Open Cultural Studies (Dec 2017)

Prissy’s Quittin’ Time: The Black Camp Aesthetics of Kara Walker

  • Stephens Brian

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1515/culture-2017-0059
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 1
pp. 646 – 659

Abstract

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Through a close reading of Walker’s first silhouette instalment-the audaciously titled Gone, An Historical Romance of a Civil War as it Occurred Between the Dusky Thighs of One Young Negress and Her Heart (1994)-this article examines how Walker utilises black camp to undermine both white supremacist and restrictive black uplift discourse. To be sure, the article is not an attempt to conflate these two, for the former is powerfully worse than the latter. However, it is necessary to explore how both discourses reinforce essentialist articulations of blackness and also to examine how black camp is a provocative analytic for their simultaneous disruption. Camp is usually understood as a queer-derived cultural practice that inflates identity to expose the constructed nature of gender. However, this article shows that black articulations of camp inflate identity to demonstrate the fiction of race as well.

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