Metro Australia – July 2019

(Nancy Kaufman) #1
in theprocess.Mostdistressingly,thereis thelesbianwho
endureda ‘leucotomy’(analternativetermforlobotomy)to
‘correct’hersexuality.In anaffectlesstone,sheexplainsthat
shecannolongerworkbecauseherconcentrationhasbeen
so impaired:‘My creativityhas been destroyed.I used to paint
a bit and write poetry.I can’t do that anymore.Whichhas
madethingsprettymeaningless.’Severelydepressedasshe
wasatthetimeofsurgery,a teamofmaledoctorsdecided
onherbehalfthatsheshouldhavetheprocedure.Alongside
the vigoroustide of activismthat Duncancharts,these first-
personstorieshumanisea population that was deprived of
a voice for far too long.
Suchgenuinediversityofrepresentationchimeswiththe
film’s broadsociohistoricalreach.There is a wider objective
underpinningWitchesand Faggots,Dykesand Poofters: a
commitmenttoeducatingitsaudience(whetherLGBTQIA+or
heterosexual)abouttheoppressionofqueerpeoplethrough-
out history and across cultures. As Duncan explains:

The film, even with only a brief documentationof this history,
revealstherealityoftheoppressionofhomosexualpeople
and how relentlesslyin the nameof gods,kings and ‘our way
of life’, this oppression has been perpetrated.^30

Theopeningsequenceis a
montagethatlocatesthelocal
conversationaboutgayrights
withina historicalframeworkof
hysteria,prejudiceandabuse
datingbacktotheMiddleAges.
Thevoiceoveris deliveredby
Jude Kuring,best knownfor her
roleasNoelineBurkein theTV
seriesPrisoner(which,coinci-
dentally,hasgoneontobecome
a cultlesbianseries^31 ). Medievalmusicsetsa sombretone
thatemphasisesthesadlyenduringcorrelationbetween‘then’
and the year that the film was recorded.Still imagesaccom-
panya voiceoverdescribingthecrimeof‘heresy’,whichsaw
women,includinglesbians,labelled‘witches’andburnedat
the stake.Kuringexplainsthat the bodiesof gay men were
used as wood for fires (whichwere referredto as ‘faggots’).
Sheclaimsthatsomehomosexualmenin Naziconcentration
campswereaskedto‘prove’theirheterosexualitybyraping
women.The film proceedsto referenceStalinistRussia,the
1950s‘witch-hunts’ofUSsenatorJosephMcCarthy,through
totheStonewallriotsthatprovokedtheInternationalDayof
GaySolidarity,whichAustralia’s‘dykesandpoofters’chose
to commemorateon 24 June 1978 – the day of the first Mardi
Gras.Threadedthroughoutthesequenceareearlyexamples
of queer protestand the fledglingassemblyof activistgroups.
While the eventsdepictedin the montageare filtered
througha Western(predominantlyEuropean/US)lens, it is an
effectivetoolforestablishinga contextbeyondtheisolated
geographyof Australia.At the same time, it signalsthe doc-
umentary’sintentionto presenta dialogueaboutfilm-as-
activism;themodeofaddressmovesbetweenprovocative
andderisive,andthereis notakingupofanobjectiveposi-
tion, nor any attemptto flesh out nuancewithinthe events
referenced.However,this is very much in keepingwith the
style and aestheticsof the film.Witchesand Faggots,Dykes
and Pooftersis not a ‘naturalistic’recordof reality:in fact,
it uses the documentary formtoreorient the representation

of gays and lesbians.The film’s privilegingof authenticity
helps it developan emergingrepresentationallanguagethat
furthersthepoliticalagendasofradicallesbianfeminism
andgayhumanrights.Thedirect-to-cameraaddressofthe
‘talkinghead’is usedwhenrecordingmanyoftheactivists
sharingtheirexperiences;thisshapestheillusionof‘reality’
while intensifyingthe film’s politicalovertones.In this way,
the goals of activism,affirmative representation and gay
liberationarealigned.
Thetalkingheadsareintercutwitha roving(oftenfrenetic)
handheldcamerathatpresentsan‘on-the-ground’activist’s
pointofviewoftheMardiGrasstreetpartyaswellasthe
subsequentarrests.Oneofthearrestedwomendescribesher
inhumanetreatmentatDarlinghurstprison, where they were
held in a small cell for six hours:

Whenwearrivedat Darlinghurst[...]I wasshovedintoa small
roomwithtwenty­fourotherwomen.Andthiscellwasreally
designedfor two people,and we had twenty­four of us. The
spacewasn’tsufficientfor us all to lie downtogether.There
wasonetoiletin themiddleofthiscellthatthetwenty­four
of us had to use, and we couldn’teven get a drink of water,
whichweaskedforrepeatedly.Andthenwewerejustleftfor
hours, and, like, nobodytold us we couldmake a phonecall
oranythinglikethat.Andwhenwe
askedfor our rights, we were told,
‘What rights?’

Thisis justoneincidentin a damn-
ingcatalogueofpoliceactions
thatignoredtheprotesters’rights.
A perfectlylegaleveningevent
thathadbeenapprovedbythe
policeturnedintoa violentand
bloodystand-off.Therecollec-
tions of abusecapturedin the film also highlightthe commu-
nity’scontemptforthepolice;insteadofprotectingthestreets
fromviolence,thelattersetouttotakethestreetsbackfrom
thequeerrevellers.One young man recalls his experience, his
anger palpable:

Theyjustarrestedpeopleandthrewthemin thepaddywagons.
I saw peoplebeingdraggedby their hair, punchedin the face,
draggedby their legs, draggedacrossthe road. Just every
singlerightthata person’sentitledtoin Australiahasbeen
blatantlydeniedbythepolice.Andthisstationhas just lived
up to its reputation, as far as I’m concerned.

Thepolicecontinuedtobreachestablishedprotocol,even
goingsofarastoclosethecourthouseduringthehearings
of those arrested.This meantthat friends,familyand allies
werenotabletosupportthearrestedprotesters.
SomeofthemostpowerfulfootageinWitchesand Faggots,
Dykesand Pooftersis capturedduringheatedexchangesat
a meetingthatwasheldtodecidetheactivists’nextmoves.
Passionate,rage-filledand indignant,these meetingsshow
ustherallyingofanoppositionalvoice.Thisis Duncan’s
favouritescenein the film:^32 shootingthemeetingwassen-
sitive,asmanyactivistsdidn’twantthemselvesappearing.
Theyfearedthatexposurewouldleadtodiscrimination,so
the filmmakersagreedto keep one side of the room out of
theshot,tocaptureonlythosewhowerewilling.Inthisway,
the production conditions intersected with the sociopolitical

WitchesandFaggots,DykesandPoofters
isnota ‘naturalistic’recordofreality:
infact,itusesthedocumentar yform
toreorienttherepresentationofgays
andlesbians...thegoalsofactivism,
affirmativerepresentationand
gay liberation are aligned.

114 • Metro Magazine 201 | © ATOM

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