Current:Home > Invest'That's so camp': What the slang and aesthetic term means, plus its place in queer history -Momentum Wealth Path
'That's so camp': What the slang and aesthetic term means, plus its place in queer history
View
Date:2025-04-18 04:36:52
"Camp" is a term many know but few can define. You may have heard it as slang adopted by Gen Z or in context with the 2019 Met Gala theme, but it has a much deeper history, particularly in queer communities.
Though “camp” preexisted American writer Susan Sontag, she produced one of the most seminal texts to define it in 1964:
“Camp asserts that good taste is not simply good taste; that there exists, indeed, a good taste of bad taste,” Sontag wrote in her “Notes on ‘Camp.’”
What does camp mean?
Camp is an aesthetic or expression of “inauthentic visual cues,” says Michael Mamp, an associate professor of Lousiana State University’s fashion program and the director and curator of the university’s textile and costume museum.
In other words, "camp" isn't often intentional. It's expressing yourself earnestly and sincerely, but coming off as over-the-top to those around you.
“Camp is a vision of the world in terms of style – but a particular kind of style,” Sontag wrote. “It is the love of the exaggerated, the ‘off,’ of things-being-what-they-are-not.”
Wesley Breed, a 20-year-old fashion influencer and student at New York University describes it as “so bad it’s good.”
“It’s an attempted seriousness that fails,” Breed says. “You miss the mark, but in missing your mark, you create something that's good in its own way.”
'Black Drag Queens Invented Camp':Black, queer culture at the 2019 Met Gala
Examples of camp fashion
Camp is often most clearly seen in fashion. Breed points out Comme des Garçons runway shows, which often feature over-the-top looks that, to the average viewer, may seem more like an arts and crafts project than high fashion.
“Rei Kawakubo, who heads Comme des Garçons, has a vision for her fashion that’s a little bit comic, but she kind of plays with it,” Breed says. “It creates this whole new aspect of seriousness that people really enjoy.”
Gen Z often applies the word to celebrities in the way they act or dress. Think Katy Perry’s bubblegum sweet, plastic-laden dresses, Lady Gaga’s meat dress. Breed even points out now-campy early 2000s runway looks.
The Met Gala tried its hand in 2019 with its theme “Camp: Notes on Fashion.” Billy Porter was carried in by six shirtless pharaohs and flew gold wings. Michael Urie sported a half-tux, half-gown look. Cara Delevingne's headpiece was made of bananas, fried eggs, fingers, mouths and eyeballs. Zendaya wore an LED Cinderella gown. Janelle Monáe's trippy look included no less than four hats.
But Mamp says it failed – some didn’t understand the essence of camp (cue Karlie Kloss’ “Looking camp right in the eye”) and it didn’t center the LGBTQ+ community, which has been an essential part of camp expression for hundreds of years.
The Met Gala oozes exclusivity, and it's part of what makes it so interesting to watch for those of us who didn't get an invite. But the stories of wealthy celebrities do not necessarily encompass what camp is and has been, Mamp says.
“It put camp into the common vernacular in a way that it probably hadn’t been in a while,” Mamp says. “But I don’t think it did appropriate justice to the connection between camp and LGBTQ+ communities.”
Camp has roots in queer fashion, art
Sontag points to the early examples of the camp aesthetic in the late 17th century and early 18th-century mannerist art; English poets like Alexander Pope, William Congreve and Horace Walpole, architecture like the Rococo churches of Munich and a French literature style called preciosity.
The Palace of Versailles is another early example many point to.
“It’s hard not to think of life at Versailles in the 18th century, in particular, as being a personification of camp,” Mamp says. “What’s more campy than the queen building a little village, the Hameau de la Reine, for her to play shepherdess there, but to do so with crystal chandeliers, the marble tables and perfectly manicured gardens.”
But there’s an even richer history of “doing” camp in queer communities, says Mamp, who teaches a class at LSU on LGBTQ+ history through the lens of fashion. He references cross-dressing at masquerade balls and queer communities in the early 20th century dressing or acting in a way colloquially referred to as “camping it up.”
