Reading Six Feet Under: TV to Die For

Reading Six Feet Under: TV to Die For by Kim Akass, Janet McCabe

Book: Reading Six Feet Under: TV to Die For by Kim Akass, Janet McCabe Read Free Book Online
Authors: Kim Akass, Janet McCabe
Tags: Non-Fiction
Ads: Link
acutely felt, Six Feet Under can make a radical intervention and propose profound social change.
    49

    four
    Sex, shocks and stiffs: Six
    LUCIA
    Feet Under and the
    RAHILLY
    pornography of the
    morbid
    Season one, episode five, ‘An Open Book’: ageing porn star Jean Louise McArthur, screen name Viveca St John (Veronica Hart), is killed by her own pussy. The segment is brief but rife with innuendo: panning the cosmetic paraphernalia scattered across Viveca’s bathroom, the camera settles on Viveca, wooing her pet cat tub-side like a lover, preparing for an impending rendezvous by reclining into a bath. ‘He’s got a big fat dick. And he fucks like a jackhammer,’ she confides of her date, swooning in a swirl of bubbles and sighing,
    ‘Those never last.’ Within seconds Viveca’s pedicured toes are tensing convulsively in a visual allusion to orgasmic ecstasy. Her cat has nudged her hot rollers into the bathwater, electrocuting her.
    In the parlance of porn, this image – Viveca’s final, climactic shudder – constitutes a kind of ‘money shot’, a depiction of an irrepressible bodily spasm that, in this instance, ironically blurs le petit mort with the moment of death. Within the framework of hard-core porn, the money shot fulfils an essential function: testifying to the authenticity of the experience being filmed – and the limit of acting, or ‘faking it’ – by zeroing in on a moment of reflexive, involuntary physical expression, the paroxysm of male ejaculation. By highlighting a body that is quite literally unable to contain itself, the money shot provides a fleeting glimpse of ‘genuine’ affect, of the private self un-inflected by the norms of public performance; porn scholar Linda 50
    SEX, SHO CKS AND ST IFFS
    Williams calls it ‘the ultimate and uncontrollable – ultimate because uncontrollable – confession of sexual pleasure in the climax of orgasm’
    (Williams 1999: 101). Resonating with the quality of unadulterated
    ‘truth’, therefore, the money shot represents the logical culmination of what philosopher Michel Foucault describes as the ‘will to knowledge’
    regarding sex – the irremediable cultural compulsion to exact sexual confessions as a means of understanding one another and ourselves.
    As Foucault writes (1998:78):
    We must make no mistake here…the West has managed…to bring us almost entirely – our bodies, our minds, our individuality, our history – under the sway of the logic of concupiscence and desire.
    Whenever it is a question of knowing who we are, it is this logic that henceforth serves as our master key … Sex, the explanation for everything.
    In the case of Viveca St John, the connection between sex and self is unusually overt; as a porn star, Viveca’s persona – and, what’s more, her livelihood – are inextricably bound up with her legibility as a sex symbol. For Viveca and her partners in porn, sex is not a secret but rather a source of pride and profits; at her funeral, her former colleagues shamelessly bring sexuality to the fore, tearfully eulogising her career break as a fledgling fluffer, her peerless flair for fellatio and her near-sacrosanct successes in the sack (as one mourner laments,
    ‘fucking Viv is at the top of my list of things to thank God for’).
    Indeed, by the time a sobbing former co-star (Sandra Oh) bursts in on one of David’s client meetings to exclaim, ‘Her tits have never looked better!’ the funeral proceedings have come to seem less a testament to truth than a burlesque of grieving; the sheer surfeit of sexuality imbues the proceedings with the spirit of ribald farce. The cardinal question of identity, in this sequence, hinges on performance – and specifically on whose self-presentation is less ‘genuine’: Viveca, the actor whose hypersexual affect is nakedly in evidence (David calls her surgically enhanced bosom ‘beautiful, in a completely artificial way’), or David, the closeted gay man who’s trying

Similar Books

To Stand Beside Her

B. Kristin McMichael

Grave Secrets

Kathy Reichs

The Magic Path of Intuition

Florence Scovel Shinn

A Bone of Contention

Susanna Gregory

Hopelessly Broken

Tawny Taylor

Daring Devotion

Elaine Overton

The Three Sentinels

Geoffrey Household