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The politics of hyperbole on Geordie Shore: class, gender, youth and excess

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journal contribution
posted on 2018-02-01, 12:15 authored by Helen Wood
This article discusses MTV’s Geordie Shore against the backcloth of current social conditions for working-class youth. It suggests that the aesthetic, physical and discursive features of excess represent hyperbole, produced from within an affective situation of precariousness and routed through the labour relations of media visibility. Hyper-glamour, hyper-sex and hyper-emotion are responses to the ideologies of the future-projected, self-governing neoliberal subject and to the contemporary gendered contradictions of sexually proclivity and monogamous heteronormativity. By ‘flaunting’ the realities of self-work and making the labour of themselves more/ most visible, the participants of Geordie Shore are claiming an animated type of ill/ legitimate subjectivity.

History

Citation

European Journal of Cultural Studies, 2017, 20 (1), pp. 39-55

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, ARTS AND HUMANITIES/Department of Media, Communication and Sociology

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

European Journal of Cultural Studies

Publisher

SAGE Publications

issn

1367-5494

eissn

1460-3551

Copyright date

2016

Available date

2018-02-01

Publisher version

http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1367549416640552

Language

en

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