ebooks logo journals logo reference works logo abstract databases logo
bullet  SIGN IN Register | Why Register? | Got a Voucher? alerts   marked lists   shopping cart 

informaworld

HOME   |   SEARCH   |   BROWSE
    Issues List       Latest Issue       Volume 14 Issue 2       Subscribe       Article       References       Related articles      
<< firstfirst   < prevprev   Table of contentstoc   next >next   last >>last
Publisher Logo Publication Cover
Search within this journal
iFirst
Coming soon to this journal

Death and disposal of the people's singer: The body and bodily practices in commemorative ritual 

Author: Irene Stengs a (Show Biography)
Affiliation:   a Meertens Institute, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
DOI: 10.1080/13576270902807516
Publication Frequency: 4 issues per year
Published in: journal Mortality, Volume 14, Issue 2 May 2009 , pages 102 - 118
Formats available: HTML (English) : PDF (English)
Article Requests: Order Reprints : Request Permissions


Abstract

This contribution focuses on the power of commemorative ritual with special attention for bodily matters. It relies on empirical material from a sequence of ceremonies in commemoration of Dutch singer Andreacute Hazes (1951-2004). All celebrations were staged performances and widely mediated events. In the Dutch context, they were of an unusual form, content and scale, and evoked widespread amazement and even disapproval. Significant in all these performances was the bodily presence of Hazes, not only by the literal presence of Hazes' dead body, but also in the form of mimicked representations by his fans. Hazes was an ambiguous celebrity, his bodily appearance and habits offered occasion for identification as well as abjection. Emphasising his general physical appearance (fat, sweating, unhealthy looking), the 'social body' of Andreacute Hazes appears as a counter-ideal of rough authenticity, in opposition to the dominant social construct of the body as young, smooth, healthy and beautiful. The contribution's main argument is that his fans' bodily identification is a practice to contest dominant bodily ideals in a societal struggle about who matters and who does not.
Keywords: celebrity; commemorative ritual; mimesis; serial disposal; body politics
view references (21)
Bookmark with:
  • CiteULike
  • Del.icio.us
  • BibSonomy
  • Connotea
  • More bookmarks
Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions | Accessibility | RSS
FAQs in: English . Français . Español . 中文(简体和繁體)
© 2009 Informa plc