Description

Book Synopsis
Railroads, telegraphs, lithographs, photographs, and mass periodicals - the major technological advances of the 19th century seemed to diminish the space separating people from one another, creating new and apparently closer, albeit highly mediated, social relationships...

Trade Review

It is one of the key achievements of Edward Berenson and Eva Giloi’s lively volume to remind us that many of the mechanisms, phenomena and discussions readily associated with the present day date back to the 1800s an age Leo Braudy calls ‘the first century of mass culture.’ The concept of charisma’ invariably presented with all the Weberian trimmings is used here as an analytical leitmotif to provide the different contributions with an additional degree of coherence. What is more, the volume’s eponymous claim about the constructability of charisma is picked up very ingeniously in Braudy’s concluding observations, which deliver a thought-provoking punch line.” · European History Quarterly

“…a lively collection, with invaluable insights for scholars working on celebrity and celebrity culture. · French Studies

The conclusion by Braudy (himself a figure of some celebrity in the field of celebrity culture) does terrific work in reminding us of just how rich this collection is as a whole…By reminding us of the diverse intellectual achievements of our historical predecessors in dealing with fame and celebrity when it actu­ally was new and unknowable, this collection is highly recommended. · European Journal of Cultural Studies

In revising and broadening Weber’s original definition of charisma, for example by considering its gendered construction, the editors and authors bring together a range of innovative interdisciplinary perspectives drawn from history, literary studies, art history, and musicology…These perspectives provide a valuable template for the study of individuals ‘known for their well-knownness,’ in Daniel J. Boorstin’s catchphrase, across cultures and historical eras into the present day, from Sarah Bernhardt to Lady Gaga. · H-France Net

“…the collection offers a refreshing addition to celebrity studies scholarship for a variety of reasons, not the least of which is its European frame of reference. By focusing on Britain, France, and Germany, the book throws into relief the field’s overemphasis on the United States as the archetype of celebrity culture….[Its] greatest strength is the careful attention paid to the culture of the image and to visual performance throughout.” · Critical Quarterly

“This is a persuasive and timely collection. Celebrity and charisma are very much on the current research agenda. This volume deals with these issues in a serious, insightful manner, making an original contribution to what is now a rising field of study.” · Philip Nord, Princeton University



Table of Contents

Introduction
Edward Berenson and Eva Giloi

Part I: Constructing Charisma

Chapter 1. “Charisma and the Making of Imperial Heroes in Britain and France, 1880-1914.”
Edward Berenson

Chapter 2. “‘So Writes the Hand that Swings the Sword’: Autograph-hunting and Royal Charisma in the German Empire, 1861-1888.”
Eva Giloi

Chapter 3. “The Workings of Royal Celebrity: Wilhelm II as Media Emperor.”
Martin Kohlrausch

Part II: Celebrity as Performance

Chapter 4. “From the Top: Liszt’s Aristocratic Airs.”
Dana Gooley

Chapter 5. “Celebrity Gifting: Mallarmé and the Poetics of Fame.”
Emily Apter

Chapter 6. “Rethinking Female Celebrity: The Eccentric Star of Nineteenth-Century France.”
Mary Louise Roberts

Part III: The Politics of Fame

Chapter 7. “Byron, Death, and the Afterlife.”
Stephen Minta

Chapter 8. “The Historical Actor.”
Peter Fritzsche

Chapter 9. “Celebrity, Patriotism, and Sarah Bernhardt.”
Kenneth E. Silver

Chapter 10. “Heroes, Celebrity and the Theater in Fin-de-Siècle France: Cyrano de Bergerac.”
Venita Datta

Conclusion: “Secular Anointings: Fame, Celebrity, and Charisma in the First Century of Mass Culture.
Leo Braudy

Constructing Charisma Celebrity Fame and Power in

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    A Paperback by Eva Giloi

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      Publisher: Berghahn Books
      Publication Date: 1/1/2013 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780857458155, 978-0857458155
      ISBN10: 0857458159

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Railroads, telegraphs, lithographs, photographs, and mass periodicals - the major technological advances of the 19th century seemed to diminish the space separating people from one another, creating new and apparently closer, albeit highly mediated, social relationships...

