In Defense of Sharp Objects’ Camille Preaker: Carving the Distinction of Being “Represented” vs Seen
Photo Courtesy of HBO
Camille Preaker is a messy bitch and bad at her job.
While worthy of a page in the Burn Book, this largely was the critical reception of Amy Adams’s character for HBO’s Sharp Objects. The miniseries, which wrapped roughly two years ago in August, launched many angry responses
from predominantly female cultural critics, outraged by Camille’s less-than-desirable journalistic standards. These were easy marks. Should Camille stop drinking on the job, hooking up with multiple sources (including a barely-legal brother of a murder victim), carving her trauma into her skin, and taking inadequate notes during interviews? Absolutely. But the function of her character and the larger aim of the miniseries shouldn’t have to service the image female journalists want to see of themselves on-screen in order to be valid.
There’s an uneasy tension between characters that exist as “representation for representation’s sake” versus those who earn a fully fleshed out storyline. These two categories are not always mutually exclusive, but oftentimes characters that deviate from norm— anyone who isn’t a cishet, able-bodied, and neurotypical white man—slot into one or another. Conversations on tokenism abound as the laziest way from showrunners to fold in “diverse” casting while doing the least amount of work to incorporate minorities into the plot. With Camille Preaker, this rationale doesn’t quite jive with her character’s handling by screenwriters. She does occupy the main role of the show and exercises a large range of agency in her storyline. But critics didn’t like her because of her choices.
Camille barely operates as a problematic fave within the world of Sharp Objects’s Wind Gap. As a character, she struggles. There’s the vodka in an Evian bottle that supports her will to live day to day. She buys a sewing kit in order to possess a sharp object with which to cut herself; a writer who needs her scars as both a text to parse her story and armor to protect herself against the world. With that said, Camille’s earned the right to flounder. The layers of trauma Camille’s yoked with matches the density of her body modifications. Knowing this, why can’t viewers, especially women, let Camille bungle her job and sex life without the vitriol?