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Chapter 15 - Bette Davis’s Eyes and Minoritarian Survival: Camp, Melodrama, and Spectatorship

from II - Developments

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 January 2020

Alex Houen
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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Summary

On screen Bette Davis captivates James Baldwin. Baldwin is unsure what to make of her, except that he recognizes a kinship between the two of them and he is not alone in finding himself in Bette Davis’ eyes. What to make of this fascination with Davis? This essay parses the affective currents that flow between Davis, Baldwin, and the playwright Adrienne Kennedy, using the frameworks of camp and melodrama. Both affective genres build identification through excess and exaggeration – camp hyperbolizes style while melodrama amplifies feeling. These queer forms attach to Davis in different ways, revealing identificatory strategies for coping with the unhappiness of minoritarian subjectivity while simultaneously revealing the vacuum that lies at the heart of this excess.

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Affect and Literature , pp. 284 - 299
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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