The Star as Icon: Celebrity in the Age of Mass Consumption

The Star as Icon: Celebrity in the Age of Mass Consumption

by Daniel Herwitz
The Star as Icon: Celebrity in the Age of Mass Consumption

The Star as Icon: Celebrity in the Age of Mass Consumption

by Daniel Herwitz

Hardcover(New Edition)

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Overview

Princess Diana, Jackie O, Grace Kelly—the star icon is the most talked about yet least understood persona. The object of adoration, fantasy, and cult obsession, the star icon is a celebrity, yet she is also something more: a dazzling figure at the center of a media pantomime that is at once voyeuristic and zealously guarded. With skill and humor, Daniel Herwitz pokes at the gears of the celebrity-making machine, recruiting a philosopher's interest in the media, an eye for society, and a love of popular culture to divine our yearning for these iconic figures and the role they play in our lives.

Herwitz portrays the star icon as caught between transcendence and trauma. An effervescent being living on a distant, exalted planet, the star icon is also a melodramatic heroine desperate to escape her life and the ever-watchful eye of the media. The public buoys her up and then eagerly watches her fall, her collapse providing a satisfying conclusion to a story sensationally told—while leaving the public yearning for a rebirth.

Herwitz locates this double life in the opposing tensions of film, television, religion, and consumer culture, offering fresh perspectives on these subjects while ingeniously mapping society's creation (and destruction) of these special aesthetic stars. Herwitz has a soft spot for popular culture yet remains deeply skeptical of public illusion. He worries that the media distances us from even minimal insight into those who are transfigured into star icons. It also blinds us to the shaping of our political present.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780231145404
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Publication date: 10/16/2008
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 176
Product dimensions: 5.80(w) x 8.40(h) x 0.80(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Daniel Herwitz is the Frederick G. L. Huetwell Professor of Humanities at the University of Michigan. His Columbia University Press books include Heritage, Culture, and Politics in the Postcolony (2012) and, with Lydia Goehr, The Don Giovanni Moment: Essays on the Legacy of an Opera (2006).

Table of Contents

Preface and Acknowledgments
1. The Candle in the Wind
2. There Is Only One Star Icon (Except in a Warhol Picture)
3. Therefore Not All Idols Are American
4. A Star Is Born
5. The Film Aura: An Intermediate Case
6. Stargazing and Spying
7. Teleaesthetics
8. Diana Haunted and Hunted on TV
9. Star Aura in Consumer Society (and Other Fatalities)
Notes
Index

What People are Saying About This

Edward Dimendberg

The Star as Icon displays an uncommonly high level of erudition and a masterful understanding of art history and philosophy rarely encountered in contemporary studies of mass culture. Daniel Herwitz's book is likely to provoke vigorous debate and few people will be able to read it without finding themselves challenged to articulate their own beliefs and commitments. It reconfigures the axis along which relations among high and low culture may be apprehended, yet does so without recourse to identity politics or a master narrative of globalization.

Arthur Danto

The Star as Icon can be compared with Stanley Cavell's Pursuits of Happiness, but is more contemporary and less optimistic. The book studies significant movies (Rear Window, The Philadelphia Story), is culturally literate, and is very good on the idea of aura and popular culture as it has evolved since Walter Benjamin. Required reading for any course in film studies.

Marjorie Perloff

In this highly original and provocative book, Daniel Herwitz argues that the star icon is not just an emblem of our celebrity culture. Rather the star is a creature 'caught between transcendence and trauma in her own life and in the public's gaze.' As aesthetic type, the star is at once created and destroyed by the society in which she operates. Both a philosophical meditation and an incisive cultural critique, this study of consumer culture's power to establish aura, only to reduce it quickly to a marketing formula, will make you laugh out loud—but perhaps also weep!

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