Publications by authors named "B Mitchell-Peters"
Article Synopsis
- The novella "Other Voices, Other Rooms" by Truman Capote has been critiqued for its lack of popularity and often analyzed within the Southern-gothic genre, neglecting its significant queer themes.
- Capote employs gothic elements in the narrative but subverts them to illuminate the experiences of two adolescent queer characters.
- The text's Camp aesthetic acts as a liberating force that contrasts with the prevailing narrative of queer-character death in literature from the late 1940s and 50s, allowing for the exploration of queer desires.
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