Gender and Australian Celebrity Culture

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AFL Player
Asian Australian
Asian Australian Identity
Aussie Bloke
Australia's colonial histories
Australian Celebrity
Australian celebrity culture
Australian Women's Weekly
Bindi Irwin
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Celebrity Culture
Celebrity Feminism
Celebrity Feminist
Celebrity Feminists
digital culture analysis
Drag
Drag Queens
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Feminist Killjoy
feminist theory
Gender and Celebrity
Gender Confirmation Surgery
gendered celebrity representation Australia
Gendered specificities
Hegemonic masculinities
Indigenous Athletes
Jacinda Ardern
Kitchen Cabinet
Mandated Motherhood
Marriage Equality Activism
Marriage Equality Campaign
masculinity studies
media studies
Parasocial Interaction
Popular Feminism
Popular Misogyny
queer identities
Rugby League
Russell Crowe
Star Image
Torres Strait Islander
Torres Strait Islander Peoples
Transgender Celebrity
whiteness and colonialism
Women's Anger

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138366220
  • Weight: 640g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Dec 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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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.

Gender and Australian Celebrity Culture engages with celebrities across a diverse range of fields – actors, journalists, athletes, comedians, writers, and television personalities – and in doing so critically reflects upon different forms of Australian fame and the media platforms and practices that sustain them. Authors in this volume engage directly with pertinent issues relating to gender and sexuality, including celebrity feminism and the generative capacity of feminist rage; normative femininity and its instability; hegemonic masculinities; and queerness and its (in)visibility. Contributors also intervene in a number of ongoing debates in media and cultural studies more broadly, including those around the politics and affordances of digital media; whiteness and Australia’s colonial histories; celebrity labour; and methodologies for celebrity studies. This timely collection urges scholars of celebrity to attend further both to the gendered nature of celebrity culture and to local conditions of production and consumption.

This book will be of key interest to researchers and graduate students in cultural studies, television and film studies, digital media studies, critical race and whiteness studies, gender and sexuality studies, and literary studies.

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.