“Historically, this idea of camp is linked to what was someone’s personal truth but what was seen by others as inauthentic or outside of the norm for them to behave,” Mamp says. “While camp may be seen as inauthentic, it is often most an expression of the most sincere.”
Mamp points to Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera, trans activists who played a pivotal role in the 1969 Stonewall Riots. Their expressions were seen as “campy” in that period, he says, but they were a “very real and very personal expression” of who they were.
Sontag, who herself was queer, mentions this in her 1964 essay: “The peculiar relation between Camp taste and homosexuality has to be explained. While it’s not true that Camp taste is homosexual taste, there is no doubt a peculiar affinity and overlap.”
Historically, camp culture for gay men in particular has been queer icons that didn’t even identify as queer themselves. They just *were* camp, Mamp says.
“Judy Garland, Joan Crawford, Barbra Streisand, camp icons Cher, Bette Midler,” he says. “You can’t help but watch a clip from a Judy Garland show in the 1960s and think ‘Oh my god, this is the campiest thing I’ve seen.’ Yet at the same time, she’s pouring every ounce of her most sincere emotion and energy into the performance.”
This is the essence of camp, both Sontag and Mamp agree: The best expressions are “dead serious,” Sontag wrote.
“Camp taste is a kind of love, love for human nature. It relishes, rather than judges, the little triumphs and awkward intensities of ‘character,’” Sontag wrote in her essay.
What does camp mean as slang?
Today, camp is used as slang to describe something over-the-top – eccentric, ridiculous, unexpected, striking, out-of-the-ordinary.
Earlier this year, Breed made a TikTok video explaining the history and definition of camp for an audience of 11 to 26-year-olds who want to get in on the lingo.
Breed likens it to a figure of speech: “If you have a friend who does something strange or stupid or ridiculous or unexpected of their character, it can be camp. It’s kind of like people just give camp a definition based on context.”
It’s slang and it’s fashion, it’s an art and a way of living. It’s everything and it’s nothing. And maybe that’s what camp has meant all along.
“I think the point that Sontag makes is that sometimes it's easier to define what isn't camp versus what is,” Mamp says.
Finding LGBTQ+ community:How bisexual people find support amid discrimination
Just Curious for more? We've got you covered
USA TODAY is exploring the questions you and others ask every day. From "Who created Barbie" to "What does ICYMI mean?" to "What is a recession?", we're striving to find answers to the most common questions you ask every day. Head to our Just Curious section to see what else we can answer for you.
veryGood! (63)
prev:'Most Whopper
Related
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Lukas Gage and Chris Appleton Officially Obtain Marriage License
- Julie Chen Moonves Wants Kim Kardashian and Tom Brady to Have a “Showmance” on Big Brother
- Get Glowing Skin and Save 45% On a Complete Sunday Riley Beauty Routine
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- Vanderpump Rules' Ariana Joked About Being in a Throuple With Tom and Raquel Before Affair News
- Matthew Perry Says Keanu Reeves Won't Be Mentioned in Future Versions of His Memoir
- The EPA's watchdog is warning about oversight for billions in new climate spending
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- Greta Thunberg's 'The Climate Book' urges world to keep climate justice out front
Ranking
- Bodycam footage shows high
- Dead whales on the east coast fuel misinformation about offshore wind development
- Sofia Richie's Fiancé Elliot Grainge Gives Rare Glimpse Into Their Cozy Home Life
- A huge winter storm is expected to affect millions across 22 states
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Get Glowing Skin and Save 45% On a Complete Sunday Riley Beauty Routine
- Arctic chill brings record low temperatures to the Northeast
- Kelly Ripa Dances Off Minor Wardrobe Malfunction on Live
Recommendation
Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
Joseph Baena Reveals How He Powered Past the Comments About Being Arnold Schwarzenegger's Son
Greenland's melting ice could be changing our oceans. Just ask the whales
Sephora Sale Last Day to Save: Here’s a Shopping Editor’s Guide to the 43 Best Deals
Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
Why Elizabeth Olsen Thinks It’s “Ridiculous” She Does Her Own Marvel Stunts
Sofia Richie Marries Elliot Grainge During Lavish Ceremony in South of France
Why finding kelp in the Galapagos is like finding a polar bear in the Bahamas