Making Camp: Rhetorics of Transgression in U.S. Popular Culture
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Making Camp examines the rhetoric and conventions of “camp” in contemporary popular culture and the ways it both subverts and is co-opted by mainstream ideology and discourse, especially as it pertains to issues of gender and sexuality. Camp has long been aligned with gay male culture and performance. Helene Shugart and Catherine Waggoner contend that camp in the popular media—whether visual, dramatic, or musical—is equally pervasive. While aesthetic and performative in nature, the authors argue that camp—female camp in particular—is also highly political and that conventions of femininity and female sexuality are negotiated, if not always resisted, in female camp performances. The authors draw on a wide range of references and figures representative of camp, both historical and contemporary, in presenting the evolution of female camp and its negotiation of gender, political, and identity issues. Antecedents such as Joan Crawford, Wonder Woman, Marilyn Monroe, and Pam Grier are discussed as archetypes for contemporary popular culture figures—Macy Gray, Gwen Stefani, and the characters of Xena from Xena: Warrior Princess and Karen Walker from Will & Grace. Shugart and Waggoner find that these and other female camp performances are liminal, occupying a space between conformity and resistance. The result is a study that demonstrates the prevalence of camp as a historical and evolving phenomenon in popular culture, its role as a site for the rupture of conventional notions of gender and sexuality, and how camp is configured in mainstream culture and in ways that resist its being reduced to merely a style.
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Making Camp - Helene A. Shugart
MAKING CAMP
RHETORIC, CULTURE, AND SOCIAL CRITIQUE
SERIES EDITOR
John Louis Lucaites
EDITORIAL BOARD
Richard Bauman
Barbara Biesecker
Carole Blair
Dilip Gaonkar
Robert Hariman
Steven Mailloux
Raymie E. McKerrow
Toby Miller
Austin Sarat
Janet Staiger
Barbie Zelizer
MAKING CAMP
Rhetorics of Transgression in U.S. Popular Culture
HELENE A. SHUGART and CATHERINE EGLEY WAGGONER
The University of Alabama Press
Tuscaloosa
Copyright © 2008
The University of Alabama Press
Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35487-0380
All rights reserved
Manufactured in the United States of America
Designer: Michele Myatt Quinn
Typeface: Minion & Impact
∞
The paper on which this book is printed meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences-Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1984.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Shugart, Helene A., 1966–
Making camp : rhetorics of transgression in U.S. popular culture / Helene A. Shugart and Catherine Egley Waggoner.
p. cm. — (Rhetoric, culture, and social critique)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-8173-1607-5 (cloth : alk. paper) — ISBN 978-0-8173-8011-3 (electronic : alk. paper) 1. Popular culture—United States. 2. Camp (Style) I. Waggoner, Catherine Egley, 1962–II. Title.
E169.12.S5154 2008
306.0973—dc22
2007033572
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Trail Map
1 - Camp Grounds: Histories and Characters of Camp
2 - Breaking Camp: Co-optation and Critical Logics
3 - Xena: Camped Crusader
4 - Karen Walker: Drag Hag
5 - Macy Gray: Venus in Drag
6 - Gwen Stefani: Camp Vamp
Conclusion: Camp Sites
Notes
References
Index
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This book, like most, is a result not only of our own time and efforts but that of others, as well. We would like to acknowledge the staff of The University of Alabama Press for assistance and guidance throughout the publication process, as well as the two anonymous reviewers of our manuscript, whose thoughtful insights and suggestions were key in strengthening and refining it.
Wittenberg University provided generous assistance in the form of a research leave and a grant, and we also thank our colleagues at Wittenberg University and the University of Utah for their valuable support. Juliann Cortese assisted with research early in this project, and we thank her for her contributions.
An early version of portions of this book originally appeared as the journal article A Bit Much: Spectacle as Discursive Schism,
in Feminist Media Studies 5 (2005): 64–80. Permission to use this material is courtesy of the Taylor and Francis Group (www.taylorandfrancis.com).
