Difference between revisions of "Richard Dyer"
From LGBT Archive
Ross Burgess (Talk | contribs) |
Ross Burgess (Talk | contribs) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[File:Richard Dyer.png|thumb|Richard Dyer]]'''Richard Dyer''' (born 1945) is an academic, Professor of Film Studies at King's College London.<ref>http://www.kcl.ac.uk/artshums/depts/filmstudies/people/acad/dyer/index.aspx</ref> | [[File:Richard Dyer.png|thumb|Richard Dyer]]'''Richard Dyer''' (born 1945) is an academic, Professor of Film Studies at King's College London.<ref>http://www.kcl.ac.uk/artshums/depts/filmstudies/people/acad/dyer/index.aspx</ref> | ||
− | Born in [[Leeds]], Dyer studied French at the University of [[St | + | Born in [[Leeds]], Dyer studied French at the University of [[St Andrews]] and worked in the theatre before studying for a PhD in English at the University of [[Birmingham]]'s Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies. |
He was an active and influential figure in the [[Gay Liberation Front]], a member of the [[Gay Left Collective]] and a regular contributor to the journal ''[[Gay Left]]''. Dyer’s article "In Defence of Disco" in ''Gay Left'' (1979), was one of the first to take disco seriously as an expression of the new gay consciousness.<ref>http://www.gayleft1970s.org/issues/gay.left_issue.08.pdf Gay Left 1970s issue.</ref> | He was an active and influential figure in the [[Gay Liberation Front]], a member of the [[Gay Left Collective]] and a regular contributor to the journal ''[[Gay Left]]''. Dyer’s article "In Defence of Disco" in ''Gay Left'' (1979), was one of the first to take disco seriously as an expression of the new gay consciousness.<ref>http://www.gayleft1970s.org/issues/gay.left_issue.08.pdf Gay Left 1970s issue.</ref> |
Revision as of 23:33, 21 February 2014
Richard Dyer (born 1945) is an academic, Professor of Film Studies at King's College London.[1]Born in Leeds, Dyer studied French at the University of St Andrews and worked in the theatre before studying for a PhD in English at the University of Birmingham's Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies.
He was an active and influential figure in the Gay Liberation Front, a member of the Gay Left Collective and a regular contributor to the journal Gay Left. Dyer’s article "In Defence of Disco" in Gay Left (1979), was one of the first to take disco seriously as an expression of the new gay consciousness.[2]
In 1995 he was included in the Independent's List of 40 influential gay men. The citation said:
- "Dyer has done Dietrich for The Late Show, programmed a season on body-building for the National Film Theatre and also written at least three influential, much-borrowed-from texts: Gays and Film (1977), Stars (1979) and Heavenly Bodies (1987). He brings an elegant blend of analysis, insight and gossip to the academic study of films and television, from the Hollywood musical to the iconography of stardom."[3]