Toxic
$28.00
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5 + | $21.00 |
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Description
A scathing reexamination of the lives of nine female celebrities in the 2000s—Britney, Paris, Lindsay, Aaliyah, Janet, Amy, Kim, Chyna, and Jen—and the sexist, exploitative culture that let them down
Welcome to celebrity culture in the early aughts: the reign of Perez Hilton, celebrity sex tapes, and dueling tabloids fed by paparazzi who were willing to do anything to get the shot.
The internet was still the Wild West: slut-shaming, fat-shaming, and revenge porn were all fair game, and celebrity was seen as a commodity to be consumed. And for the famous women of this era, they were never as popular—or as vulnerable—as when they were in crisis.
In Toxic, journalist Sarah Ditum tells the stories of nine famous women who defined this era and explores how they were devoured by fame, how they attempted to control their own narratives, and how they succeeded or (more often) failed.
Whatever you think you already know, leave it at the door. Toxic reveals these women neither as pure victims nor as conniving strategists, but as complex individuals trying to navigate celebrity while under attack from a vicious and fast-changing media. It’s time to come to terms with how these iconic women and their experiences living under the public gaze shaped the way we see ourselves, our bodies, our relationships, and our aspirations. We are all products of the toxic decade.
Sarah Ditum is a freelance writer and literary reviewer who contributes to the Times, the Guardian, the Observer, the Spectator, Mail on Sunday, and UnHerd. She writes a monthly column on pop music for Critic magazine and is also a contributor to Graydon Carter’s Air Mail. She lives in London.
"Ditum’s prose is never overwrought, and she treats pop culture with a rare seriousness. She is right to do so. . . .Toxic, Ditum’s reframing of an era, suggests that the uproar. . . may have been just the beginning of a reckoning."
—Financial Times, "The best books of the week"“Top-notch pop-culture commentary—a smart and entertaining look at female celebrity during a decade of immense change.”—Kirkus, starred review“Readers will rethink what they thought they knew about some of the most publicized celebrity stories of the early 2000s.”—Publishers Weekly“A necessary and incisive feminist reckoning with the aughts. Insightful, exhilarating—and horrifying. What were we thinking?”—Caroline Criado-Perez, author of Invisible Women“Living through the ’00s, I never realized how casually cruel they were—how cruel we were— to famous women. Toxic is an incendiary page-turner that will make you reconsider the price of fame. . . and your opinion of Kim Kardashian. It’s a Molotov cocktail hurled at the feet of celebrity culture.”—Helen Lewis, writer at the Atlantic and author of Difficult Women“Brilliant . . . [Toxic] really made me realize how no one has pulled back and given an overall story to the last twenty years . . . It’s clever because it makes me think about now.”—Adam Curtis, filmmaker"When I discovered Toxic I was immediately taken by the depth of Sarah's dedication, research and writing."—Paris HiltonAdditional information
Dimensions | 0.6 × 7.55 × 9.25 in |
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Subjects | Kim Kardashian, Media consumption, Toxic decade, Crisis management, Public gaze, Fame and vulnerability, Sexist narratives, Exploitative media, Media scrutiny, Chyna, Celebrity narratives, Janet Jackson, Aaliyah, Lindsay Lohan, Paris Hilton, Britney Spears, Female celebrities, Tabloid journalism, Celebrity culture, Media manipulation, Celebrity authenticity, Media coverage, Celebrity trials, Public fascination, Celebrity icons, Media ethics, Hollywood scandals, Cultural impact, Fame dynamics, cultural criticism, Celebrity stories, Media sensationalism, Celebrity downfall, Public perception, Media exploitation, Entertainment industry, Digital revolution, Cultural analysis, HEA055000, ethics, iconic women, body image, magazine, fame, journalism, Sociology, SOC028000, actress, internet, celebrity, Sports, relationships, female empowerment, BIO022000, culture, television, tv, early 2000s, sexist, media business, newspapers, paparazzi, POL032000, SOC052000, exploitation, jennifer aniston, celebrity memoirs, feminism, Journalists, sexism, scandal, pop culture, amy winehouse, singer, gossip, web |