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[ecrea] CFP: The Cult of Personality: Constructing and Defining the  Cult Film Star
Thu Oct 29 22:17:11 GMT 2009
The Cult of Personality: Constructing and Defining the Cult Film Star
Edited by Kate Egan and Sarah Thomas (Aberystwyth University, UK)
Proposals are invited for contributions to an edited collection on 
cult film stars. The term 'cult film star' has been employed, and 
used as a common-sense term, in publicity and popular journalistic 
writing for at least the last twenty-five years (for instance, in 
Danny Peary's 1991 reference book, Cult Movie Stars).  However, what 
makes cult film stars or actors distinct or different from other 
film stars has rarely been addressed, with the cult star label often 
being attributed to particular stars or actors in a rather arbitrary 
or random way. This edited collection aims to contribute to two key 
areas of debate and enquiry within film studies - star studies and 
cult film studies - by bringing together contributions focused on 
case studies of particular film stars/actors who have been 
considered to have a particular 'cult' appeal (whether actors or 
stars associated with Hollywood filmmaking, independent filmmaking 
or cinemas beyond Hollywood). The question that should unite all 
contributions to the book is: what are the industrial, 
performance-related, formal/aesthetic, cultural or discursive 
processes that inform the naming of particular film actors as 'cult 
actors' or 'cult stars'? Consequently, we are happy to receive 
contributions that employ methods associated with: textual analysis, 
analysis of star performance, star labour, historical reception 
studies and/or audience research.
Questions that could be addressed in contributions may include, but 
are not limited to:
1.       What role do particular stars or actors play in films that 
have been designated as cult?  How do particular stars or actors 
relate to qualities that have been identified as important to many 
cult films, such as generic hybridity, self-consciousness, 
reflexivity, and excessiveness?
2.       How are cult stars constructed and defined as alternative 
examples of stardom?  Is the status of particular stars/actors as 
'cult' related to their marginal status as 'other' or with other 
associations of 'difference' (for example, in relation to 
employment, race, nationality, sexuality)?
3.       How does the status of particular stars/actors as 'cult' 
relate to issues of cultural capital or tie-ins (for example, the 
advertising of particular kinds of products)?
4.       How are particular stars/actors employed in films to 
signify difference or off-beatness or other such qualities (for 
example, through cameos or supporting roles)?
5.       Does the status of particular stars/actors as 'cult' relate 
to their association with particular genres or modes of filmmaking 
(for example, horror, art cinema or independent American cinema)?
6.       Do cult stars or actors employ particular performance 
styles that set them apart from more conventional performances, such 
as self-conscious, non-naturalistic or overplayed styles?
7.       Are certain cult stars or actors designated as such because 
of the cult status of a character they have played?
8.       Does the designation of particular stars/actors as 'cult 
stars' occur retrospectively (i.e. after their death, or through the 
rediscovery of particular stars via film festivals, the internet or 
DVD re-releases)?
9.       Is there an alternative star system associated with, for 
instance, straight to DVD releases or films distributed via the internet?
10.   Is the status of someone as a cult star or actor related to 
his/her associations with other mediums outside of the cinema (for 
example, radio or the music industry)?
Please send proposals (of between 300-350 words) to Dr Kate Egan 
(<mailto:(kte /at/ aber.ac.uk)>(kte /at/ aber.ac.uk)) and Dr Sarah Thomas 
(<mailto:(skt /at/ aber.ac.uk)>(skt /at/ aber.ac.uk)) by Friday 29th January 2010.
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