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Susan Reno.wmv | Swingin In Atlanta -

The attribution “Susan Reno” is key. No mainstream credits exist. Possibilities:

Using feminist film theory (Laura Mulvey, Linda Williams), the paper explores how a female director’s gaze might differ in framing swing events—e.g., more attention to social negotiation, decor, and female pleasure. Without the video, we analyze “directorial signature” through naming as a performative act.

Drawing on sociologist Terry Gould’s The Lifestyle (1999) and local historical sources, Atlanta emerged as a hub for suburban swinging due to: Swingin In Atlanta - Susan Reno.wmv

We hypothesize that Susan Reno’s video captures a house party in Cobb or Gwinnett County, blending 1990s fashion (neon, tube socks, permed hair) with ritualized key parties. The paper analyzes how “swingin” (colloquial spelling) signals a white working-to-middle-class vernacular distinct from elite “polyamory” discourse.

If you have the file locally, you can extract more data: The attribution “Susan Reno” is key

If the title is literal, "Swingin In Atlanta" would likely be a pastiche song in the style of:

No evidence exists of this song being commercially released, copyrighted, or listed with ASCAP/BMI. Using feminist film theory (Laura Mulvey, Linda Williams),

The name Susan Reno is the key. A search across music archives, dance registries, and Atlanta historical societies reveals a few possible identities, each plausible for this rumored video.