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E-raamat: Women, Celebrity and Cultures of Ageing: Freeze Frame

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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 11-Aug-2015
  • Kirjastus: Palgrave Macmillan
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781137495129
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 11-Aug-2015
  • Kirjastus: Palgrave Macmillan
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781137495129

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Women, Celebrity and Cultures of Ageing interrogates the relationship between women, ageing and celebrity, examining how celebrity culture plays a crucial role in mapping out the social and cultural meanings of 'older' and ageing women. Indeed, with the corporeality of female celebrities being surveilled and scrutinised by popular media forms on a daily basis, celebrity culture now serves a key function in shoring up 'appropriate' and 'inappropriate' images and directives regarding how women 'should' age. Focusing on an array of historical and contemporary star/celebrity images, including figures such as Bette Davis, 'Moms' Mabley, Jennifer Aniston, Grace Jones and Dame Judi Dench, the book seeks to examine the powerful, contradictory and sometimes celebratory ways in which celebrity culture constructs discourses on the limits and possibilities of ageing femininities.

Arvustused

By placing celebrity under the lens of ageing, Deborah Jermyn and Su Holmes edited collection offers a thoughtful, timely and necessary commentary on celebrity in old age that has broader ramifications for understandings of current demographic shifts and the so-called crisis of ageing. this book makes an innovative and worthwhile contribution to celebrity, media and film studies as well as to cultural gerontology, and is highly recommended for its insights into the gender/age/celebrity matrix. (Josephine Dolan, Journal of British Cinema and Television, Vol. 13 (2), April, 2016)

"This collection of essays demonstrates that although female celebrities may be many things for many people, they are all ageing in front of our eyes on our screens and the pages of our newspapers. From the repulsive crone to the sexually alluring icon of style, the images of ageing female celebrities are manifold, as is the vocabulary with which to describe them: spinster, witch, star, diva, artist, role model. This timely book challenges our thinking about these images and words, inviting us to look again at the pathologised or invisible older woman and to listen out for her voice, or examine her sexuality, and identify the complexity of the matrices which extend from questions of femininity, sexuality, race and ageing in celebrity cultures." - Lucy Bolton, Queen Mary, University of London, UK

'Ageing is universal everywhere, eternal, and unchanging. Yet, the meanings of age and how we experience it are under constant negotiation, with media and celebrity culture ever active in charging people to resist being victimized by age or to avoid the consequences of ageing that bad choices yield. Women, Celebrity and Cultures of Ageing brings together a roster of engaging and enlightening scholarly investigations that delve into celebrity, gender, and the meanings of age, in both an historical and contemporary context. From 80-year-old fashionistas to the 'age drag' donnedby supermodels, this book fills an important need for sustained discussion on the meanings of age made visible through celebrity.' - Brenda R. Weber, author of Makeover TV: Selfhood, Citizenship, and Celebrity and Women and Literary Celebrity in the Nineteenth Century

"The very clever title of this valuable and timely collection notes both the way ageing female celebrities are haunted by images of their younger selves in contemporary coverage and the centrality to that coverage of stories of surgical attempts to freeze the passage of time. Jermyn and Holmes argue convincingly that celebrity is key to an understanding of how age and (female) gender interact in popular culture. Studies of individual celebrities, black and white, from past and present, demonstrate how contradictory popular representations can be. Jennifer Aniston is the youngest celebrity defined by her age to be examined, but the upper range is well populated by the Fabulous Fashionistas, Agnes Varda and Judi Dench, to name just a few. It isn't just the media coverage that is interrogated but their performances as well. The lyrics of Grace Jones's 2008 comeback, Vanessa Redgrave's voiceover in Call the Midwife and Varda's alternation between the personal and the auteur are all investigated. Even the inescapable termination of ageing appears in an examination of the abrupt end to Elizabeth Sladen's return in the Sarah Jane Adventures with her unexpected death during filming." - Frances Bonner, University of Queensland, Australia

List of Figures
ix
Acknowledgements x
Notes on Contributors xi
Introduction: A Timely Intervention -- Unravelling the Gender/Age/Celebrity Matrix 1(10)
Deborah Jermyn
Su Holmes
1 Here, There and Nowhere: Ageing, Gender and Celebrity Studies
11(14)
Su Holmes
Deborah Jermyn
2 Reconfiguring Elinor Glyn: Ageing Female Experience and the Origins of the `It Girl'
25(18)
Karen Randell
Alexis Weedon
3 Bette Davis: Acting and Not Acting Her Age
43(16)
Martin Shingler
4 Moms Mabley and Whoopi Goldberg: Age, Comedy and Celebrity
59(18)
Sadie Wearing
5 `Je joue le role d'une petite vieille, rondouillarde et bavarde, qui raconte sa vie...' [ `I am playing the role of a little old lady, pleasantly plump and talkative, who is telling the story of her life...']: The Significance of Agnes Varda's Old Lady Onscreen
77(20)
Rona Murray
6 Ageing Grace/Fully: Grace Jones and the Queering of the Diva Myth
97(15)
Nathalie Weidhase
7 From the Woman Who `Had It All' to the Tragic, Ageing Spinster: The Shifting Star Persona of Jennifer Aniston
112(15)
Susan Berridge
8 `Don't Wear Beige -- It Might Kill You': The Politics of Ageing and Visibility in Fabulous Fashionistas
127(19)
Deborah Jermyn
9 The Best Exotic Graceful Ager: Dame Judi Dench and Older Female Celebrity
146(16)
Melanie Williams
10 `I'm Not Past My Sell By Date Yet!': Sarah Jane's Adventures in Postfeminist Rejuvenation and the Later-Life Celebrity of Elisabeth Sladen
162(16)
Hannah Hamad
11 `Call the Celebrity': Voicing the Experience of Women and Ageing through the Distinctive Vocal Presence of Vanessa Redgrave
178(19)
Ros Jennings
Eva Krainitzki
Index 197
Deborah Jermyn is Reader in Film and Television at the University of Roehampton, UK. She has published widely on women, ageing and the media, including articles in CineAction; Critical Studies in Television and Celebrity Studies, and is the editor of Female Celebrity and Ageing: Back in the Spotlight (2013).  Su Holmes is Reader in Television at the University of East Anglia, UK. She is the author of numerous articles on celebrity and the co-editor of Framing Celebrity (2006); Stardom and Celebrity: A Reader (2007), and In the Limelight and Under the Microscope: Forms and Functions of Female Celebrity (2011).