ABSTRACT

In this fascinating and topical beginners guide, Ellis Cashmore explores the intriguing issue of celebrity culture: its origins, its meaning and its global influence. Covering such varied perspectives as fame addiction, the ‘celebrification’ of politics and celebrity fatigue, Cashmore analyzes the relationship celebrity has with commodification and the consumer society, and investigates the new media and the quest for self-perfection.

Cashmore takes readers on a quest that visits the Hollywood film industry of the early twentieth century, the film set of Cleopatra in the 1970s, the dressing room of Madonna in the 1980s, the burial of Diana in the 1990s, and the Big Brother house of the early 2000s. Author of Beckham and Tyson, Cashmore collects research, theory, and case studies en route as he explores the intriguing issue of celebrity culture: its origins, its meaning, and its global influence.

Including reviews of existing literature, and an outline of key contemporary topics, this absorbing book skilfully explains why we have become so captivated by the lives and loves of the celebrity and, in so doing, presents the clearest, most comprehensive, wide-ranging, and accessible account of celebrity culture to date.

chapter 1|16 pages

CULTIVATING/TASTES

chapter 2|19 pages

MAKING/NEW RULES

chapter 3|20 pages

GIVING/IT ALL

chapter 4|22 pages

FABRICATING/FAME

chapter 5|20 pages

WORSHIPPING/ FROM AFAR

chapter 6|18 pages

CONSUMING/BEAUTY

chapter 7|24 pages

COMMODIFYING/RACE

chapter 8|25 pages

THRIVING/ON SCANDAL

chapter 9|23 pages

BUYING/SALES

chapter 10|20 pages

TELEVISING/REALITY

chapter 11|19 pages

BLURRING/THE LINE

chapter 12|20 pages

CREATING/LEGENDS

chapter 13|23 pages

ANSWERING/THE BIG QUESTION