Celebrity Humanitarianism and North-South Relations: Politics, place and power

Author:   Lisa Ann Richey (University of Roskilde, Denmark)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9781138854284


Pages:   242
Publication Date:   08 September 2015
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Celebrity Humanitarianism and North-South Relations: Politics, place and power


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Full Product Details

Author:   Lisa Ann Richey (University of Roskilde, Denmark)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.00cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.408kg
ISBN:  

9781138854284


ISBN 10:   113885428
Pages:   242
Publication Date:   08 September 2015
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Introduction. Celebrity Humanitarianism and North-South Relations. Politics, Place and Power Part 1: Celebrity-Impact in the Global South 1. Angelina Jolie and the Everyday Geopolitics of Celebrity Humanitarianism in a Thailand–Burma Border Town 2. Madonna in Malawi. Celebritized Interventions and Local Politics of Development in the South 3. Muhammad Yunus. A Bangladeshi Aid Celebrity 4. Sophie’s Special Secret. Public Feeling, Consumption and Celebrity Activism in Post-Apartheid South Africa 5. Celebrity Philanthropy in China. the political critique of Pu Cunxin's AIDS heroism Part 2: Celebritization, Participatory Democracy, and the Donor North 6. Ben Affleck Goes to Washington. Celebrity Advocacy, Access and Influence 7. Humanitarian Relief Worker Sean Penn – A Contextual Story 8. Irony and Politically Incorrect Humanitarianism. Danish Celebrity-led Benefit Events 9. Celebrity, Humanitarianism and Settler-Colonialism. G.A Robinson and the Aborigines of Van Diemen’s Land Epilogue. The Politics of Celebrity Humanitarianism

Reviews

This is a landmark collection. Genuinely interdisciplinary, blending empirical study with theoretical analysis, and featuring global case studies from a wide range of perspectives, it pushes debates on the impact of celebrity 'humanitarian helping' forward significantly, considerably advancing our understanding of the role of celebrity intervention in contemporary global inequalities. -Jo Littler, City University London, UK This edited collection is an exciting addition to a proliferating literature. Rather than viewing the role of celebrities from a generic Western-centric perspective all the chapters demonstrate the importance of bringing the global South into the analysis in a nuanced fashion, with an appreciation of differences of place and context. -Andrew F. Cooper, University of Waterloo, Canada Celebrity Humanitarianism and North-South Relations edited by Lisa Ann Richey marks a major advance for debates on celebrity 'do-gooding'. This well-organized collection of chapters includes empirically grounded and critical analyses of cases from both the North and Global South that drastically improve our understanding of celebrity humanitarianism and its politics. -Olivier Driessens, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK Taking us beyond Bono, Geldof and Jolie, this comprehensive edited collection gives us the empirical depth and geographical breath to better understand when and how celebrities matter for humanitarianism, not just in the US, but all over the world. The product of years of genuinely collaborative work, this book will broaden the horizons of anyone who thought they knew about the politics of celebrity humanitarianism. -Martin Scott, University of East Anglia, UK This excellent volume provides a systematically arranged set of case studies concerning the exponential growth of Celebrity Humanitarianism. The edition will be welcomed by academics and practitioners alike as it foregrounds the Global South within this important phenomenon. -Mark Wheeler, London Metropolitan University, United Kingdom Should we care about celebrities? Not at all, we might have once said, especially if our prime concerns are North-South relations and humanitarian causes. No more. This book does more than challenge such an answer, it turns it on its head. Each chapter makes a powerful case for taking celebrities seriously as agents of change - both positive and negative, and does so on the basis of careful observation and forensic analysis. Together, the authors force us to re-think our understanding of who and what celebrities are, their role in international relations, and the complex politics that forge the link between the two. -John Street, University of East Anglia, UK An original and compelling book on celebrity humanitarianism. Through its rich collection of essays, it convincingly interrogates the politics of fame, pity and power at the heart of celebrity as a key form of elite leadership in global governance. -Lilie Chouliaraki, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK This excellent book makes a much needed contribution to the literature on celebrity humanitarianism: not only does it examine the multiple ways in which celebrities mediate elite forms of politics between the global South and North, but its empirically grounded studies of celebrity interventions in places ranging from Bangladesh, Congo and South Africa to Denmark, Australia and the US, help fill a sizeable gap in our understanding of the local impacts of celebrity power. -Ilan Kapoor, York University, Canada


