[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] CFP ZoneModa Journal - Fashion and Celebrity Culture
Thu May 11 21:39:24 GMT 2017
*Call for papers*
cfp ZONE MODA JOURNAL 7
*Fashion and celebrity culture*
*Body spectacle and the enlarged sphere of show business*
**
For more than a century, the fashion industry and fashion marketing have
actively participated in the enormous and progressive expansion of show
business' sphere of action, expression, behavior, and texts (an
expansion further stretched - in the new millennium - by you tube,
social networks , video games, and the domestication of entertainment).
The last two decades have been marked by the dissemination,
availability, and spreading of information about fashion products,
fashion sites and events, and, most of all, of fashion personalities
(designers, models, art directors, publicists). This availability of
fashion imagination and consumption has intermingled with other
practices and pleasures of show business, from filmmaking to red
carpets. Conflating with movie watching, awarding, publicity, and
gossip, the viewers' expanded attention to fashion items has had a
great impact on the general notion of /what/ public personalities are
and what they look like. It has contributed to inflate the interest in
celebrities and to enlarge the number of celebrities. It has exploded
the ambition and desire of the hitherto unknown to increase their own
public self-exposure, enlarging spectators' experience of leisure and
spectacle and the spaces of entertainment.
At the same time, celebrities can be generated outside the
world of the show business and instead turn a crime, a scientific
discovery, a political statement into entertainment and spectacle. The
artist-as-celebrity , going back to Oscar Wilde if not earlier , has
been joined by the artist as /fashion /celebrity , a phenomenon that
arguably started with Andy Warhol , while the past twenty years have
seen the emergence of the /sporting /‘fashion celebrity ‘ ; musicians
from every genre can be part of the new fashion spectacle, if they are
suitably photogenic.. The general attractiveness of a myriad kind of
celebrities, hybrid, hardly definable, open to dispute, has inflated and
rendered more /visible/ the sphere of entertainment. Similarly, fashion
was born when /couture/ inhabited restricted, private, and aristocratic
conclaves: now expertise about clothing, style and image creation has
entered the sphere of spectacle and entertainment. Fashion creates
images and codes through which celebrities are conceived and exposed,
reproduced. Fashion forges the celebrity text. In the new millennium
"Our lives, our intellect, our religion, our creativity, our sexuality
are all the vocabulary of fashion and are open for renegotiation and
representation. Yet we view fashion as suspect, insubstantial, the stuff
of dreams not reality" (Changing Fashion: A Critical Introduction to
Trend Analysis and Meaning’ Annette Lynch, Mitchell Strauss, p. 1 ).
This could also be said of contemporary celebrity, which shares with
fashion an ambivalent status, halfway between materiality and
insubstantiality, where narration plays a pivotal role.
The general public's enjoyment, contempt, and denigration
of celebrities is based on personal narratives: stories about
celebrities' private lives, about their bodies and apparatuses:
aesthetic surgery, clothes, technologies... This journal issue devoted
to celebrity and fashion investigates the modes of verbal and visual
narrations revolving around attractive personalities. How does this
narrative factor, which supports the celebrity system , operate within
and influence the world of fashion, and how have the stories about
fashion (films, biographies, but also publicity, gossip, events, spaces,
architecture) influenced the world of show business?
To tackle the intriguing relationship between fashion and celebrity
culture, we suggest the following topics:
*Influence, masses, populism*: democratization of fashion,
democratization of celebrity: conflicts and ambivalences between notions
of ordinariness vs. exceptionality. Discourse about audiences as agents
in the making of meanings concerning celebrities. Fashion seen as a
vehicle of the mass appropriation of the means of construction of the
celebrity's image.
*Success, achievement, publicity: *Fashion publicity, fashion
branding**and the**culture of the branded self. Public versus private
life, aristocratic exclusiveness versus egalitarism.
*Sponsorship and Internet celebrities*: Wide access to celebrity
information through the social media: how does this generate new kinds
of sponsorship on part of fashion brands? How do Internet personalities
negotiate between their performance of authenticity and their fashion
endorsement?
*Historical roots and new celebrities: *How is 20th century prototypes,
i.e. the rock-star or the classical Hollywood star, influencing the
culture of celebrity? Do new forms of celebrity (micro-celebrity,
anti-celebrity, subcultural-celebrity...) correspond to new styles and
new circulation of fashion trends? Old and new atypical star bodies:
their impact on fashion bodily stylizations. Fashion professionals
turning into celebrities.
*Character versus Film Persona*. Film and television characters' fashion
styles interact with actors/actresses’ public personas. Are there
celebrity icons who have become style icons due to their fictional
characterizations more than their public appearance?
*Taste, disgust, anti-celebrity*. Celebrities as models of good or bad
taste. Bad taste condemnation influencing the aesthetic canon.
Anti-canon and celebrities' social connotation (celebrity chav, rich
kids...). Anti-celebrity as a result of anti-fashion styles. How does a
celebrity's repudiation of a luxury style affect critical consumption?
Style icons turning into celebrities: how does taste capital" is
transformed into "celebrity capital"?
*Cumbersome celebrities and fashion fails*: celebrities might become
detrimental to fashion brands: scandals can induce both rejection and
employment of a testimonial. How do fashion brands react to celebrities'
lapses of style and fashion fails? Do these fall downs contribute to the
construction of a celebrity?
Abstracts of no more than 1000 words + 5 bibliographical references
(word-, doc format), written either in Italian or English, are be sent
to: (zonemodajournal /at/ unibo.it) <mailto:(zonemodajournal /at/ unibo.it)>
Abstract acceptance does not guarantee publication of the article, which
will be submitted to a double-blind peer-review process. The length of
the article should be comprised between 6000 / 7000 words.
Important dates:
- abstract submission deadline: June 15, 2017
- notification of acceptance/rejection: June, 30 2017 (notice of
acceptance might include comments and requests of explanations)
- full-lenght paper submission deadline: September 20,
- comments of the reviewers will be conveyed together with the
reviewers’ decision (approval with no changes, approval with major/minor
changes, rejection) by October 16, 2017
- authors shall send the improved article to the editorial staff by
Novembre 6, 2017.
ZMJ7 is scheduled to be published at the end of 2017.
---------------
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/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]