phelan 2001 375). Wealthy heterosexual white men dominate those positions of power in American (Benshoff, Grinffin 2009, 33), AIDS is oversimplified as gay disease partly because for the dominant group ignore the possibility for heterosexual to be infected while gay is emphasized. Hegemony is a form of cultural control and power by a dominant group in society, the traditional, binary view of gender that heterosexual men hold perpetuates patriarchal hegemony in society (Connell and Messerschmidt). The hegemonic power, therefore, ensures the stigma of AIDS is broadly spread and accepted within the culture. In Dallas Buyers Club, Ron seems to be the only heterosexual patient. The AIDS union overlaps with gay union, and, gay bars are good place to selling AIDS drugs. In the process of selling medicine, Ron is accosted by different men for everyone else thinks he is gay, indicating that gay and AIDS are naturally and closely related. And Ron is passively considered as a member of the gay group and experiences the loss of power as a minority. Ron used to be a representative of patriarchal society and masculinity. Such as rodeo ring, cowboy bars, those homosocial spaces are accustomed haunts of Ron, which work not only to instill a sense of masculinity, but also confirm standard men with traits of American patriarchal culture (Benshoff, Grinffin 358). He also cares what other men will think about him. The anger of the possibility of being regarded as gay by physicians leads him to speak and laugh exaggeratedly in the hospital; he hides his fear of death so he could only cry in his car in wilderness. It is a shame, an ultimate contempt for men to be afraid, unmanly, sissy, untough, and uncool (Kimmel 230), this recognition controls him and leads him to homophobia. He uses taboo words to Hudson and other gay men who accost him, his typical sexual prejudice towards homosexual by regarding them as pussy and abnormal could be clearly seen from that. But his attitudes changes unconsciously since he finds that gay men with AIDS are also desperate and eager to live like him does. They are not so that different. In scene 107, a conservative gay couple from his club provide Ron a house as the office of buyers club for free to help (Borten and Wallack 71-72). In scene 111A, Rayon sells his life insurance to raise money for Ron’s further medicine career (ibid. 75). Being touched and sentimental by others’ generousness and the coming death, Ron has put down his sexual prejudice totally. Though he has already accepted Rayon as his friend and work together, suggests Rayon to live healthier, the decisive change of Ron happens after Rayon has passed away—it is the moment Ron feels sorrowful for Rayon’s death and furious about the misuse of unproper medicines. Soon afterwards, Ron sells his car to provide other AIDS patients useful and less poisoning drugs, as a contrast, he used to reject one patient without enough money. Ron not only accepts them, and finally being one of them to give support to others. In addition, two typical changes signify ideological transformation of Ron. Firstly, Ron and Rayon come across T.J., one of Ron’s old friends, in the supermarket. T.J. sees Rayon and calls him as faggot, then he refuses to shake hands while Rayon sticks his hand first. His prejudice towards 6 Rayon is similar with Ron’s previous emotion to Rayon and to other homosexual, that is being afraid of touched by them as if homosexual is infected as well. T.J. remains the same, however, Ron has taken Rayon as his friend instead of the abnormal, he forces T.J. violently to shake hands with Rayon (ibid. 47-48). To some extent, it signals that Ron has been different with not only T.J., but also the T.J.-like, masculine, old Ron. Secondly, Ron has gradually given up his taboo words describing gay men. Psychological condition is the most influential factor in using taboo words (Wene, Ena 74). At the beginning of the film, Ron uses insulting and negative words to refer to homosexual to a great degree, while at the end, he uses neutral pronouns such as “they” and “people” (Borten and Wallack 84). Jay proposed that one, especially the sexually anxious person, utilizes offensive words to express aggression, as well as avoidance hesitation and anxiety. That is, the disappearance of aggressive words connotates the dispelling of anxiety, Ron is no longer anxious of being regarded as unmanly, untough like gay. To sum up, in the process of experiencing the stigmatization, Ron has seen how gay men are double stigmatized and suffered; in the process of fighting for a living, Ron finds out that gay men are struggling as well and thus getting along with them, they are friendly and generous. Though havig different sexual orientation, they are still human being. Due to AIDS, Ron is forced to join the opposite group and his personal experiences bring him empathy with homosexual. On the one hand, Ron is misrecognized as homosexual and realizes how his previous prejudice towards them are unreasonable; on the other hand, Ron is helped by those people he used to look down up. On the way of fighting against AIDS, Ron has gradually overcome his sexual prejudice towards homosexual. 5 Conclusion Even if the heterosexual white protagonist seems to be a member of minority, he owns position among gay AIDS patient because he used to be one of the dominant group. He has a more serious disease than others at the beginning, while he lives longer and has the strength to go back the rodeo ring at the end. The protagonist has been the Redeemer when others are in need. It could be concluded that the stigmatization of AIDS tightly related to gay is not challenged in this film, the story of an innocent victim accidentally getting into homosexual AIDS supportive groups may even reinforce the construction of AIDS as a gay plague. However, the stigmatization of AIDS depicted in Dallas Buyers Club represents the power relation in American society and indicates the reality that AIDS and gay men are inseparable at 1980s. From the perspective of the protagonist, the audience will see how homosexual is double stigmatized. Cultural studies scholar Stuart Hall considered that representation not merely transmits meanings which are already existed, but actively structures and shapes what things mean (64). Though the film hasn’t explored the hidden reason of stigmatization of AIDS or provides the eventual elimination of the stigmatization as an end, it represents the process that how AIDS patients are labeled, stereotyped, separated, and discriminated. 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