This is a landmark collection. Genuinely interdisciplinary, blending empirical study with theoretical analysis, and featuring global case studies from a wide range of perspectives, it pushes debates on the impact of celebrity 'humanitarian helping' forward significantly, considerably advancing our understanding of the role of celebrity intervention in contemporary global inequalities. -Jo Littler, City University London, UK This edited collection is an exciting addition to a proliferating literature. Rather than viewing the role of celebrities from a generic Western-centric perspective all the chapters demonstrate the importance of bringing the global South into the analysis in a nuanced fashion, with an appreciation of differences of place and context. -Andrew F. Cooper, University of Waterloo, Canada Celebrity Humanitarianism and North-South Relations edited by Lisa Ann Richey marks a major advance for debates on celebrity 'do-gooding'. This well-organized collection of chapters includes empirically grounded and critical analyses of cases from both the North and Global South that drastically improve our understanding of celebrity humanitarianism and its politics. -Olivier Driessens, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK Taking us beyond Bono, Geldof and Jolie, this comprehensive edited collection gives us the empirical depth and geographical breath to better understand when and how celebrities matter for humanitarianism, not just in the US, but all over the world. The product of years of genuinely collaborative work, this book will broaden the horizons of anyone who thought they knew about the politics of celebrity humanitarianism. -Martin Scott, University of East Anglia, UK This excellent volume provides a systematically arranged set of case studies concerning the exponential growth of Celebrity Humanitarianism. The edition will be welcomed by academics and practitioners alike as it foregrounds the Global South within this important phenomenon. -Mark Wheeler, London Metropolitan University, United Kingdom Should we care about celebrities? Not at all, we might have once said, especially if our prime concerns are North-South relations and humanitarian causes. No more. This book does more than challenge such an answer, it turns it on its head. Each chapter makes a powerful case for taking celebrities seriously as agents of change - both positive and negative, and does so on the basis of careful observation and forensic analysis. Together, the authors force us to re-think our understanding of who and what celebrities are, their role in international relations, and the complex politics that forge the link between the two. -John Street, University of East Anglia, UK An original and compelling book on celebrity humanitarianism. Through its rich collection of essays, it convincingly interrogates the politics of fame, pity and power at the heart of celebrity as a key form of elite leadership in global governance. -Lilie Chouliaraki, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK This excellent book makes a much needed contribution to the literature on celebrity humanitarianism: not only does it examine the multiple ways in which celebrities mediate elite forms of politics between the global South and North, but its empirically grounded studies of celebrity interventions in places ranging from Bangladesh, Congo and South Africa to Denmark, Australia and the US, help fill a sizeable gap in our understanding of the local impacts of celebrity power. -Ilan Kapoor, York University, Canada


