This article extends Nick Perry’s concept of the Antipodean camp – that there is a camp style common to settler popular cultures of Australia and New Zealand – by also considering possible differences between the two cultures and by re-emphasizing the camp’s relation to gay and queer cultures. The Topp Twins, lesbian, anarchist, variety entertainers, are discussed as an act that both extend and challenge Perry’s ideas and the traditional association of camp and gay male culture. The article finishes by considering the degree to which they articulate a particularly New Zealand style, which I refer to as ‘bush camp’
Paul Swan’s performances at the turn of the century through the 1960’s are an overlooked, early exam...
In all seriousness, camp is not dead. But since Susan Sontag's Notes of 'Camp', academic attention t...
This study explored the experience of what it is to be a gay man and to live in a rural community. I...
This article extends Nick Perry’s concept of the Antipodean camp – that there is a camp style common...
Vanessa Knights and Tony Biddle write that “conceptualizations of the national ... have been somewha...
Vanessa Knights and Tony Biddle write that conceptualisations of the national have been somewhat sid...
ChillOut is Australia's largest rural lesbian and gay festival, and this article examines how the ev...
The article is concerned with the possibility of employing countercultural and subversive strategi...
I wish to take the "Camp eye" as a point of departure for an examination of camp (lower-case "c") as...
“Camp” is a phenomenon that is as fickle as it is undertheorized. Usually loosely associated with an...
Although called "From Camp to Queer", this book is really about the early years of the gay liberatio...
International audienceThe critical and popular success of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert (Stephan El...
The critical and popular success of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert (Stephan Elliott, 1994) h...
This multi-sited ethnographic study explores U.S. gay men's interactional usages of camp, a queer ae...
Pier Vittorio Tondelli’s second novel, Pao Pao (1982), has often been considered as an example of he...
Paul Swan’s performances at the turn of the century through the 1960’s are an overlooked, early exam...
In all seriousness, camp is not dead. But since Susan Sontag's Notes of 'Camp', academic attention t...
This study explored the experience of what it is to be a gay man and to live in a rural community. I...
This article extends Nick Perry’s concept of the Antipodean camp – that there is a camp style common...
Vanessa Knights and Tony Biddle write that “conceptualizations of the national ... have been somewha...
Vanessa Knights and Tony Biddle write that conceptualisations of the national have been somewhat sid...
ChillOut is Australia's largest rural lesbian and gay festival, and this article examines how the ev...
The article is concerned with the possibility of employing countercultural and subversive strategi...
I wish to take the "Camp eye" as a point of departure for an examination of camp (lower-case "c") as...
“Camp” is a phenomenon that is as fickle as it is undertheorized. Usually loosely associated with an...
Although called "From Camp to Queer", this book is really about the early years of the gay liberatio...
International audienceThe critical and popular success of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert (Stephan El...
The critical and popular success of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert (Stephan Elliott, 1994) h...
This multi-sited ethnographic study explores U.S. gay men's interactional usages of camp, a queer ae...
Pier Vittorio Tondelli’s second novel, Pao Pao (1982), has often been considered as an example of he...
Paul Swan’s performances at the turn of the century through the 1960’s are an overlooked, early exam...
In all seriousness, camp is not dead. But since Susan Sontag's Notes of 'Camp', academic attention t...
This study explored the experience of what it is to be a gay man and to live in a rural community. I...