Finally, we would like to thank our families, notably Edward Bennett, Anni Shugart, Laura Egley Taylor, and Dana Waggoner, for their patience, for their support, and especially for their creative insights throughout this endeavor. As we have learned in the course of writing this book, even the study of a phenomenon as inherently playful, delightful, and dynamic as camp has the potential to be desiccated and fossilized beyond all recognition when subjected to intense scrutiny. If it has escaped that terrible fate here, they, more than we, are to thank for that.
Introduction
Trail Map
In October 2004, U.S. television audiences and critics alike noted with delight the debut of a prime-time drama sporting a distinctive aesthetic. A cross between a somewhat sanitized American Beauty and The Stepford Wives delivered with a wink, Desperate Housewives sends up suburbia in a nicely wrapped, ironic package of bucolic domesticity. The aesthetic that constitutes the key motif of the show is camp, a parodic, ironic, over-the-top, and often nostalgic sensibility that is arguably a hallmark of popular U.S. media fare today. Indeed, camp is pervasive in contemporary popular media, apparent, for instance, in the recent spate of films that pay comic tribute to television classics of yore, such as Charlie’s Angels, The Brady Bunch, The Dukes of Hazzard, and Starsky and Hutch, as well as films that hearken back to a particular era and aesthetic, such as the Austin Powers trilogy and Undercover Brother. In addition to Desperate Housewives, contemporary mainstream television delivers camp to its audiences via shows like Xena: Warrior Princess, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and The Simpsons. Popular musicians increasingly feature camp in their songs, music videos, or even personas; arguably, Madonna is and long has been quintessentially camp, mining as she does historically popular cultural forms in ironic ways for her renowned reinventions, and Macy Gray similarly embodies and ironizes a bygone aesthetic. Musicians such as Prince, Missy Elliott, Pink, and Christina Aguilera all have periodically, to a greater or lesser extent, drawn on a camp sensibility in their careers. In short, one cannot consume popular culture today without also consuming camp.
Because mediated popular culture—that is, culture as represented and made available via electronic and print technologies—is by definition notoriously dynamic and fluid, camp’s relative stability and its steadily increasing presence are intriguing. Clearly, something about this sensibility resonates with contemporary audiences. Furthermore, its versatility affords it not only endurance but mobility across a variety of venues, genres, and forms—from the mediated popular cultural forms mentioned above to mass-marketed commodities, including T-shirts, Hallmark cards, and bumper stickers. For these reasons alone, camp warrants closer examination as a barometer of sorts of contemporary U.S. culture.
Given the wide variety of shapes that camp assumes, many have questioned whether the character and function of camp are consistent across all forms and representations. For instance, is the camp sensibility we observe in Desperate Housewives equivalent to that performed by Prince; is the aesthetic that infuses Charlie’s Angels similar to that available in The Simpsons? And if camp does in fact vary across instances, how exactly does it vary and with what implications? More broadly, how does camp fit
within broader conversations regarding the nature and function of the media, culturally and politically?
Such questions intrigue scholars who are interested in tracing how power is negotiated in the landscape of popular media—that is, with respect to how conventional notions of what is true
or real,
which benefit certain groups and interests, might be challenged, modified, and even resisted in certain mediated texts. With respect to camp, in particular, many scholars have noted that it is frequently—if not always—anchored in conventional notions or discourses
of gender and sexuality, and accordingly, their questions circulate around whether and, if so, how camp may function as a key strategy by which those discourses might be renegotiated. As others note, however, perhaps camp’s popularity in contemporary culture says more about the ability of dominant media interests, invested in preserving conventional discourses, to appropriate and defuse potentially threatening strategies and sensibilities. In either case—and certainly in the intersection of the two—camp serves as an intriguing site for analysis for those interested in understanding the cultural landscape of contemporary media in general and its implications for gender and sexuality in particular.
