Jack Babuscio (1937–1990) was an American journalist and activist who primarily lived in England.

Early life

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Jack Babuscio was born in New York, NY. His mother and father were Irish and Italian, respectively.

Career

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In the 1960s, after completing an undergraduate degree in history from Rutgers University.[1] Babuscio moved to London to complete his master's and PhD in history.[2] During the 1970s and 1980s, he worked as a film critic and a gay counselor. He was simultaneously a full-time teacher at the Kingsway-Princeton College in London lecturing on topics related to history and film.[3]

In 1974, he began to write for the publication Gay News, which is where he published most of his film reviews. Babuscio's reviews were some of the first to take films by John Waters and other similar directors seriously. He would remain with the publication until its closure in 1983.[1] Afterwards, he continued to write for the Gay Times.[3]

He is best known for his work "Camp and the Gay Sensibility", an influential piece that provided an overview of cinematic camp. It posited an idea that camp is a "nexus of irony, aestheticism, theatricality and humor" and that it is specifically a "gay sensibility".

Babuscio also edited an influential work called We Speak for Ourselves.[4][5]

"Camp and the Gay Sensibility"

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Originally published in 1977, this highly influential work, often cited and republished, attempts to define the gay sensibility and to describe camp. Babuscio asserts that the gay sensibility is a creative energy that is formed out an awareness of the world based on social oppression. Given this fact, he believes that the gay sensibility responds to society's need to label and subsequently polarize people, which has resulted in camp. Despite acknowledging a difficulty in defining camp, given it can be subject to one's own view and tastes, he does emphasize consistent features that are basic to camp such as irony aestheticism, theatricality, and humor. Babuscio's essay addresses each feature individually, providing an understanding of the typical elements of camp, and then goes on to illustrate these concepts by including examples wherein he analyzes camp as it relates to Rainer Werner Fassbinder's The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant, the films of Josef von Sternberg, and the films based on Tennessee Williams' work.[6]

We Speak for Ourselves

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This work represents Babuscio's experiences in counseling, gathering transcripts and case histories. This work "represents a landmark contribution to gay self-understanding and acceptance" and is regarded as an important piece, both politically and in regards to its impact as a resource for other counselors[7]

The book received the 1977 Gay News Book Award. Additionally, New Society described the work as "a mosaic of self-told case histories" that "speaks very powerfully as the authentic voice of an oppressed minority", and goes on to add that Babuscio "presents his testimony with great intelligence and subtlety".[8] Another reviewer believed the book proved a "useful primer" for those interested in gay peer-counseling and as an interesting "panoramic presentation of the issues" people face regularly.

European Political Facts 1648–1789

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With his partner, Richard Dunn, Babuscio published European Political Facts 1648–1789. This book derived from Babuscio and Dunn's academic background in history, and it included information on heads of state, key ministers, political chronology, and other historical facts of the period.[9]

Personal life

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During his time in London, Babuscio met fellow American Richard Dunn, a teacher from Mississippi. The two considered themselves 'Anglophiles' and first met at the British Museum. The couple lived together in England for twenty years. January 11, 1990, Jack Babuscio died at the age of 52.[2] Both Babuscio and Dunn wanted it known that Babuscio passed away from Kaposi's sarcoma and internal hemorrhaging as a result of AIDS with the intent of lessening the stigma around the disease.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c Burton, Peter (February 1990). "Jack Babuscio: 'an enduring contribution'". Gay Times. No. 137. p. 7.
  2. ^ a b "Obituary Jack Babuscio". Capital Gay.
  3. ^ a b "Leading gay critic and author dies". The Pink Paper. No. 106. January 1990. p. 5.
  4. ^ "We Speak for Ourselves : Jack Babuscio : 9780281043491". www.bookdepository.com. Retrieved January 28, 2020.
  5. ^ Babuscio, Jack (1988). We Speak for Ourselves: The Experiences of Gay Men and Lesbians. SPCK. ISBN 978-0-281-04349-1.
  6. ^ Queer cinema : the film reader. Benshoff, Harry M., 1963–, Griffin, Sean. New York: Routledge. 2004. ISBN 0415319862. OCLC 53398178.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  7. ^ Cleto, Fabio (2006). Gerstner, David (ed.). Babuscio, Jack. London: Routledge. ISBN 0415306515.
  8. ^ Ward, Colin (March 17, 1997). "Coming Out". New Society. 39 (754). New Science Publications: 564 – via ProQuest.
  9. ^ Walden, Barbara (1985). "Review of European Political Facts, 1648–1789". RQ. 25 (2): 258. ISSN 0033-7072. JSTOR 25827601.