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Performing celebrity motherhood on Twitter: courting homage and (momentary) disaster - the case of Peaches Geldof

journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-01, 09:02 authored by Diane Charlesworth
<p>It sickens me to see just how far the cult of celebrity and super fandom has come when grown women are passing their own kids round. I hate the world sometimes. (@peaches-g) (cited in Halliday 2013)This quote was part of a Twitter message that Peaches Geldof published in November 2013. In the message she also named the two women who had allowed the Lost Prophets singer Ian Watkins to abuse their babies. What became key elements focused upon by journalists in the newspaper debate that followed her subsequent deletion of the message and apology were the purpose of Twitter as a form of communication, and the celebritisation of public discourse. This tweet was constructed as an empty-headed, gossipy, childish and hence feminised intervention into the public sphere.1 Also tied up with this debate was the ongoing narrative of the ‘non-functionality’ of celebrity culture and its ‘reflexive exhibitionism’ (Hyde 2013). Yet Geldof had, until this point, used a combination of Twitter and Instagram to enact a self-transformation from girlhood to motherhood that had drawn critical affirmation from both media pundits and female followers via the social media sites. It is this image of motherhood that has informed the reporting of her sudden death of a heroin overdose at the age of 25 on 7 April 2014.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • Lincoln School of Creative Arts (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Celebrity Studies

Volume

5

Issue

4

Pages/Article Number

508-510

Publisher

Routledge

ISSN

1939-2397

eISSN

1939-2400

Date Submitted

2014-12-17

Date Accepted

2014-07-28

Date of First Publication

2014-11-01

Date of Final Publication

2014-11-01

Date Document First Uploaded

2014-12-17

ePrints ID

16298

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