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Diana and Beyond: White Femininity, National Identity, and Contemporary Media Culture

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The death of Princess Diana unleashed an international outpouring of grief, love, and press attention virtually unprecedented in history. Yet the exhaustive effort to link an upper class white British woman with "the people" raises questions. What narrative of white femininity transformed Diana into a simultaneous signifier of a national and global popular? What ideologies did the narrative tap into to transform her into an idealized woman of the millennium? Why would a similar idealization not have appeared around a non-white, non-Western, or immigrant woman?
 
Raka Shome investigates the factors that led to this defining cultural/political moment and unravels just what the Diana phenomenon represented for comprehending the relation between white femininity and the nation in  postcolonial Britain and its connection to other white female celebrity figures in the millennium.   Digging into the media and cultural artifacts that circulated in the wake of Diana's death, Shome investigates a range of theoretical issues surrounding motherhood and the production of national masculinities, global humanitarianism, transnational masculinities, the intersection of fashion and white femininity, and spirituality and national modernity. Her analysis explores how images of white femininity in popular culture intersect with issues of race,  gender, class, sexuality, and transnationality in the performance of Anglo national modernities.   
 
Moving from ideas on the positioning of privileged white women in global neoliberalism to the emergence of new formations of white femininity in the millennium ,  Diana and Beyond fearlessly explains the late princess's never-ending renaissance and ongoing cultural relevance.
 
 

272 pages, Paperback

First published October 30, 2014

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Raka Shome

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269 reviews178 followers
May 31, 2017
Shome provides good feedback on postcolonial literature and in seeing how white feminism works toward the "Other."

Random notes on Shome from thesis - not so much from this book as much as from journal articles:

The attitude of ignoring core issues related to global justice and human dignity situates multiculturalism “within a nation-centered ethos of citizenship, justice, rights, and identity, and also in West-centric assumptions about ‘freedom,’ ‘belonging,’ and ‘democracy’” (Shome, 2012, p. 145).

Seeing how “the absence of any legitimate national or international instrument for dealing with matters that require a transnationally sensitive intervention for evaluating ‘justice’ can also engender a ‘biopolitics of disposability’ (Shome, 2012, p. 152).
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