3,800
Views
6
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Introduction: re-viewing literary celebrity

&
Pages 449-456 | Received 28 Jul 2016, Accepted 05 Sep 2016, Published online: 26 Oct 2016

References

  • Boone, J. and Vickers, N., 2011a. Introduction: celebrity rites. Celebrity, fame, notoriety. Special issue of PMLA, 126 (4), 900–911.
  • Boone, J. and Vickers, N., eds., 2011b. Celebrity, fame, notoriety. Special issue of PMLA, 126 (4), 900–1139.
  • Boyce, C., Finnerty, P., and Millim, A., 2013. Victorian celebrity culture and Tennyson’s circle. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Braudy, L., 1986. The frenzy of renown: fame & its history. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Braun, R., 2011. Fetishising intellectual achievement: The Nobel prize and European literary celebrity. Celebrity studies, 2 (3), 320–334.
  • Eagleton, T., 2003. After theory. London: Allen Lane.
  • English, J., 2010. Everywhere and nowhere: the sociology of literature after ‘the sociology of literature’. New literary history, 41 (2), v–xxiii.
  • Felski, R., 2015. The limits of critique. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Foucault, M. 2000. What is an author? [1969]. In: J.D. Faubion, ed. Essential works of Foucault 1954–1984. London: Penguin, vol. 2, 205–222.
  • Friedman, D.M., 2014. Wilde in America: Oscar Wilde and the invention of modern celebrity. New York: Norton.
  • Galow, T., 2011. Writing celebrity: Stein, Fitzgerald, and the modern(ist) art of self-fashioning. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Glass, L., 2004. Authors Inc.: literary celebrity in the modern United States, 1880–1980. New York: New York University Press.
  • Glass, L., 2014. Zuckerman/Roth: literary celebrity between two deaths. PMLA, 129 (2), 223–236.
  • Hammill, F., 2007. Women, celebrity, and literary culture between the wars. Austin: University of Texas Press.
  • Jaffe, A., 2005. Modernism and the culture of celebrity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Jameson, F., 1991. Postmodernism, or, the cultural logic of late capitalism. Durham: Duke University Press.
  • Latour, B., 2005. Reassembling the social: an introduction to actor-network-theory. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Marcus, S., 2015. Celebrity 2.0: the case of marina abramović. Public culture, 27 (1 75), 21–52. Special issue on celebrities and publics in the Internet Era. S. Marcus, ed.
  • Marshall, P.D., 2010. The promotion and presentation of the self: celebrity as marker of presentational media. Celebrity studies, 1 (1), 35–48.
  • Marwick, A. and boyd, d., 2011a. ‘I tweet honestly, I tweet passionately’: Twitter users, context collapse, and the imagined audience. New media & society, 13 (1), 114–133.
  • Marwick, A.E. and boyd, d., 2011b. To see and be seen: celebrity practice on Twitter. Convergence: the international journal of research into new media technologies, 17 (2), 139–158.
  • Mole, T., 2007. Byron’s romantic celebrity: industrial culture and the hermeneutic of intimacy. Basingstoke: Palgrave.
  • Mole, T., ed., 2009. Romanticism and celebrity culture, 1750–1850. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Moran, J., 2000. Star authors: literary celebrity in America. London: Pluto.
  • Moran, J., 2006. The age of hype: the contemporary star system. In: P. David Marshall, ed. The celebrity culture reader. New York: Routledge, 324–344.
  • Ohlsson, A., Forslid, T., and Steiner, A., 2014. Literary celebrity reconsidered. Celebrity studies, 5 (1–2), 32–44.
  • Ommundsen, W., 2007. From the altar to the market-place and back again: understanding literary celebrity. In: S. Redmond and S. Holmes, eds. Stardom and celebrity: a reader. Los Angeles: Sage, 244–255.
  • Pearl, S. and Polan, D., 2015. Bodies of digital celebrity. Public culture, 27 (1 75), 185–192. Special issue on celebrities and publics in the Internet Era. S. Marcus, ed.
  • Pozorski, A., ed., 2012. Roth and celebrity. Lanham, MD: Lexington.
  • Rojek, C., 2001. Celebrity. London: Reaktion.
  • Rojek, C., 2016. Presumed intimacy: para-social relationships in media, society, and celebrity culture. Cambridge: Polity.
  • Senft, T., 2008. Camgirls, community and celebrity in the age of social networks. New York: Peter Lang.
  • Weber, B.R., 2012. Women and literary celebrity in the nineteenth century: the transatlantic production of fame and gender. Burlington: Ashgate.
  • York, L., 2013. Margaret Atwood and the labour of literary celebrity. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.