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Book Cover for: Straight White Men Can't Dance: American Masculinity in Film and Popular Culture, Addie Tsai

Straight White Men Can't Dance: American Masculinity in Film and Popular Culture

Addie Tsai

Straight White Men Can't Dance: American Masculinity in Film and Popular Culture investigates a trope proliferating throughout popular American media over the last half-century: that straight white men can't dance.

Addie Tsai traces this reiterative moving image of vaudevillian buffoonery in film, television, and video from the mid-1980s to present-day. During the height of homophobic hysteria in response to the AIDS epidemic, dance began to be used as a marker to scrutinize white men's position within homosexuality and masculinity. Therefore, white men could misperform good dancing to more securely sit within hegemonic masculinity.

Tsai establishes how ethnic mimicry within American popular media, even that of white masculinity, is produced and reiterated from the 19th-century theatrical practice of blackface minstrelsy. This history resurfaces in one of the exceptions to the trope: when white men use the hip currency of blackness to affirm their (dancing) masculinity through theft and positionality.

By revealing how dance in American popular media reifies and problematizes gendered and racialized economies, Straight White Men Can't Dance demonstrates how the image of the buffoonish white male dancer operates as a smokescreen for the more violent manipulative forces of the reigning figure of white supremacy.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
  • Publish Date: Sep 18th, 2025
  • Pages: 216
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 9.21in - 6.14in - 0.50in - 1.05lb
  • EAN: 9781350443563
  • Categories: Dance - PopularGender StudiesDance - Regional & Cultural

About the Author

Tsai, Addie: - Addie Tsai (any/all) is the author of Dear Twin (2019), included in American Library Association's Rainbow List in 2021, and Unwieldy Creatures (2022), a Shirley Jackson finalist for Best Novel. She collaborated with Dominic Walsh Dance Theater on Victor Frankenstein and Camille Claudel, among others. They are the founding editor in chief for just femme & dandy. Addie is an Assistant Teaching Professor of Creative Writing at William & Mary, where she is Affiliate Faculty in Gender, Sexuality, and Women's Studies. She is the author of Straight White Men Can't Dance: American Masculinity in Film and Popular Culture (Bloomsbury, forthcoming). Her articles have been published in LO: TECH: POP: CULT: Screendance Remixed (2024), The Bloomsbury Handbook of Dance and Philosophy (2021), Slapstick: An Interdisciplinary Companion (2021), and The International Journal of Screendance.

Praise for this book

"This is a superb book for anyone curious about how media, historically and currently, contribute to and undergird systemic exclusions. Tsai offers a wonderful example of interdisciplinary research that benefits dance studies, film studies, gender studies, queer studies, critical race studies, media studies, and communication studies." --Kate Mattingly, Dept of Communication & Theatre Arts, Old Dominion University, USA

"Addie Tsai convincingly unpacks forty years of film, television, and music videos to reveal how awkward moves, gay panics, and racial appropriation shape constructions of white masculinity dancing on screen. Provocative close readings reveal how dance becomes a battleground for gender, race, and power. Smart and sharp essential reading for anyone curious about what's really at stake when white men hit the dance floor." --Thomas F. DeFrantz, Professor, Northwestern University, USA

"Tsai connects high-brow critique with pop culture everyone knows ... It's smart, layered, and often quite funny in its observations about how white male identity has been staged, protected, and parodied over decades. Straight White Men Can't Dance is both a critique and a celebration of pop culture's messiness - a book that'll make you see familiar movies and TV moments in a totally new light." --Lou Reviews Blog