This intellectually vibrant volume is the first collection to deal with Australian celebrity in ways that account for both cultural and gendered specificities, demonstrating how gendered ways of imagining Australia are reinforced and contested in celebrity representations and self-presentations.
This intellectually vibrant volume is the first collection to deal with Australian celebrity in ways that account for both cultural and gendered specificities, demonstrating how gendered ways of imagining Australia are reinforced and contested in celebrity representations and self-presentations.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Anthea Taylor is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Gender and Cultural Studies at the University of Sydney. She is the author of four monographs in feminist media and cultural studies, the most recent of which is Postfeminism in Context: Women, Australian Popular Culture, and the Unsettling of Postfeminism (with Margaret Henderson, Routledge, 2020). Her book on Germaine Greer, celebrity, and the archive is forthcoming with Routledge. Joanna McIntyre is a Lecturer in Media Studies at Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne. She has published extensively in the fields of media studies, trans studies, celebrity studies, and queer theory, including in the European Journal of Cultural Studies. Her monograph, Transgender Celebrity, is forthcoming with Routledge.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction: 'Gendering Australian celebrity' Part I; Celebrity masculinities and settler colonialism 1: 'From mild colonial boy to Jake the Paed: Rolf Harris and Australian celebrity masculinity in the UK' 2: 'The manly whiteness of Russell Crowe' 3: 'Johnathan Thurston Indigeneity and technologies of masculinity in Australian sporting celebrity culture' Part II; Feminist politics and celebrity feminisms 4: 'Celebritised anger: Theorising feminist rage voice and affective injustice through Hannah Gadsby's Nanette' 5: 'Clementine Ford online misogyny and the labour of celebrity feminism' 6: "Good" girl turned "bad": Tracey Spicer's memoir celebrity feminist journalism and #MeToo activism in Australia' Part III; Queer celebrity and marginalised subjectivities; 7: 'Interviewing a queer national celebrity: Carlotta as an "outsider within" Australian celebrity culture' 8: '"It was nice for me watching that because [Magda Szubanski] was very calming": LGBTIQ+ Australians respond to marriage equality activism' Part IV; Self-presentation and celebrity femininities; 9: '"I can call myself Australian if I want to": Natalie Tran and Asian Australian femininity on YouTube' 10: 'Disarming femininity: Annabel Crabb celebrity politics and culture' 11: '"Australian TV's golden girl": Asher Keddie Offspring and the celebrity motherhood narrative'
Introduction: 'Gendering Australian celebrity' Part I; Celebrity masculinities and settler colonialism 1: 'From mild colonial boy to Jake the Paed: Rolf Harris and Australian celebrity masculinity in the UK' 2: 'The manly whiteness of Russell Crowe' 3: 'Johnathan Thurston Indigeneity and technologies of masculinity in Australian sporting celebrity culture' Part II; Feminist politics and celebrity feminisms 4: 'Celebritised anger: Theorising feminist rage voice and affective injustice through Hannah Gadsby's Nanette' 5: 'Clementine Ford online misogyny and the labour of celebrity feminism' 6: "Good" girl turned "bad": Tracey Spicer's memoir celebrity feminist journalism and #MeToo activism in Australia' Part III; Queer celebrity and marginalised subjectivities; 7: 'Interviewing a queer national celebrity: Carlotta as an "outsider within" Australian celebrity culture' 8: '"It was nice for me watching that because [Magda Szubanski] was very calming": LGBTIQ+ Australians respond to marriage equality activism' Part IV; Self-presentation and celebrity femininities; 9: '"I can call myself Australian if I want to": Natalie Tran and Asian Australian femininity on YouTube' 10: 'Disarming femininity: Annabel Crabb celebrity politics and culture' 11: '"Australian TV's golden girl": Asher Keddie Offspring and the celebrity motherhood narrative'
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