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[Commlist] New Book: Performing Identity: Actor Training, Self Commodification and Celebrity
Fri Dec 29 19:58:56 GMT 2023
Barry King's book Performing Identity: Actor Training, Self
Commodification and Celebrity (Palgrave) has just been published.
https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-031-15798-1
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-15798-1
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan Cham
This book examines how the persistent and deepening casualization and
precarity of acting work, coupled with market pressures, has affected
the ways in which actors are trained in the US and UK. It reviews the
existing state of training, looking at various theories of what the
actor does, debates about casting, and the impact of reality television
and social media. In the increasing effort to find ways to overcome the
precarious labour market for actors and other performers, the
traditional emphasis on theatrical character has been replaced by the
celebration of the persona – a public image of the performer as a
personal brand. As a result, a physiocratic elite, that literally
incorporates the collective labour of cultural workers into the star or
celebrity body, has formed. This book explores how the star or
celebrity’s appearance and comportment are positioned as the rule of
nature, formed and abiding outside capitalism as a mode of production.
This book will be of interest to those studying theatre studies and
performance, contemporary stardom and celebrity and the impact of
technology on the formation of identity.
Barry King is Professor of Communications at Auckland University of
Technology, New Zealand. He is the author (with Sean Cubitt, Harriet
Margolies and Thierry Jutel) of Studying the Event Film: The Lord of the
Rings (Manchester University Press, 2008) and Taking Fame to market:
Essays on the prehistory and post-history of Hollywood stardom (
Palgrave, 2014). He is on the editorial board of Celebrity Studies and
Palgrave Communications and is a project reviewer for the Australian
Research Council. King has published a substantial number of articles
that explore the relationships been popular culture, celebrity and
stardom and digital media. His other publications focus on creative
labour, semiotic determinism, the sociology of acting and performance
and the New Zealand Cultural industries.
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