We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
The Starr Report Disrobed
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
-
02 August 2000

"What is this strange book" asks Fedwa Malti-Douglas, "that can bring the American presidency to its knees?" In this probing study of Kenneth W. Starr's influential and historic work, she reveals how The Starr Report exposed the cultural tendencies, desires, and taboos of Americans while it disrobed the most powerful man in the world.
Unveiling the political and ideological implications of the report's relentless pursuit of corporeal and prurient detail, Malti-Douglas underscores the document's ground-breaking nature—both for its legal and cultural content. What does the report imply about American values when it repeatedly points to the dates on which trysts occurred? Why does gender seem so unstable in the report? And how do such varied objects as Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass or Arthur Koestler's Darkness at Noon or a Hugo Boss tie or Vox, a novel about phone sex, fit into the legal discourse of the report? Fraught with assumptions about gender and sexuality, the report reflects a strategy to use Clinton's "body natural" to undermine his "body politic."
Acknowledgments
Note
Introduction
1. The Mighty Morphin Report
2. Organization as Obsession
3. He Loves Me, He Loves Me Not: The Geographies of Lust
4. The Great Facilitator: Or, How to "Currie" Favor
5. Are We Having Fun Yet?
6. Fall Into the Gap: Or, The Starr Report Introduces Popeye to Bill Clinton
7. How Is a Sexual Encounter a Sexual Encounter?
8. "I Love the Narrative!"
9. My Body, My Gender
10. An American Postmodern
Conclusion: The President's Two Bodies and the Politics of Masquerade
Index