Our interest here is in identifying and examining ways in which resistive possibilities might be realized through camp in the broader context of contemporary mediated conventions and practices. Although we concede that camp does indeed assume normative dimensions in mainstream contemporary popular culture fare, we suggest that the elements of play and critique that are inherent to camp in any guise, and perhaps especially those performances that turn on gender and sexuality, are infused with critical promise. We submit, first, that some contemporary and popular camp texts, icons, and performances might realize that promise more than others; and second, that those performances might feature a particular constellation or configuration of elements—a logic, as it were—that distinguishes them from their camp peers in popular culture. To that end, we turn our attention to contemporary camp icons whose performances, we assert, constitute transgressive camp not only by mobilizing conventional camp sensibilities but by configuring contemporary aesthetic practices in a specific, predictable pattern—a pattern that simultaneously aligns these performances with normative conventions and facilitates their resistance of those very conventions. Our project here is to identify and assess the precise elements of this resistive camp logic, as well as the movement of that logic, within the broader context of constraint—the contemporary mainstream mediascape—in which it occurs. Our broader theoretical aims are to address the ways in which these camp performances converge with and diverge from camp as historically theorized; to contribute to contemporary cultural studies work relevant to the negotiation of resistance; and to illuminate the value of a critical rhetorical attitude in animating political critique.
Camp Girls
The camp icons that we assess as a springboard for our discussion are the television character Xena, of the action/fantasy series Xena: Warrior Princess (played by actor Lucy Lawless); the character Karen Walker (played by actor Megan Mullally), of the television situation comedy series Will and Grace; singer/songwriter Macy Gray; and singer/songwriter Gwen Stefani.¹ Specifically, we examine mediated representations of these contemporary female camp performances, including concert footage, music videos, television interviews, and profiles printed in popular magazines. Via extensive and close analysis of these texts, we identify, analyze, and evaluate particular verbal, visual, acoustic, and performative codes that characterize these camp performances in order to interpret and assess the discursive logics that constitute them as transgressive.²
Our rationale for selecting these particular cases for analysis includes the following criteria: first, a camp
aesthetic—understood at the most basic level as over-the-top, playful, and parodic—clearly marks each of them and is easily apprehended by audiences. The figure of Xena, an action/fantasy heroine set in days of yore and modeled on similar figures, such as Hercules and Wonder Woman, arguably is inherently camp merely by dint of her moorings in that genre. In different ways, Karen Walker also is campy
insofar as her character is an extreme parody of the spoiled, incredibly wealthy socialite. Although Macy Gray and Gwen Stefani are not characters, their public personae also feature strong camp sensibilities; Gray is known for her almost cartoonish retro
1970s Soul Train aesthetic, and Stefani is renowned for mining highly recognizable icons and aesthetics from the past and incorporating them, in excessive and ironic ways, into her public persona. Thus, each of these women embodies and reflects the camp sensibility that pervades popular culture in general and popular media fare in particular.
Indeed, this pervasiveness speaks to another of our criteria: that each of these characters is squarely located in mainstream
popular culture via similarly mainstream media venues. Although Xena: Warrior Princess concluded active production in 2001, it was an extremely popular series throughout its six-year run, regularly garnering high ratings; and it is still widely broadcast in syndication, suggesting that it continues to resonate with mass audiences. Similarly, Will and Grace, which features the character of Karen Walker, concluded its run in the spring of 2006, but during its eight years in active production, it was a top-rated prime-time series for NBC. Even before it ceased production, it was being syndicated and rebroadcast by a number of stations nationally, and this continues to be the case. Gray and Stefani are both popular musicians, featured regularly (in concert with new releases
of their music and attendant touring) on billboard charts and receiving heavy radio and music video rotation. Stefani is also distinctive for her status as a fashion icon, both as a trendsetter and, most recently, as a designer. These singers, like the characters of Xena and Karen Walker, have thus figured and continue to figure fluidly and prominently in the landscape of popular culture, embodying and/or reflecting sensibilities that are at least congruent with those of mainstream
audiences.
We also have elected to assess specifically female camp performances of femininity. As many theorists have noted, and as we will address further in the following chapter, gender and sexuality are key axes on which camp has turned historically, especially as available in gay male and cross-dressing cultures and epitomized in drag.
