We heard there's a place where everyone can be a queen, and it's not just at the Pink Pony Club. From drag kings to hyper queens, otherwise known as AFAB (Assigned Female at Birth) queens, the rise of the "camp" aesthetic has made its way to mainstream beauty. If you need proof, just look at Julia Fox's sartorial style or Chappell Roan's, well, everything .

"Camp" is a fluid concept. It was first defined in Susan Sontag's 1964 essay "Notes on Camp," where she assigned 58 characteristics — from "do something extraordinary" to "dethroning the serious" — to explain the term. In its most rudimentary sense, it's dressing and behaving in a flamboyant and theatrical way.

It embraces liminality — celebrating the absurd, the eccentric, and the dramatic. This comes in contrast with rigid beauty standards geared toward the male gaze and incessant micro trends perpetuated by capitalism, celebrating the one thing that really matters: individuality. The queer and drag communities have long been privy to "camp.

" With its increased education and diversity , it's only natural that it's reached peak pop culture and your social media feed, too. "The camp aesthetic is very Instagrammable," Clover Bish , hyper queen and former contestant on Drag Race España, tells PS. "It's striking to see a picture with something big and huge, and camp aesthetics always has that.

It makes you stop scrolling." Cis women have participated in drag for decades, but only now are we beginning to see hyper quee.