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[ecrea] CFP: Special Issue of Celebrity Studies on Reality TV Celebrity
Wed Oct 12 11:07:01 GMT 2016
Celebrity Studies Special Issue: The New Reality of Reality Television
Celebrity Call for Papers
In the late 1990s and early 2000s, scholarship on celebrity culture
expanded to incorporate the rising popularity of reality television
celebrities. Much of this early work used Chris Rojek’s concept of the
celetoid and Graeme Turner’s identification of the “mass production” of
celebrity to explain the nature of short-lived fame gained from reality
television. Other scholars acknowledged the reality celebrity as a
unique and specific form of the celebrity image that subverted
traditional notions of stardom by emphasizing the revelation of the
private and “ordinary” self as the point of entry into the public eye
(Mole, 2004; Holmes, 2005; Turner, 2010). While many early reality
celebrities experienced only fleeting fame, the greater longevity of
certain individuals and the enduring existence of reality celebrity as a
category point to the continued relevance of reality television to
contemporary celebrity culture.
This special issue of Celebrity Studies seeks to build upon the robust
body of existing work on reality celebrity within television and
celebrity studies in order to interrogate the contemporary state of the
reality television celebrity. In particular, this special issue aims to
address the impact of contemporary shifts within the media landscape
that defines celebrity culture as well as trace related changes to the
category of reality television celebrity.
We seek scholarly essays that explore these shifts from a variety of
disciplinary and methodological approaches. Questions to be considered
include, but are not limited to: How has the reality television
celebrity changed in the second decade of the twenty-first century and
what do such changes tell us about broader shifts within celebrity and
media cultures? Is the reality celebrity still a distinct part of the
celebrity industrial system? How do reality celebrities leverage their
fame across extratextual media in an increasingly convergent media
system? How does the reality celebrity function as a brand? In what ways
does the contemporary reality television celebrity challenge or
reinforce norms of cultural identity, particularly race, class, gender,
and sexuality?
Potential topics for essays include, but are not limited to:
*
Specific contemporary reality television stars (e.g. the
Kardashians, the Duggars)
*
The changing industrial landscape of reality television and its
impact on celebrity (e.g. networks that rely
on reality television brand, the decline of reality television as a
genre)
*
The enduring and shifting celebrity status of earlier reality
television celebrities (e.g. Lauren Conrad,
Nicole “Snooki” Polizzi, Katie Price)
*
Aging reality stars and long-running franchises
*
Celebrity within the reality television franchise (e.g. the various
incarnations of Love & Hip-Hop, The Real
Housewives, The Bachelor/The Bachelorette etc.)
*
Celebrity within “talent”-driven reality series (e.g. The X Factor,
Project Runway, Top Chef)
*
The re-circulation of reality celebrities across series (e.g.
Dancing with the Stars, Marriage Boot Camp, Celebrity
Apprentice, I’m a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here!)
*
Influence of other media on the fame of reality celebrity (i.e.
social media, tabloids)
*
The expansion of the conception of “ordinary” celebrity beyond the
traditional reality star (e.g. what
does it mean to be “Instagram famous”?)
*
The reality television celebrity as a brand, extending beyond the
scope of the show
*
Existing traditional celebrities using reality television to reclaim
their brand/image
*
Masculinity and reality television celebrity (e.g. Duck Dynasty, The
Bachelor)
Interested authors should send an abstract of 500 words, 3-5
sources, and a brief bio to Erin Meyers ((emeyers /at/ oakland.edu)) and
Alice Leppert ((aleppert /at/ ursinus.edu)) by Dec. 1, 2016. Acceptance
notices will be sent by Jan. 10, 2017, and full papers of 6000 to
8000 words will be due June 15, 2017.
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