In large part, this has led a host of scholars to suggest that camp performances that draw on this legacy are inherently subversive, insofar as they challenge conventional sensibilities regarding gender and sexuality. As such, cross-sex performances would likely be relatively less available in mainstream popular culture and media fare. Further, given their volatility in terms of the challenges they pose to conventional discourse, they are typically highly managed in such a way as to defuse or trivialize any critical potential, more often rendered as a quirk of an eccentric if sometimes lovable oddball, as with Nathan Lane’s character in The Birdcage. If camp—and, more specifically, its critical potential—continues to turn on gender and sexuality, then, we surmised that popular performances of either femininity by women or masculinity by men might be a fruitful location for analysis, given the likelihood that critical sensibilities might be imported into those performances under the cover of gendered and sexual conventions.
Our decision to examine femininity as camped
by women is informed by two primary considerations: first, although several scholars have decried the eradication of women from the received history and culture of camp as inappropriate, femininity certainly is the playing field of camp within that history and culture; thus, we understand femininity to be an established home
for camp. Second, aside from camp, conventional discourses of femininity and contemporary sensibilities overlap in interesting ways as relevant to the artifice and excess that are understood to characterize both. This is not the case with masculinity, which, as Halberstam (1998) has argued, is conversely assumed to be natural,
authentic, essential, unadorned, and uncontrived. Accordingly, we surmise that female performances of femininity might be the likeliest contemporary cultural site for camp performances in general and, perhaps, critical camp performances as well. This rationale further illustrates our interest in examining the specific convergence of contemporary aesthetic practices, camp, and femininity in contemporary popular culture at this historical moment. We are particularly interested in discerning how attendant new venues and modalities might give rise to innovative critical opportunities and, more specifically, logics and rhetorics of resistance, specifically as realized through camp and as relevant to gender and sexuality.
As we have noted, however, the mere fact that a camp sensibility is present does not necessarily afford resistive potential. Thus, we also identified our four cases because the camp that characterizes them, as we will demonstrate, is distinguishable from the broader camp sensibility as it is available in contemporary popular culture. In this regard, we take our cue from Robertson (1996), who, in tracing feminist camp,
acknowledges (as have other critics) that since the 1960s, camp has become virtually interchangeable with pop and . . . postmodernism,
manifest as an ironic sensibility [that] eulogizes a fantasy of the baby boomers’ American innocence through nostalgia
(pp. 119–121). She argues, however, that even if this trend could be taken as evidence of camp’s demise, not all camp in this context ought to be dismissed. To this end, she considers Madonna as a case in point—someone who certainly embodies a pop
camp sensibility but who nonetheless takes that sensibility into the terrains of gender and sexual difference, aligning herself with some of the traditional concerns of camp
(p. 123) and its attendant, critical potential. Specifically, Robertson (1996) argues, Madonna’s reliance on gay subcultures (especially drag), gender bending, and female masquerade all distinguish her in important ways from the rather fetishistic and narcissistic nostalgia that characterizes the camp media milieu in which she operates.
Like Madonna, the camp performers that we have chosen for analysis are distinctive in the contemporary popular landscape insofar as they similarly turn on gender and sexual difference. Also like Madonna, they suggest that camp can still be a political and critical force—perhaps even more so since becoming a more public sensibility
(Robertson, 1996, p. 138). Robertson ends her historical discussion of camp as a feminist practice with Madonna, noting precisely the tensions and constraints posed by a postmodern, pop
media environment thoroughly saturated with camp sensibilities and its significance for spectatorship.
She calls for close scrutiny of our camp icons, and our own camp readings and practices, to ensure that we do not naively substitute camp for politics
(p. 138). Our interest in this endeavor is to do precisely that—to identify more clearly, and with a specifically rhetorical eye, the features and forms that might characterize and perhaps typify critical, potentially transgressive camp performances, as distinct from the broader contemporary camp/pop environment in which they occur. That is, we identify a discursive logic that, we argue, characterizes resistive
contemporary camp performances—a logic distinguished by specific, predictable premises that invite a reading of those performances as subversive, even as the movement of that logic functions in novel ways that reflect the environment in which they occur. In so doing, we hope to contribute to broader cultural studies conversations regarding the media as a dynamic and shifting site of contestation and, more broadly, opportunities for resistance in a context of constraint. We launch our analysis of the critical potential and implications of camp in a contemporary era from a brief but necessary discussion of the ways in which four arenas of scholarship—critical media studies, critical rhetoric, cultural studies, and performance studies—shape our apprehension of camp.
