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Review: The Drama of Celebrity

Sharon Marcus’s book is tour de force and the author a total star, says Jonathan Margolis

August 27, 2019 11:31
Sarah Bernhardt
2 min read

The Drama of Celebrity by Sharon Marcus (Princeton University Press, £24)

There is nothing more reassuring than learning that there is nothing new under the sun. So it is oddly warming when Sharon Marcus, towards the end of her quite brilliant treatise on celebrity, discusses a populist US politician known for his ignorance, vanity, mendacity, racism and crudity, but above all, for his celebrity, his fame for being famous.

That politician, Marcus points out playfully, is Davy Crockett, the 19th-century frontiersman and soldier, popularly known as the King of the Wild Frontier, who was briefly elected as a Tennessee Congressman. He was mostly distinguished from the current occupant of the Oval Office by having shown some bravery as a soldier and being arguably of slightly higher moral fibre.

Sharon Marcus is a Columbia University literature professor, but her book, The Drama of Celebrity, is far from being densely academic. Her writing is sparky, feisty and compelling. Yet is it also a scholarly work, and a reasonably compact one; she channels the nuts and bolts of her scholarship into the 72 pages of footnotes, which might perhaps have been better kept online.