Affiliation:
1. University of Queensland, Australia
Abstract
The fame of major stars, and especially dead ones, has been entangled throughout the 20th century with a religious vocabulary: the figures of apotheosis, ritual, cult, and sacrifice are the staple of the most banal analyses of high celebrity. I ask whether the idea of a religious dimension to stardom can and should be taken literally, and what kind of rethinking both of stardom itself and of the methodological concerns of cultural studies such a move might entail. I explore various usages of the categories of the sacred and the numinous in order to ask whether they are formally empty or carry a set of meanings relevant to the sorts of transcendence peculiar to stars, and I seek to locate that transcendence in the structures of repetition and seriality in which the being of stars is grounded. I conclude by questioning the secularization thesis which has sought to explain away apparently vestigial religious categories, and by asking what it would mean for cultural studies to abandon it.
Cited by
46 articles.
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