Queer Immaterial Labor in Beauty Videos by LGBTQ-Identified YouTubers

Authors

  • Ellie Homant Ellie Homant graduated from the University of Michigan Ann Arbor in 2018 with a double major in Communication (with honors) and Linguistics.
  • Katherine Sender Katherine Sender is professor of media and sexuality in Communication at Cornell University.

Keywords:

LGBTQ, media, queer, YouTube, beauty, vlog, immaterial labor, emotional labor, visibility, authenticity, intimacy, surplus

Abstract

Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender beauty vloggers on YouTube exist at the margins of a historically gender- and sexually normative, white-dominated beauty industry. Through an analysis of six queer beauty vloggers, four of whom are also people of color, we argue that this group leverages the affordances of the media peripheries, here online platforms, and capitalizes queer cultural repertoires, such as camp, coming-out narratives, and reading to assert their expertise and authenticity. We propose a specification of Lazzarato’s term with “queer immaterial labor” that (1) recognizes that immaterial labor is not performed in the same way by participants in online spaces but is intersectionally structured through sexuality, race, and gender; and (2) acknowledges the cultural practices that queer people, including queer people of color, have honed over long histories of marginalization and community formation.

Author Biographies

Ellie Homant, Ellie Homant graduated from the University of Michigan Ann Arbor in 2018 with a double major in Communication (with honors) and Linguistics.

Ellie Homant graduated from the University of Michigan Ann Arbor in 2018 with a double major in Communication (with honors) and Linguistics.

Katherine Sender, Katherine Sender is professor of media and sexuality in Communication at Cornell University.

Katherine Sender is professor of media and sexuality in  Communication at Cornell University.

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Published

2019-10-29

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Section

Articles