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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Unique insight, September 21, 2009
By 
N. Wong (HONG KONG, HONG KONG Hong Kong) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Fame (The Art of Living Series) (Paperback)
3.5 stars

I have been reading several books in The Art of Living Series published by Acumen and I have to say some of them really fascinate me with the author's insights and lines of arguments. The series aims at confronting a number of issues that are popular in our contemporary culture, issues that are around us all the time but we (as laymen) just do not have the time to think through. When we have the time to think, mostly we are not able (maybe due to a lack of training) to think critically, not to mention proper and intriguing philosophization. This explains why reading Mark Rowland's Fame is interesting and worthwhile.

Mark Rowland starts the book with over-attention-seeking girls who would like to sexualize themselves in reality TV shows and then moves to discuss Paris Hilton and David Beckham. This is a brilliant start simply because such types of people are everywhere in our popular culture. Yet, the author doesn't stop there, but discusses and explores what it means to be an individual with a great sense of autonomy and self-realization by going back to Plato and advocacies during Englightenment.

The subsequent chapters after the introduction may be frustrating because the author does not actually mention fame (the subject matter of the book) at all, but this is because he needs to build up his arguments step by step and to showcase how mdoern individualism has turned our lives and cultures into meaningless existence. Trust me, it's worth following the arguments and when you reach the final two chapters, you will realize this book on fame really has its own acute angle.

As I would expect, a book on such a topic may have a chapter on postmodern culture and another one on psycholanalytic theories (probably over-mentioning Freud or Lacan). However, Mark Rowland gives up these two approaches and suggests that the fame we now have in our contemporary culture is a variant of the fame we used to understand. He calls it 'vfame', a kind of fame that has nothing to do with respect, quality and values. Yet, its construction in mainly on the lack (possible to go back to Lacan's objet petit a in this case) embeded in every one of us.

If you want to study popular culture and you're fed up with the academic stuff on postmodernism and psycholanalysis, I would highly recommend this book to you.
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Fame (The Art of Living Series)
Fame (The Art of Living Series) by Mark Rowlands (Paperback - Sept. 2008)
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