‘They Are Not like […] Pamela Hódi […] Constantly Showing Off’—How Hungarian Tweens Negotiate Fame through Disney Princesses

IF 0.3 0 FILM, RADIO, TELEVISION Studies in Eastern European Cinema Pub Date : 2021-12-18 DOI:10.1080/2040350X.2021.2008132
Anna Zsubori
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract Ever since Disney Princesses were established as a marketing brand in 2000, they have become a famous ‘phenomenon’ that has been commercially successful, popular, and adored, but one that has also received much criticism from scholars and consumers alike. Although audience research has gained increasing recognition in recent years, this field’s attention has focused mainly on the ‘West’, neglecting Eastern European—including child—audiences. Moreover, while there are several scholarly examinations of Disney Princess films, these studies mainly employ textual analysis (Escalada-Cordova 2018; Whelan 2014; Wilde 2014) rather than conducting empirical research. Instead of reading for the audiences and making assumptions about how they interpret fame from a media text, in this case Disney Princesses, it is therefore crucial to ask audience members themselves, as Sonia Livingstone observes, ‘it is established that audiences are plural in their decodings, that their cultural context matters, and that they often disagree with textual analyses’ (2008, p. 4). By drawing upon diverse scholarly works within the field of celebrity studies as well as undertaking an audience study with Eastern European—specifically Hungarian—tweens, the objective of this article is twofold. On the one hand, this paper argues that animated characters are indeed entitled to have a fame status. It does so by deploying theorisations that distinguish between heroes and celebrities (North, Bland, and Ellis 2005), celebrities and stars (G. Turner, Bonner, and Marshall 2000), and differentiate among animated characters considered as ‘celeactors’ (Rojek 2001), or as stars (Ellis 2007; McGowan 2018; 2019). On the other hand, through the analysis of audiences’ diverse perceptions of fame, illustrated by Hungarian tweens’ understanding of Disney Princesses—an enormous global media phenomenon—this article provides a key case study for the aforementioned argument while highlighting the features of celebrity culture that are specific to Hungary. Taking into account Hungarian tweens’ approaches towards Disney Princesses, while considering that Disney is claimed to have ‘immense power over childhood culture’ (Garofalo 2013) and that ‘[t]he celebrity is simultaneously a construction of the dominant culture and a construction of the subordinate audiences of the culture’ (Marshall 2014, p. 48), this paper starts revealing the diverse ways in which different cultures conceptualise celebrity notions.
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“他们不像[…]帕梅拉Hódi[…]不断炫耀”——匈牙利少年如何通过迪士尼公主获得名声
自从迪斯尼公主在2000年成为一个营销品牌以来,她们已经成为一个著名的“现象”,在商业上取得了成功,受到了欢迎和崇拜,但也受到了许多学者和消费者的批评。尽管受众研究近年来获得了越来越多的认可,但这一领域的注意力主要集中在“西方”,而忽视了东欧——包括儿童受众。此外,虽然对迪士尼公主电影有一些学术研究,但这些研究主要采用文本分析(Escalada-Cordova 2018;惠兰2014;Wilde 2014),而不是进行实证研究。与其为观众阅读并假设他们如何从媒体文本中解读名声,在这个例子中,迪士尼公主,因此询问观众自己是至关重要的,正如索尼娅·利文斯通(Sonia Livingstone)所观察到的那样,“可以确定的是,观众在解码中是多元的,他们的文化背景很重要,他们经常不同意文本分析”(2008)。通过借鉴名人研究领域的各种学术著作,以及对东欧(特别是匈牙利)青少年进行受众研究,本文的目的是双重的。一方面,本文认为动画人物确实有权享有名声地位。它通过运用区分英雄和名人(North, Bland, and Ellis, 2005)、名人和明星(G. Turner, Bonner, and Marshall, 2000)的理论来做到这一点,并区分被认为是“明星”(Rojek, 2001)或明星(Ellis, 2007;麦高文2018;2019)。另一方面,通过分析观众对名声的不同看法,以匈牙利青少年对迪士尼公主的理解为例,这是一个巨大的全球媒体现象,本文为上述论点提供了一个关键的案例研究,同时突出了匈牙利特有的名人文化特征。考虑到匈牙利青少年对迪士尼公主的态度,同时考虑到迪士尼被声称拥有“对儿童文化的巨大权力”(Garofalo 2013),以及“名人同时是主导文化的建构,也是文化下属观众的建构”(Marshall 2014,第48页),本文开始揭示不同文化概念化名人概念的不同方式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Studies in Eastern European Cinema
Studies in Eastern European Cinema Arts and Humanities-Visual Arts and Performing Arts
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
34
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