[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] Call for Papers: Trans Celebrity (special issue of Celebrity Studies)
Mon Nov 27 14:24:19 GMT 2023
Call for Papers: Trans Celebrity
Special issue of Celebrity Studies Journal, edited by Hannah Yelin, Kat
Gupta and Alon Lischinsky
Deadline for proposals: 29 February 2024
Full drafts due: 31 October 2024
Celebrities have played an essential role in the circulation of
knowledge and understanding about trans and gender-nonconforming people.
Since the media frenzy around Christine Jorgensen's transition propelled
her to international fame, figures such as Chaz Bono, the Wachowski
sisters or Sam Smith have been at the centre of public discourses around
the trans experience, while microcelebrities such as Fox Fisher and Alok
Vaid-Menon have been key in community-building and activism. But despite
the many productive ways in which the fields of trans studies and
celebrity studies can illuminate one another, work in the field remains
scarce and scattered.
An important concern has been the selectiveness with which the practices
and frameworks of celebrity culture endow specific biographical
narratives with visibility. Michael Lovelock (2017) has convincingly
argued that the cultural legibility of figures such as Caitlyn Jenner is
granted because their accounts of feeling trapped in a wrong body that
required work and investment to reveal its authentic self resonate with
broader discourses about self-actualisation. For the trans community,
the price of such visibility is the reproduction and amplification of
patterns of exclusion of transmasculine and gender-nonconforming
identities. These identities, while being an equally rich site for the
study of issues of celebrity authenticity, self-making and gendered
expression, remain under theorised in our field.
Undercurrents of consent and violation are characteristic of wider
celebrity culture’s economics of access and fascination with the exposé
(Yelin, 2020) and celebrities frequently express “reluctance” and
discomfort with their intense condition of social visibility (York,
2018). The trajectory of trans celebrities is typically marked by the
need to negotiate their rise to public prominence and privilege with
trans stigma. Historically this required some trans celebrities to live
stealth and disguise their gender history, only to be sometimes
posthumously outed (Billy Tipton); for others, involuntary outing comes
as part of their fame (Wendy Carlos). Even those figures who openly
embrace their trans history can struggle with being unwillingly placed
in the position of public representatives for a complex and diverse
community
We seek original papers that address trans celebrities for a special
issue of Celebrity Studies (CSJ), expected 2025 subject to editorial and
peer review. Papers must be 6000-8000 words long, and explicitly and
thoroughly grounded in the field of celebrity studies.
Abstracts under 500 words, outlining how the proposed article meets the
aims of both the special issue and CSJ, should be sent by 29 February
2024 to the guest editors at (trans.celebrity.studies /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(trans.celebrity.studies /at/ gmail.com)>.
We are committed to addressing inequalities in scholarship and academic
publishing. We particularly welcome submissions from authors from
marginalised minorities, authors from the Global South and early career
researchers.
Topics that the articles may address include, but are not limited to:
*
Case studies of specific trans celebrities past and present
*
Intersections of trans celebrity with race, ethnicity, class, age,
sexuality, religion and disability
*
Trans celebrity and normativity, “ordinariness” or success
*
Trans celebrity, passing and beauty politics
*
Retheorising celebrity authenticity in the context of trans celebrity
*
Trans celebrities and queerness
*
Trans celebrities and their fandoms
*
Trans celebrity activism
*
Trans microcelebrity and community icons
*
Celebrity outside the binary
*
Celebrity and the trans closet
*
Posthumous trans celebrity
*
Trans scholars as public intellectuals
*
Transnational circulation of trans celebrity
*
Anti-trans celebrity and exclusionary social movements
Celebrity Studies <https://www.tandfonline.com/journals/rcel20>(CSJ) is
a peer-reviewed journal that focuses on the critical exploration of
celebrity, stardom and fame. It seeks to make sense of celebrity by
drawing upon a range of (inter)disciplinary approaches, media forms,
historical periods and national contexts. CSJaddresses key issues in the
production, circulation and consumption of fame, and its manifestations
in both contemporary and historical contexts.
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ commlist.org)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]