Starlight and Stargazers

Slavic Screen Celebrities

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Academic Studies Press
Edited by Helena Goscilo
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Celebrification has thrived for centuries in literature, theater, music, and other cultural spheres, as vividly illustrated by Byron, Sarah Bernhardt, and Paganini. It especially effloresced in cinema after the symbolically named Lumière brothers pioneered movies as light-projected “moving life” to be contemplated and shared in the intimate darkness of theaters. Actors and actresses such as Valentino and Garbo acquired the status of divine beings whose life on and offscreen stimulated fascination and a passionate devotion most frequently invested in religious figures. The recent explosion in social media has only amplified immeasurably the scale and intensity of that adulation. Yearning for the seemingly transcendent, fans as mere mortals seek contact with celebrities as objects of worship that, like nocturnal stars, are simultaneously remote yet accessible. Starlight and Stargazers examines the multifaceted nature and specific manifestations of film celebrification in Czechoslovakia/the Czech Republic, Poland, Soviet Russia/Russia, and Ukraine before and after 1991.

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Contributor Bio

Helena Goscilo’s current research resides in the domains of film and queer/gay culture: namely, a monograph on current Polish women film directors, Film’s Feisty Femmes: Polish Women Directors, a co-edited issue of The Polish Review devoted to Polish cinema, and a volume on Slavic queerness.

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