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Elizabeth Taylor
A Private Life for Public Consumption
Elizabeth Taylor
A Private Life for Public Consumption
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Description
The first volume to examine the iconic Elizabeth Taylor in this light, Elizabeth Taylor: A Private Life for Public Consumption paints Taylor as the seminal representation of “celebrity.” A figure of enormous charisma and cultural sway, she intrigued a global audience with her marriages and extra-marital improprieties, as well as her extravagant jewelry, her never-ending illnesses, her dependency on alcohol, and her perplexing friendship with Michael Jackson. Despite her continued world-renown, however, most people would be hard-pressed to name even three of her films, though she made over seventy.
Ellis Cashmore traces our modern, hyperactive celebrity culture back to a single instant in Taylor's life: the publicizing of her scandalous affair with Richard Burton by photographer Marcelo Geppetti in 1962, which announced the arrival of a new generation of predatory photojournalists and, along with them, a strange conflation between the public and private lives of celebrities. Taylor's life and public reception, Cashmore reveals, epitomizes the modern phenomenon of “celebrity.”
Table of Contents
1. The Most Public of Private Lives
2. Animal Delight
3. Like A Million Dollars
4. With Human Failings
5. Inseparable from the Gossip
6. Dismantling the Fantasy
7. Believing and Wanting to Believe
8. Beyond Condemnation
9. The Devil's Work
10. Every Fiber of My Soul
11. Facing Oblivion
12. Voyeurs and Performers
13. Rules of Engagement
14. No Life Without
15. Everything is for Sale
16. Other People's Lives
17. On Dangerous Ground
18. Only the Custodian
19. Nobody Can Hurt Her
Players
Bibliography
Index
Product details

Published | 25 Feb 2016 |
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Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 368 |
ISBN | 9781628920673 |
Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
Illustrations | 30 bw illus |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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'A Private Life' offers a rich and illuminating reassessment, invigorating the somewhat lackluster discourse about the iconic movie star. Although there are at least 10 biographies of Elizabeth Taylor, Cashmore's lively study provides a compelling interpretation and bridges the many gaps between Taylor's impact on the American zeitgeist and her alluring, infamous life.
Nathan Smith, The Washington Post
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[Cashmore] examines Taylor with all the thoroughness of a jeweller with a loupe, holding every facet of her public persona to the light. He shows how she was the herald of the curious intimacies that now exist between audience and celebrity, a one-woman rolling news channel long before social media.
The Sunday Times
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In the cigar-chomping Hollywood of the Fifties ... how did Taylor manage to call the shots? Ellis Cashmore's book is an impressive answer ... [His] thesis ... [on the effects of Taylor's unfailing ability to merge art and life is what] makes his book compelling.
The Daily Telegraph
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Ellis Cashmore details the way in which Taylor 'consciously made herself into a living narrative', allowing the dramas of her life to supersede, refract and monetize the dramas she enacted on screen ... [A] book which catalogues what seems like not just every detail of her career, but also every detail of the lives of her supporting cast.
Times Literary Supplement
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Cashmore (Beyond Black: Celebrity and Race in Obama's America) combines broad research and personal observations in this lively study examining how Elizabeth Taylor transformed our perception of modern celebrity.
Publishers Weekly
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[Taylor's] extraordinary life and career ... is pored over and unpicked in painstaking detail ... [Cashmore's] efforts in tackling the Taylor brand are prodigious.
Sight & Sound

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