Celebrity Culture

In September 2005, UWS held the ‘Celebrity Culture’ conference, which brought around 100 speakers to Ayr, Scotland’s Riviera (according to Trip Adviser). This March, Dr Philip Drake and I have co-edited a section of Cultural Politics (BERG),  publishing a handful of those papers. You can find more here, but below is the running order. Thanks to all authors for hanging in there with us.

The Cultural Politics of Celebrity

Philip Drake and Andy Miah consider celebrity as a ubiquitous aspect of contemporary culture, mass media, and the Internet that is inextricably linked to developments in media systems that operate within capitalist systems of commodity exchange.

News, Celebrity and Vortextuality: A Study of the Media Coverage of the Michael Jackson Verdict

Gary Whannel examines the transformation of news as a cultural commodity and a social process by the expansion in the range, volume, and circulation speed of media production or what Whannel conceptualizes as ‘Vortextuality’ with reference to the coverage of the verdict announcement in the trial of Michael Jackson.

Unsolicited Submission

American artist David Levine’s project about unsolicited wannabe celebrity submissions to talent and other cultural agencies is a multidisciplinary and multiyear project of gathering, analysing, and archiving such unsolicited submissions in every field of cultural endeavour.

The ‘Public Inquisitor’ as Media Celebrity

Michael Higgins looks at the development and utility of celebrity among high-profile political interviewers, offering the revised description of ‘public inquisitor’ to describe the rise of the political interviewer as a celebrity form.

‘As Seen on TV’: The Celebrity Expert: How Taste is shaped by Lifestyle Media

Helen Powell and Sylvie Prasad examine how television, print, and advertising contribute to the construction of media stars such as Jamie Oliver whose function is to transfer knowledge of particular lifestyles to the lived experience of ordinary people.

Surveillance and Society

New publication in the journal Surveillance and Society

Rich, E. & Miah, A. (2009) Prosthetic Surveillance: The medical governance of healthy bodies in cyberspace, Surveilance and Society 26(1), 163-177. http://www.surveillance-and-society.org/ojs/index.php/journal/article/view/prosthetic/prosthetic

The special edition of this journal also includes a review of Medicalization of Cyberspace, which was also just reviewed in Body and Society

Studies in Ethics, Law and Technology

A month or so back, I published a couple of new articles, which each deal with the concept of posthumanism. The main article details a typology of human enhancements that aims to clarify the different levels of discussion and expectation of human enhancement technologis. The second is a ‘Letter to Utopia’, a reply to Nick Bostrom’s Letter from Utopia published alongside my paper in SELT. They’re available through the SELT website:

MIAH, A. (2008) Engineering Greater Resilience or Radical Transhuman Enhancement? Studies in Ethics, Law and Technology, 2, http://www.bepress.com/selt/vol2/iss1/art5.

MIAH, A. (2008) Letter to Utopia. Studies in Ethics, Law and Technology, 2, http://www.bepress.com/selt/vol2/iss1/art7

Letter to Utopia

I’ve just finished a reply to Nick Bostrom’s ‘Letter from Utopia’ It will appear on my website in a few days, but here’s the final document and it’s citation details:

Miah, A. (2007) Letter to Utopia, v1.0: A Reply to ‘Letter from Utopia, v1.4’ (Bostrom, 2007). PDF Document. Available Online at: http://www.andymiah.net/documents/utopia1.0.pdf