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Published byErlin Liana Tedja Modified over 6 years ago
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Notes on Camp Borrowed heavily from Susan Sontag’s article, “Notes on ‘Camp’” from Against Interpretation (1966)
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What is Camp? Camp is a sensibility: it’s the love of the unnatural, the artifice, the exaggerated, the esoteric.
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Camp is an aesthetic Camp is an aesthetic and a way of viewing a very stylized version of the world.
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Camp exaggerates Camp is intentionally exaggerated thematic or genre elements, especially in television and motion picture mediums. “Camp” style over-emphasizes certain elements of the genre or theme on purpose to create become self-satirical.
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Camp is not natural All camp is man-made (nothing natural is campy) and sees everything in quotation marks. It’s not a woman, it’s a “woman.”
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Camp is “too much” Camp is art that proposes itself seriously, but cannot be taken seriously because it’s over the top.
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Camp is kitsch
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Camp is vulgar Who decides what’s “vulgar”?
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Camp changes with time Time disconnects the work from moral relevance – time contracts the sphere of banality. (Common becomes fantastic with time since we can see the failure of the attempt.)
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How does bad become camp?
If something is campy it is obviously intended to be strange or shocking and seems to be ridiculing itself.
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Who gets to decide what is or is not camp?
“A work can come close to Camp, but not make it, because it succeeds.”
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“The pure examples of Camp are unintentional; they are dead serious
“The pure examples of Camp are unintentional; they are dead serious. … Genuine Camp… does not mean to be funny.” (Packet, 240) But isn’t it mean to call these folks ‘Campy?’
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Is it camp if it never took itself seriously?
Camp? Let’s Decide.
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Camp?
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Camp?
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Camp?
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Camp?
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Where does camp and humor intersect? Find examples!
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