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[Commlist] cfp - Carry on Camping: The Politics of Subversion
Wed Mar 06 22:15:06 GMT 2019
*Carry on Camping: The Politics of Subversion*
*A One-Day Conference*
*University of Brighton, Friday 6 September 2019*
**
Deadline for proposals: Monday 1 July 2019
Keynote: Elizabeth Wilson (http://www.elizabethwilson.net/)
Camp has enjoyed many definitions throughout decades of academic
discussion and debate. For Susan Sontag it is a ‘sensibility’: ‘the
essence of Camp is its love of the unnatural: of artifice and
exaggeration’(1964: 515). For Richard Dyer (1977), as argued in an essay
titled ‘It’s being so camp as keeps us going’, camp is a form of queer
resistance, a way of looking at objects rather than any inherent
qualities in those objects themselves. Fabio Cleto (1999) also sees camp
as an unstable, but powerful, progressive critical tool; while for David
Halperin, camp is connected to irony as a strategy of subversion.
‘Camp,’ Halperinwrites, ‘is a reminder of the artificiality of emotion,
of authenticity as a performance’(2012: 288). In both academic and
popular terms, camp is clearly a quality that evades easy definition.
Throughout its history, camp has performed many countercultural
functions, as a means of articulating alternative self-identification,
of securing group coherence, of challenging dominant conventions,
meanings and power structures. At the same time, camp has been a
recognisable component of broad popular entertainment. Many classic
entertainers such as Mae West, Marilyn Monroe and Liberace embody
recognisable aspects of camp performance. In the UK, camp served as a
way of sneaking queer discourses into mainstream culture, with comedians
such as Kenneth Williams, Frankie Howerd and the programme /Round the
Horne /bringing the gay language of Polari to a BBC audience. British
television of the subsequent era was full of performers like Larry
Grayson, Kenny Everett and John Inman, while later generations grew up
with Julian Clary, Graham Norton and
drag-queen-turned-teatime-entertainer Paul O’Grady. The revival of
/Mystery Science Theatre 3000/, the popularity of /Rupaul’s Drag Race/,
the critical acclaim surrounding Lady Gaga, suggests that camp retains a
significant role in contemporary culture.
Sontag’s essay ‘Notes on Camp’ was both notorious and controversial//on
its publication in 1964 and remains so. Fifty-five years later, and more
than half a century since the decriminalization of homosexuality in
England, in an age of gay marriage, how significant is camp? Do the
functions that it once served remain important to gender and cultural
politics? If films from /Carry on Camping/ to /Pulp Fiction/ can be
described as camp, can the term retain its meaning? When the work of a
filmmaker like John Waters becomes repackaged as mainstream musical
theatre, has camp become too commodified? Or do such questions
misunderstand the very complexities and contradictions which make camp
so fascinating?
This conference, to be held at the University of Brighton on Friday 6
September 2016, will investigate camp in both its historical and
contemporary manifestations, and interrogate its relevance today.
We invite panels and papers on topics including, but not restricted to:
* Camp icons: film stars, musicians, writers
* Camp cultures: film, music, theatre, literature, television
* Camp spaces: clubs, bars, theatres, tourist sites, domestic spaces
* Camp fashion
* Camp histories
* Camp practices
* Camp women
* The politics of camp
Deadline for proposals: Monday 1 July 2019
Contact: Ewan Kirkland – (e.kirkland /at/ brighton.ac.uk)
Conference fee: £40/ concessions: £20
Lunch and refreshments will be provided
https://blogs.brighton.ac.uk/carryoncampingthepoliticsofsubversion/
References:
Cleto, F. (ed). 1999. /Camp: queer aesthetics and the performing
subject: a reader. /Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press
Dyer, R. 2002. It’s Being So Camp as Keeps Us Going. In: Richard Dyer,
/The Culture of Queers/. London: Routledge, 49-62
Halperin, D. M. 2012. /How to be Gay./ Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard
University Press
Sontag, S. 1964. Notes on “Camp”. /Partisan Review/. 31(4), 515-530
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