Abstract

Alfred Hitchcock has often been accused of inserting queer subtexts into his films. This examination seeks first to posit camp as a humor system that is subversive by nature. Hitchcock's use of a hidden poetics of camp is then considered as the way in which his queerness is expressed. The main focus is Hitchcock's camp exploitation of the "star persona," the use of which widens the subversive nature of camp to allow for more than just the categorizing of queer desires along the axes of homosexual and heterosexual and complicates the already contentious relationship between star, actor, star persona, and audience.

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