celebrity

CfP: Celebrity Philanthropy, edited book

Call for papers: Celebrity Philanthropy, edited book
Editors: Paul Allatson and Elaine Jeffreys
Affiliation: University of Technology, Sydney
Contact details: Paul.Allatson AT uts.edu.au, Elaine.Jeffreys AT uts.edu.au
 
 
Abstract deadline: Potential contributors should send an abstract, maximum 200 words, with full contact details, to the editors named above by 1 May 2010.
 

CfP: Celebrity Studies - Special Issue Announcements

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS  
Routledge are pleased to announce the publication of Celebrity Studies from 2010
 
Celebrity Studies is currently accepting papers. For details on how to submit a paper to this exciting new journal please visit the call for papers site at: http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/cfp/rcelcfp.pdf
 

CfP: Celebrity and the transnational

Special issue of Celebrity Studies journal:

CELEBRITY AND THE TRANSNATIONAL

This special issue of the new journal Celebrity Studies will provide a space for
discussion about the internationalization of celebrity: including the various movements
(or non-movement) of celebrities across borders; the translation of their meanings into
different contexts; the different effects of celebrity between countries and cultures;
the use of the celebrity to 'aid' trans/national causes (or 'other countries'); and the

CfP: ISA World Congress of Sociology 2010 Session on Celebrity

XVII ISA World Congress of Sociology
11-17 July 2010
Gothenburg, Sweden

See: http://www.isa-sociology.org/congress2010/rc/rc17.htm

The Research Committee on Sociology of Organization (RC17) is calling for
papers for Session 3: Celebrity society and organizational life.

Anyone interested in presenting a paper in RC17's programme should contact

CfP: Back in the Spotlight: Ageing and Female Celebrity

Celebrity Studies

Proposals are invited for a special edition of the journal Celebrity Studies on
the theme of female celebrity and ageing.
It is a long held adage that women ‘of a certain age’ struggle to fi nd work or
interesting roles in youth-obsessed Hollywood and that the lifespan of female
celebrity is fi nite in a way that male celebrity is not.
Has this state of affairs shifted in the changing celebrity culture of recent
years? Have older women become less visible than ever as reality TV formats

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