is
for Underwear. The relative absence of butt shots in underwear ads
reveals how incompletely our culture has eroticized the male body, which,
unlike the female body, can never be the passive recipient of someone else's
gaze, appraised and evaluated as a sex object, but is always frozen in
genitally centered images so that the model can look back at the viewer,
meeting his stare head on. But perhaps just as importantly as the
at best partial nature of the objectification of the male body, the refusal
to turn the model around also represents a protective gesture, an act of
coyness, an expression of discomfort with the traditional audience of underwear,
the horny gay men who devour the model's body with their eyes, assessing
the value of his attributes as if he were a slave girl on an auction block.
In the fiercely defended frontal nudity of the contemporary underwear
ad, we see an implicit acknowledgment of the presence of the homoerotic
gaze, a bashful awareness that the homosexual is looking, that it is he
who sits in the front row of this never-ending striptease, relishing every
bump and grind.
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