Media, Culture, and Power
The major premise of critical media studies is that the mainstream media collectively occupy a unique position as an institution that serves as both a repository and creator of cultural discourses that reflect and promote dominant interests. A number of scholars across disciplines have noted the ways in which both media content and format are managed to the end of establishing and reinforcing power and privilege (e.g., Fiske, 1987, 1989; Gitlin, 1986; Hall, 1980; Poster, 1990). Such hegemonic goals are accomplished via a number of techniques and strategies ranging from the exclusion of certain images to the inclusion of stereotypical representations. Furthermore, the techniques and strategies by which consent is secured have become increasingly sophisticated, subtle, and even insidious as media technologies and programming have evolved in concert with broader cultural and social changes. Thus, what might appear to be progressive or even transgressive may well be positioned and delivered in such a way as to require the acceptance of quite conventional notions. The contemporary landscape of popular culture is littered with myriad performances of race, sexuality, class, and gender that appear to challenge cultural norms but are nonetheless subsumed and framed by conventions that have expanded to contain them (Schwichtenberg, 1993; Shugart, Waggoner, & Hallstein, 2001).
Some contemporary cultural critics, however, cognizant of these dynamics, hold out optimism for the resistive potential of some, especially new, mediated forms, texts, and messages. Although Hall (1980) and others (e.g., J. Collins, 1992; Giroux, 2000) have noted the possibility of negotiated and even oppositional readings of dominant
mainstream texts, perhaps most notable among these is Fiske (1986, 1987, 1989), who argues that contemporary postmodern
mediated texts, characterized as they are by chaos, randomness, inconsistency, and irony are inherently polysemous, such that audiences can construct from them, from within those audiences’ own social contexts, empowering messages. In this way, he asserts, these texts function as do-it-yourself meaning kits
with endless and significant resistive potential (1986, p. 74).
Controversial as this claim is among cultural critics, it complicates a critical apprehension of mediated texts. Fiske’s assertion that audiences have agency in spite of the ideological dimensions and functions of media content not only affords audiences a potential role other than that of cultural dupe (Hall, 1980); it also reflects a relatively recent shift in cultural studies to consider new forms and technologies of media and their messages. In this vein, Grossberg (1989) has argued that certain postmodern mediated texts, like MTV, empower viewers to control their moods and attitudes; Chen (1986) has argued similarly that the postmodern semiosis
of such texts provide[s] a cultural politics of resistance
(p. 68). McRobbie (1994), also championing the postmodern features of contemporary media fare, argues that far from being overwhelmed by media saturations, there is evidence to suggest that [marginalized] social groups and minorities are putting [contemporary media fare] to work for them
(p. 392), cobbling and crafting distinctive and politically significant—resistive—cultural forms from a pastiche of images and ideas. Although these critics acknowledge the dominant ideological discourses in which these polysemous texts are mired, they nonetheless assert that the very polysemy that characterizes said texts can be appropriated and employed resistively by audiences.
Many critics, including those noted above, have identified striking and substantial changes in communication patterns and practices over the last several decades, especially as apparent in means, aesthetics, and sensibilities. Some have labeled those patterns and practices as postmodern
or late capitalist,
linking them historically to particular social, cultural, political, and technological conditions. While the context for these changes is indisputably relevant, their identification as postmodern arguably gives rise to an inclination to apprehend them as contained within and defined by (or conflated with) a specific era—a tendency that may constrain understanding of how they function more broadly beyond specific social conditions. As such, identifying these aesthetic practices and sensibilities as postmodern
may no longer be the most appropriate or efficient way to engage their significance and implications. Like many contemporary critics, we are interested in apprehending these dynamics in ways