Synopses & Reviews
It has become something of a cliché that Western culture is obsessed with celebrity, glamour, and the opportunities ordinary people are now given (reality television, social networking sites, blogging) to become famous. These new engagements between fame and obscurity have been accompanied by energetic debates about the self, image and vanity. Similar debates are also underway in a domain apparently quite different from this digital realm - the corporeal domain of health, fitness, beauty and anti-ageing. Vanity, it seems, can account for both our least and most bodily modes of making the self. Despite these growing areas of debate, little or no sociological or cultural studies research on vanity has been conducted to date. This book sets out to remedy this. Exploring a range of sites of social and cultural production - from Helen Mirren's red bikini to The Biggest Loser reality weight loss show, from suffragists to Viagra, from anti-ageing medicine to Facebook - the book takes an engaging, sophisticated and wide-ranging look at new ideas and practices of vanity. How are contemporary subjects to cope with concurrent pressures both towards self-absorption and away from it? Taking an explicitly gendered approach to these questions, Vanity: 21st Century Selves conducts a broad analysis of a key concept shaping contemporary Western societies and their ways of understanding the self.
Synopsis
What role does 'vanity' play in the lives of 21st century subjects? Exploring a range of fields including public health, information technology, media studies and feminist approaches to the body and beauty, this book offers a broad analysis of how 'vanity' shapes contemporary Western societies and its understandings of selfhood.
Synopsis
It has become something of a cliché that Western culture is obsessed with celebrity, glamour, and the opportunities ordinary people are now given (reality television, social networking sites, blogging) to become famous. These new engagements between fame and obscurity have been accompanied by energetic debates about the self, image and vanity. Similar debates are also underway in a domain apparently quite different from this digital realm - the corporeal domain of health, fitness, beauty and anti-ageing. Vanity, it seems, can account for both our least and most bodily modes of making the self. Despite these growing areas of debate, little or no sociological or cultural studies research on vanity has been conducted to date. This book sets out to remedy this. Exploring a range of sites of social and cultural production - from Helen Mirren's red bikini to The Biggest Loser reality weight loss show, from suffragists to Viagra, from anti-ageing medicine to Facebook - the book takes an engaging, sophisticated and wide-ranging look at new ideas and practices of vanity. How are contemporary subjects to cope with concurrent pressures both towards self-absorption and away from it? Taking an explicitly gendered approach to these questions, Vanity: 21st Century Selves conducts a broad analysis of a key concept shaping contemporary Western societies and their ways of understanding the self.
About the Author
SUZANNE FRASER is a senior lecturer at the Centre for Women's Studies and Gender Research at Monash University, Australia. She is the author of two books on the Sociology list, Cosmetic Surgery, Gender and Culture (2003) and Substance and Substitution: Methadone Subjects in Liberal Societies (co-authored, 2008). She has published work on gender and culture in journals such as Journal of Homosexuality, Australian Feminist Studies, Sexualities and Bodyand Society.
JANEMAREE MAHER is an associate professor at Monash University, Australia.
SUZANNE FRASER is an associate professor at Monash University, Australia.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction. Vanity: Language, Bodies and Material Conditions
Modern Vanity: Consumption, the Body Beautiful and the New Political Subject
Fitness, 'Wellbeing' and the Beauty-health Nexus
Anti-ageing Medicine and the Consumption of Youth
Enacting 'Reality': Fat Shame, Admiration and Reflexivity
Digital Narcissism: Social Networking, Blogging and the Tethered Self
Conclusion
Notes
References