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Camp Grounds: Style and Homosexuality
David BergmanThe sixteen essays on camp included in this book explore further the relationship between style and homosexuality, showing how camp has made its way into every aspect of our cultural lives: theater, popular music, opera, film, and literature. Beginning with an overview of what camp is, where it came from, and how it operates, the chapter addresses topics ranging from the "high camp" of Whitman and Proust to the "low camp" of drag queen culture and gay fanzines. Together they carry forward a conversation that began more than twenty-five years ago, before Stonewall and AIDS, when Susan Sontag published her memorable "Notes on Camp."
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Cover Page
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Copyright Page
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Dedication
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Table of Contents
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Acknowledgements
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Introduction
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I. GENERAL CAMP
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Camp and the Gay Sensibility
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Role Models
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Uses of Camp
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The Loneliness of Camp
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Strategic Camp: The Art of Gay Rhetoric
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II. APPLIED CAMP
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Walt Whitman Camping
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High Culture and High Camp: The Case of Marcel Proust
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Degenerate Personality: Deviant Sexuality and Race in Ronald Firbank’s Novels
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“The Kinda Comedy that Imitates Me”: Mae West’s Identification with the Feminist Camp
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The Critic as Performance Artist: Susan Sontag’s Writing and Gay Cultures
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“You Don’t Have to Say You Love Me”: The Camp Masquerades of Dusty Springfield
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“It’s My Part and I’ll Die If I Want To!”: Gay Men, AIDS, and the Circulation of Camp in U.S. Theater
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“Kinky Escapades, Bedroom Techniques, Unbridled Passion, and Secret Sex Codes”
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III. STYLE AND HOMOSEXUALITY
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Fake It Like a Man
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Homosexual Expression and Homophobic Censorship: The Situation of the Text
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Roland Barthes: Toward an “ÉCRITURE GAIE"
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Contributors
- 9780870238789 (paperback)