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Sociology of culture --- -Celebrities --- -Fame --- #SBIB:309H043 --- Celebrity culture --- Celebs --- Cult of celebrity --- Famous people --- Famous persons --- Illustrious people --- Well-known people --- Fan clubs --- -Populaire cultuur en massacultuur en “performers” --- Celebrities --- Fame --- Popular culture --- History --- Social aspects --- Social aspects. --- #SBIB:309H504 --- #SBIB:AANKOOP --- Celebrity --- Renown --- Glory --- Persons --- Populaire cultuur en massacultuur en “performers” --- Code en boodschap: sociologische, antropologische benadering
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Mass communications --- Sociology of culture --- Celebrities --- Mass media and culture --- #SBIB:309H040 --- #SBIB:316.7C121 --- #SBIB:316.7C140 --- Culture and mass media --- Culture --- Celebrity culture --- Celebs --- Cult of celebrity --- Famous people --- Famous persons --- Illustrious people --- Well-known people --- Persons --- Fan clubs --- Populaire cultuur algemeen --- Cultuursociologie: gedragspatronen, levensstijl --- Cultuursociologie: cultuur en globale samenlevingen
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Aaron Jaffe investigates the relationship between two phenomena that arrived on the historical stage in the first decades of the twentieth century: modernist literature and modern celebrity culture. Jaffe systematically traces and theorizes the deeper dependencies between these two influential forms of cultural value. He examines the paradox that modernist authors, while rejecting mass culture in favor of elite cultural forms, reflected the economy of celebrity culture in their strategies for creating a market for their work. Through collaboration, networking, reviewing and editing each other's works, T. S. Eliot, James Joyce, Ezra Pound and Wyndham Lewis, among others, constructed their literary reputations and publicized the project of modernism. Jaffe uses substantial archival research to show how literary fame was made by exploiting the very market forces that modernists claimed to reject. This innovative study also illuminates the cultural impact and continued relevance of the modernist project.
English literature --- Thematology --- anno 1900-1999 --- American literature --- Authors and readers --- Authorship --- Celebrities --- Literature and society --- Literature publishing --- Modernism (Literature) --- History and criticism --- History --- Marketing --- Literary publishing --- Literature --- Publishers and publishing --- Literature and sociology --- Society and literature --- Sociology and literature --- Sociolinguistics --- Celebrity culture --- Celebs --- Cult of celebrity --- Famous people --- Famous persons --- Illustrious people --- Well-known people --- Persons --- Fan clubs --- Authoring (Authorship) --- Writing (Authorship) --- Readers and authors --- Publishing --- Social aspects
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What defines celebrity? Why is the ubiquitous cult of celebrity so important in contemporary Western culture? Through its combination of classic pieces and more contemporary writings, 'The Celebrity Culture Reader' examines the proliferation of the study of celebrity over the last two decades, and the significance and importance of celebrity in contemporary culture. The contributors look at the cult of celebrity from Alexander the Great, to the transformation of the actor into a public person in the eighteenth century, to the industrial apparatus leading to the star system in early narrative film. Taking a broad definition of the concept of celebrity, the Reader discusses music celebrity as personified by New Kids on the Block, the celebrity status of literary authors, the emergence of CEOs as corporate business celebrities, and the role of celebrity in politics. Individual articles move from discussion of recognized celebrities such as Madonna, Michael Jackson and Princess Diana through to reality television and the idea that through enough self-promotion, anyone can now achieve celebrity status. 'The' 'Celebrity Culture Reader' is divided into the following sections, each with an introduction by the editor: * Celebrity and Modernity: The Historical Pattern of Celebrity * The Textual and the ExtraTextual Dimensions of the Public Persona * Ascribed Celebrity: the Transformed Public Sphere * Transgression: Scandal, Notoriety and Infamy * The Body and Celebrity * Celebrity Culture: Narcissism, Fandom and the Will-to-Celebrity * Celebrity Nation: Celebrity in National Contexts * The Celebrity Industry: the Management of Fame * Surface and Depth: Celebrity in the 'Post-Celebrity' Era
Sociology of culture --- United States --- Civilization, Modern. --- Popular culture. --- Celebrities. --- Popular culture --- Celebrities --- Fame --- Social aspects --- Civilization. --- #SBIB:309H040 --- #SBIB:316.7C121 --- #SBIB:316.7C140 --- Populaire cultuur algemeen --- Cultuursociologie: gedragspatronen, levensstijl --- Cultuursociologie: cultuur en globale samenlevingen --- Motion pictures --- National characteristics, American, in motion pictures. --- Civilization, Modern --- Culture, Popular --- Mass culture --- Pop culture --- Popular arts --- Communication --- Intellectual life --- Mass society --- Recreation --- Culture --- Celebrity --- Renown --- Glory --- Modern civilization --- Modernity --- Civilization --- Renaissance --- Celebrity culture --- Celebs --- Cult of celebrity --- Famous people --- Famous persons --- Illustrious people --- Well-known people --- Persons --- Fan clubs --- History --- United States of America
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