Lexington Books
Pages: 200
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-66690-747-6 • Hardback • February 2023 • $95.00 • (£73.00)
978-1-66690-748-3 • eBook • December 2022 • $45.00 • (£35.00)
Gloria Shin is full-time instructor in film, television, and media studies in the School of Film and Television at Loyola Marymount University. She is a media consultant whose work has been featured on NPR and in the Los Angeles Times.
Chapter 1: Beauty is a Rare Thing: Pulchritude, Performance and Elizabeth Taylor’s Body
Chapter 2: Taylor Made: Race, Gender and Discipline in the Plantation Films of Elizabeth Taylor
Chapter 3: ‘If it be Love Indeed, Tell Me How Much’: Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton and White Pleasure After Empire
Chapter 4: The Most Beautiful Woman Saves the World: Capitalism, the Maternal Melodrama and the Meaning of Elizabeth Taylor’s AIDS Activism
Elizabeth Taylor: Icon of American Empire offers a meticulously researched, rigorous, and insightful new perspective about the titular Hollywood star. Gloria Shin explores Taylor’s iconicity as a symbol of postcolonial whiteness, revealing how the actress’s film roles, glamorous extra-cinematic image, and late-career political activism collectively frame her as appealing model of American imperialist power and consumption.
— Olympia Kiriakou, independent scholar and author of Becoming Carole Lombard