      Trade Review

      It is one of the key achievements of Edward Berenson and Eva Giloi’s lively volume to remind us that many of the mechanisms, phenomena and discussions readily associated with the present day date back to the 1800s an age Leo Braudy calls ‘the first century of mass culture.’ The concept of charisma’ invariably presented with all the Weberian trimmings is used here as an analytical leitmotif to provide the different contributions with an additional degree of coherence. What is more, the volume’s eponymous claim about the constructability of charisma is picked up very ingeniously in Braudy’s concluding observations, which deliver a thought-provoking punch line.” · European History Quarterly

      “…a lively collection, with invaluable insights for scholars working on celebrity and celebrity culture. · French Studies

      The conclusion by Braudy (himself a figure of some celebrity in the field of celebrity culture) does terrific work in reminding us of just how rich this collection is as a whole…By reminding us of the diverse intellectual achievements of our historical predecessors in dealing with fame and celebrity when it actu­ally was new and unknowable, this collection is highly recommended. · European Journal of Cultural Studies

      In revising and broadening Weber’s original definition of charisma, for example by considering its gendered construction, the editors and authors bring together a range of innovative interdisciplinary perspectives drawn from history, literary studies, art history, and musicology…These perspectives provide a valuable template for the study of individuals ‘known for their well-knownness,’ in Daniel J. Boorstin’s catchphrase, across cultures and historical eras into the present day, from Sarah Bernhardt to Lady Gaga. · H-France Net

      “…the collection offers a refreshing addition to celebrity studies scholarship for a variety of reasons, not the least of which is its European frame of reference. By focusing on Britain, France, and Germany, the book throws into relief the field’s overemphasis on the United States as the archetype of celebrity culture….[Its] greatest strength is the careful attention paid to the culture of the image and to visual performance throughout.” · Critical Quarterly

      “This is a persuasive and timely collection. Celebrity and charisma are very much on the current research agenda. This volume deals with these issues in a serious, insightful manner, making an original contribution to what is now a rising field of study.” · Philip Nord, Princeton University



      Table of Contents

      Introduction
      Edward Berenson and Eva Giloi

      Part I: Constructing Charisma

      Chapter 1. “Charisma and the Making of Imperial Heroes in Britain and France, 1880-1914.”
      Edward Berenson

      Chapter 2. “‘So Writes the Hand that Swings the Sword’: Autograph-hunting and Royal Charisma in the German Empire, 1861-1888.”
      Eva Giloi

      Chapter 3. “The Workings of Royal Celebrity: Wilhelm II as Media Emperor.”
      Martin Kohlrausch

      Part II: Celebrity as Performance

      Chapter 4. “From the Top: Liszt’s Aristocratic Airs.”
      Dana Gooley

      Chapter 5. “Celebrity Gifting: Mallarmé and the Poetics of Fame.”
      Emily Apter

      Chapter 6. “Rethinking Female Celebrity: The Eccentric Star of Nineteenth-Century France.”
      Mary Louise Roberts

      Part III: The Politics of Fame

      Chapter 7. “Byron, Death, and the Afterlife.”
      Stephen Minta

      Chapter 8. “The Historical Actor.”
      Peter Fritzsche

      Chapter 9. “Celebrity, Patriotism, and Sarah Bernhardt.”
      Kenneth E. Silver

      Chapter 10. “Heroes, Celebrity and the Theater in Fin-de-Siècle France: Cyrano de Bergerac.”
      Venita Datta

      Conclusion: “Secular Anointings: Fame, Celebrity, and Charisma in the First Century of Mass Culture.
      Leo Braudy

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