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OverviewIn Elizabeth Taylor: Icon of American Empire, Gloria Shin contends that the titular movie star is a model of postcolonial whiteness as her tenure as the most beautiful woman in the world coincides with the era of postcolonialism in the 1950s and 1960s. Taylor is examined through a series of overlapping readings: as the Mistress in a cycle of Hollywood plantation, via her extra-cinematic image as a jet-setting wanton seductress and oriental in whiteface in the early 1960, through her repatriation to the U.S. in the 1970s via her marriage to and the election of her pro-military husband John Warner to the U.S. Senate, and her evolution as a relentless AIDS activist in the 1980s. Across these interpretative frames, Taylor emerges as the figuration who performs the vast possibilities open to postcolonial whites for mobility, pleasure, and political agency while operating without the burdens of race that allows her stardom to be symbolic of American Empire at the apex of its power. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Gloria ShinPublisher: Lexington Books Imprint: Lexington Books/Fortress Academic Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 23.70cm Weight: 0.494kg ISBN: 9781666907476ISBN 10: 1666907472 Pages: 200 Publication Date: 15 February 2023 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsChapter 1: Beauty is a Rare Thing: Pulchritude, Performance and Elizabeth Taylor’s Body Chapter 2: Taylor Made: Race, Gender and Discipline in the Plantation Films of Elizabeth Taylor Chapter 3: ‘If it be Love Indeed, Tell Me How Much’: Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton and White Pleasure After Empire Chapter 4: The Most Beautiful Woman Saves the World: Capitalism, the Maternal Melodrama and the Meaning of Elizabeth Taylor’s AIDS ActivismReviewsElizabeth Taylor: Icon of American Empire offers a meticulously researched, rigorous, and insightful new perspective about the titular Hollywood star. Gloria Shin explores Taylor's iconicity as a symbol of postcolonial whiteness, revealing how the actress's film roles, glamorous extra-cinematic image, and late-career political activism collectively frame her as appealing model of American imperialist power and consumption.--Olympia Kiriakou, Florida Atlantic University, author of Becoming Carole Lombard Elizabeth Taylor: Icon of American Empire offers a meticulously researched, rigorous, and insightful new perspective about the titular Hollywood star. Gloria Shin explores Taylor's iconicity as a symbol of postcolonial whiteness, revealing how the actress's film roles, glamorous extra-cinematic image, and late-career political activism collectively frame her as appealing model of American imperialist power and consumption.--Olympia Kiriakou, independent scholar and author of Becoming Carole Lombard Elizabeth Taylor: Icon of American Empire offers a meticulously researched, rigorous, and insightful new perspective about the titular Hollywood star. Gloria Shin explores Taylor's iconicity as a symbol of postcolonial whiteness, revealing how the actress's film roles, glamorous extra-cinematic image, and late-career political activism collectively frame her as appealing model of American imperialist power and consumption. "Elizabeth Taylor: Icon of American Empire examines the life, career, and activism of Elizabeth Taylor (1932-2011) through the lenses of critical race theory, postcolonial theory, feminist theory, and political theory. Shin argues that Taylor is a ""metaphor of American empire"" and a symbol of ""postcolonial whiteness."" The book's four chapters explore four elements of Taylor's mythology. Chapter 1 examines Taylor's physical beauty and its connection to a hyperfeminine ideal of whiteness. In chapter 2, Shin analyzes Taylor's filmography, focusing specifically on her roles in the ""plantation films"" Elephant Walk, Giant, and Raintree Country, arguing that the films provide a colonial gaze and reference ""manifest domesticity."" Taylor's storied relationship with Welsh actor Richard Burton is explored in chapter 3. Shin argues that their commodified relationship positioned them to succeed as freelance actors following the demise of the Hollywood studio system. In the final chapter, Shin examines Taylor's late-life AIDS activism, arguing that it created the foundation for future celebrity activism. The Taylor Shin presents was a star and symbol who set the groundwork for future celebrity representation even as she was a conduit for ""US imperial ambitions.""Highly recommended Elizabeth Taylor: Icon of American Empire offers a meticulously researched, rigorous, and insightful new perspective about the titular Hollywood star. Gloria Shin explores Taylor's iconicity as a symbol of postcolonial whiteness, revealing how the actress's film roles, glamorous extra-cinematic image, and late-career political activism collectively frame her as appealing model of American imperialist power and consumption. Yes, there is more to say about Elizabeth Taylor, and Gloria Shin proves it with her unique look at the late icon as the model of postcolonial whiteness. Of particular interest is Shin's focus on Taylor's AIDS activism, and how Taylor served 'as an effective agent of positive social change.'" Author InformationGloria Shin is instructor in film and media studies in the School of Film and Television at Loyola Marymount University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |