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Original Articles

Young people's uses of celebrity: class, gender and ‘improper’ celebrity

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Pages 77-93 | Published online: 28 Jun 2012

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (18)

Sue Jackson. (2021) “A very basic view of feminism”: feminist girls and meanings of (celebrity) feminism. Feminist Media Studies 21:7, pages 1072-1090.
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Chelsea Sellers. (2019) ‘Fitting in’ and ‘standing out’: the peer group and young people’s development of reader identity. British Journal of Sociology of Education 40:7, pages 938-952.
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Joke Hermes & Leonie Stoete. (2019) Hating Skyler White: audience engagement, gender politics and celebrity culture. Celebrity Studies 10:3, pages 411-426.
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Emma Tennent & Sue Jackson. (2019) “Exciting” and “borderline offensive”: bloggers, binaries, and celebrity feminism. Feminist Media Studies 19:2, pages 225-238.
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Carolina Martínez & Tobias Olsson. (2019) Making sense of YouTubers: how Swedish children construct and negotiate the YouTuber Misslisibell as a girl celebrity. Journal of Children and Media 13:1, pages 36-52.
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Sally Power & Kevin Smith. (2017) ‘Heroes’ and ‘villains’ in the lives of children and young people. Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education 38:4, pages 590-602.
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Rosalind Gill. (2016) Post-postfeminism?: new feminist visibilities in postfeminist times. Feminist Media Studies 16:4, pages 610-630.
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Konstanze Spohrer. (2016) Negotiating and contesting ‘success’: discourses of aspiration in a UK secondary school. Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education 37:3, pages 411-425.
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Pat Thomson & Jodie Pennacchia. (2016) Disciplinary regimes of ‘care’ and complementary alternative education. Critical Studies in Education 57:1, pages 84-99.
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Kim Allen, Heather Mendick, Laura Harvey & Aisha Ahmad. (2015) Welfare Queens, Thrifty Housewives, and Do-It-All Mums. Feminist Media Studies 15:6, pages 907-925.
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Alexandra M. Kokoli & Aaron Winter. (2015) What a girl's gotta do: the labor of the biopolitical celebrity in austerity Britain. Women & Performance: a journal of feminist theory 25:2, pages 157-174.
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Heather Mendick, Kim Allen & Laura Harvey. (2015) ‘We can Get Everything We Want if We Try Hard’: Young People, Celebrity, Hard Work. British Journal of Educational Studies 63:2, pages 161-178.
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Hayley L. Cocker, Emma N. Banister & Maria G. Piacentini. (2015) Producing and consuming celebrity identity myths: unpacking the classed identities of Cheryl Cole and Katie Price. Journal of Marketing Management 31:5-6, pages 502-524.
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Sue Jackson & Sarah Goddard. (2015) ‘I'd say 14 is too young’: Pre-teen girls' negotiations of ‘sexualized’ media. Continuum 29:2, pages 241-252.
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Anne Mia Steno & Nanna Friche. (2015) Celebrity chefs and masculinities among male cookery trainees in vocational education. Journal of Vocational Education & Training 67:1, pages 47-61.
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Articles from other publishers (12)

Michele Paule & Hannah Yelin. (2021) ‘I don’t want to be known for it’: Girls, leadership role models and the problem of representation. European Journal of Cultural Studies 25:1, pages 238-255.
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Charlotte Dann. 2021. Navigating Tattooed Women's Bodies. Navigating Tattooed Women's Bodies 103 112 .
Ágnes Zsila, Gábor Orosz, Lynn E. McCutcheon & Zsolt Demetrovics. (2021) Investigating the Association Between Celebrity Worship and Heteronormative Attitudes Among Heterosexual and LGB+ Individuals. Sexuality & Culture 25:4, pages 1334-1352.
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Jennifer Lewallen. 2021. The Routledge Companion to Media and Poverty. The Routledge Companion to Media and Poverty 169 179 .
Samuel Vega Durán & Joaquina Samaniego Espinosa. (2021) La neoliberalización del feminismo en la industria cultural: La construcción discursiva de Rosalía como icono del movimiento feminista. Comunicación y Género 4:1, pages 93-102.
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Chris Greer & Eugene McLaughlin. (2019) Why becoming a national treasure matters: Elite celebrity status and inequality in the United Kingdom. European Journal of Cultural Studies 23:1, pages 71-88.
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Kitty Nichols. (2019) Learning From Love Island? Diversification of the Hegemonic Man. Frontiers in Sociology 4.
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Lola Fernández Hernández. (2017) El feminismo como producto mediático: la paradoja de Beyoncé. Investigaciones Feministas 8:2, pages 457-474.
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Jade Parnell. (2017) Vlogging: a new phenomenon, but is it a concern for people's health?. Journal of Aesthetic Nursing 6:4, pages 196-198.
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Sue Jackson, Sarah Goddard & Sophie Cossens. (2016) The importance of [not] being Miley: Girls making sense of Miley Cyrus. European Journal of Cultural Studies 19:6, pages 547-564.
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Sue Jackson & Tiina Vares. (2016) ‘Too many bad role models for us girls’: Girls, female pop celebrities and ‘sexualization’. Sexualities 18:4, pages 480-498.
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Kim Allen. (2014) ‘Blair's Children’: Young Women as ‘Aspirational Subjects’ in the Psychic Landscape of Class. The Sociological Review 62:4, pages 760-779.
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