The Star Decades: American Culture/American Cinema series is now available as a ten-volume set: Movie Stars from the 1910s to the 2000s.
����������� Each volume presents original essays analyzing the movie star against the background of American cultural history. As icon, as mediated personality, and as object of audience
fascination and desire, the Hollywood star remains the model for celebrity in modern culture and represents a paradoxical combination of achievement, talent, ability, luck, authenticity,
superficiality, and even ordinariness. In all of the volumes, stardom is studied as an effect of, and influence on, the particular historical and industrial contexts that enable a star to
be ��iscovered,��to be featured in films, to be promoted and publicized, and ultimately to become a recognizable and admired��ven notorious��eature of the cultural landscape. Understanding
when, how, and why a star ��akes it,��dazzling for a brief moment or enduring across decades, allows readers to assess the importance of mediated celebrity in an increasingly visualized
world.