This is a landmark collection. Genuinely interdisciplinary, blending empirical study with theoretical analysis, and featuring global case studies from a wide range of perspectives, it pushes debates on the impact of celebrity `humanitarian helping' forward significantly, considerably advancing our understanding of the role of celebrity intervention in contemporary global inequalities. -Jo Littler, City University London, UK ã This edited collection is an exciting addition to a proliferating literature. Rather than viewing the role of celebrities from a generic Western-centric perspective all the chapters demonstrate the importance of bringing the global South into the analysis in a nuanced fashion, with an appreciation of differences of place and context. -Andrew F. Cooper, University of Waterloo, Canada Celebrity Humanitarianism and North-South Relations edited by Lisa Ann Richey marks a major advance for debates on celebrity `do-gooding'. This well-organized collection of chapters includes empirically grounded and critical analyses of cases from both the North and Global South that drastically improve our understanding of celebrity humanitarianism and its politics. -Olivier Driessens, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK Taking us beyond Bono, Geldof and Jolie, this comprehensive edited collection gives us the empirical depth and geographical breath to better understand when and how celebrities matter for humanitarianism, not just in the US, but all over the world. The product of years of genuinely collaborative work, this book will broaden the horizons of anyone who thought they knew about the politics of celebrity humanitarianism. -Martin Scott, University of East Anglia, UK This excellent volume provides a systematically arranged set of case studies concerning the exponential growth of Celebrity Humanitarianism. The edition will be welcomed by academics and practitioners alike as it foregrounds the Global South within this important phenomenon. ã -Mark Wheeler, London Metropolitan University, United Kingdom Should we care about celebrities? Not at all, we might have once said, especially if our prime concerns are North-South relations and humanitarian causes. No more. This book does more than challenge such an answer, it turns it on its head. Each chapter makes a powerful case for taking celebrities seriously as agents of change - both positive and negative, and does so on the basis of careful observation and forensic analysis. Together, the authors force us to re-think our understanding of who and what celebrities are, their role in international relations, and the complex politics that forge the link between the two. -John Street, University of East Anglia, UK An original and compelling book on celebrity humanitarianism. Through its rich collection of essays, it convincingly interrogates the politics of fame, pity and power at the heart of celebrity as a keyã form of elite leadership in global governance. -Lilie Chouliaraki, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK This excellent book makes a much needed contribution to the literature on celebrity humanitarianism: not only does it examine the multiple ways in which celebrities mediate elite forms of politics between the global South and North, but its empirically grounded studies of celebrity interventions in places ranging from Bangladesh, Congo and South Africa to Denmark, Australia and the US, help fill a sizeable gap in our understanding of the local impacts of celebrity power. -Ilan Kapoor, York University, Canada


This is a landmark collection. Genuinely interdisciplinary, blending empirical study with theoretical analysis, and featuring global case studies from a wide range of perspectives, it pushes debates on the impact of celebrity `humanitarian helping' forward significantly, considerably advancing our understanding of the role of celebrity intervention in contemporary global inequalities. -Jo Littler, City University London, UK This edited collection is an exciting addition to a proliferating literature. Rather than viewing the role of celebrities from a generic Western-centric perspective all the chapters demonstrate the importance of bringing the global South into the analysis in a nuanced fashion, with an appreciation of differences of place and context. -Andrew F. Cooper, University of Waterloo, Canada Celebrity Humanitarianism and North-South Relations edited by Lisa Ann Richey marks a major advance for debates on celebrity `do-gooding'. This well-organized collection of chapters includes empirically grounded and critical analyses of cases from both the North and Global South that drastically improve our understanding of celebrity humanitarianism and its politics. -Olivier Driessens, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK Taking us beyond Bono, Geldof and Jolie, this comprehensive edited collection gives us the empirical depth and geographical breath to better understand when and how celebrities matter for humanitarianism, not just in the US, but all over the world. The product of years of genuinely collaborative work, this book will broaden the horizons of anyone who thought they knew about the politics of celebrity humanitarianism. -Martin Scott, University of East Anglia, UK This excellent volume provides a systematically arranged set of case studies concerning the exponential growth of Celebrity Humanitarianism. The edition will be welcomed by academics and practitioners alike as it foregrounds the Global South within this important phenomenon. -Mark Wheeler, London Metropolitan University, United Kingdom Should we care about celebrities? Not at all, we might have once said, especially if our prime concerns are North-South relations and humanitarian causes. No more. This book does more than challenge such an answer, it turns it on its head. Each chapter makes a powerful case for taking celebrities seriously as agents of change - both positive and negative, and does so on the basis of careful observation and forensic analysis. Together, the authors force us to re-think our understanding of who and what celebrities are, their role in international relations, and the complex politics that forge the link between the two. -John Street, University of East Anglia, UK An original and compelling book on celebrity humanitarianism. Through its rich collection of essays, it convincingly interrogates the politics of fame, pity and power at the heart of celebrity as a key form of elite leadership in global governance. -Lilie Chouliaraki, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK This excellent book makes a much needed contribution to the literature on celebrity humanitarianism: not only does it examine the multiple ways in which celebrities mediate elite forms of politics between the global South and North, but its empirically grounded studies of celebrity interventions in places ranging from Bangladesh, Congo and South Africa to Denmark, Australia and the US, help fill a sizeable gap in our understanding of the local impacts of celebrity power. -Ilan Kapoor, York University, Canada


Author Information

Lisa Ann Richey is Professor of International Development Studies in the Department of Society and Globalisation, Roskilde University, Denmark.

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