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Overview

Sontag and the Camp Aesthetic: Advancing New Perspectives marks 50 years of writing and cultural production on the phenomenon of camp since Susan Sontag’s 1964 cornerstone essay “Notes on ‘Camp’.” It provides cutting-edge theory and understanding on ways to read and interpret camp through a collection of essays from historical, theoretical, and cultural perspectives. It includes varied subject areas including camp icons, stylistics periods, and important and representative texts from television, film, and literature. These essays create a scholarly conversation that understands camp as not only signifier or aesthetic but also a language, mode, and style that goes beyond its initial linguistic and semiotic guise. The contributors, representing a diverse group of established and rising scholars, explore camp as a largely queer genre that includes varying modes of understanding of desire and of the self outside a hegemonic model of heteronormativity.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781498537773
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 02/15/2017
Series: Media, Culture, and the Arts
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 286
File size: 931 KB

About the Author

Bruce E. Drushel is associate professor in the Department of Media, Journalism, and Film at Miami University.

Brian M. Peters is tenured in the English Department at Champlain College St. Lambert.

Table of Contents

Contents

Introduction: Some Notes on “Notes”
Brian M. Peters and Bruce E. Drushel

Part I: Camp in Literature

Chapter 1: Voyage to Camp Lesbos: Pulp Fiction and the Shameful Lesbian “Sicko”
Barbara Jane Brickman

Chapter 2: Queer Ideology in the Novels of Joe Keenan
Robert Kellerman

Part II: Camp and Celebrity

Chapter 3: Authentic Artifice: Dolly Parton’s Negotiations of Sontag’s Camp
Emily Deering Crosby and Hannah Lynn

Chapter 4: Diva Worship as a Queer Poetics of Waste in D. Gilson’s Brit Lit
Chris Philpot

Chapter 5: Camping in the Closet: Susan Sontag and the Construction of the Celebrity Persona
Tim Cusack

Part III: Camp on Television

Chapter 6: Vicious Camp: Performance, Artifice, and Incongruity
Bruce E. Drushel

Chapter 7: “Excuse My Beauty!”: Camp Referencing and Memory Activation on RuPaul’s Drag Race”
Carl Schottmiller

Part IV: Camp and Place

Chapter 8: Everything is Bigger in Texas: Camp and the Queerly Normal in Greater Tuna
Elizabeth M. Melton

Chapter 9: “I’s Got to Get Me Some Edu-cation!”: Class and the Camp-Horror Nexus in House of 1000 Corpses
Olivia Oliver-Hopkins

Part V: Camp and Aesthetics

Chapter 10: Batman and the Aesthetics of Camp
Lauren Levitt

Chapter 11: Prison Camp: Aesthetic Style as Social Practice in Orange Is the New Black
Thomas Piontek

Chapter 12: Camp, Androgyny, and 1990: The Post-Gendered Spaces of Vogue
Brian M. Peters

Chapter 13: Pretty is Not Enough: Notes for a Grotesque Camp
Michael V. Perez

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