"Sensitively traces the complex routes of an aesthetic style that has long been narrowly assigned to gay men. Chris A. Eng brilliantly queers camp by opening up its imposed semantic enclosures through its various iterations in Asian American texts, performances, and historical events. Extravagant Camp astutely demonstrates how camp is a spatial, temporal, and performative site that enables fertile explorations and critiques not merely of gender, but also the frictive historical excesses, limits, and possibilities of nation, race, and sexuality." (Martin F. Manalansan IV, Rutgers University) "Merges conversations around biopolitical camps with queer camp aesthetics, forcing us to contend with questions regarding material politics and the seemingly trivial. Rather than simply privileging one over the other, Chris A. Eng complicates our understanding of both in ways that reinvigorate established discourses surrounding materiality, abjection, and extravagance, breathing new life into these established ideas. Extravagant Camp offers a new and distinct model for many other fields and minoritarian discourses. A rare and gorgeous feat!" (Hentyle Yapp, University of California, San Diego) "Chris A. Eng's discovery of a form of Asian American campiness that uses the maligned styles of imitation, exaggeration, inauthenticity, and kitschy play to investigate the many repressed histories of U.S. extrajudicial violence that racialized Asians in North America is as unsettling as it is convincing." (Chandan Reddy, University of Washington)