Cultural impact of Madonna: Difference between revisions
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Since the beginning of her career, American artist [[Madonna (entertainer)|Madonna]] has had a social cultural impact on the world through her recordings, attitude, clothing and lifestyle. Called the "[[Honorific nicknames in popular music|Queen of Pop]]", Madonna is labeled by international authors as the greatest woman in music, as well like the most influential and iconic female recording artist of all time. |
Since the beginning of her career, American artist [[Madonna (entertainer)|Madonna]] has had a social cultural impact on the world through her recordings, attitude, clothing and lifestyle. Called the "[[Honorific nicknames in popular music|Queen of Pop]]", Madonna is labeled by international authors as the greatest woman in music, as well like the most influential and iconic female recording artist of all time. |
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Accepted as a global [[cultural icon]], [[sociologists]], [[List of historians|historians]] and other [[social scientists]] have [[Madonna Studies|studied]] the legacy of Madonna, that goes beyond music,<ref name="Batanga"/> who impact is often compared with [[The Beatles' influence on popular culture|The Beatles influence]] and [[Cultural impact of Elvis Presley|Elvis Presley's impact]] (They are the [[List of best-selling music artists|best selling acts of all time]], in general, solo male and female category respectively).<ref name="Herman">{{harvnb|Herman|2009|pp=286}}</ref> Madonna is a key figure on [[popular music]]; while critics felt retrospectively that her presence, success and contributions |
Accepted as a global [[cultural icon]], [[sociologists]], [[List of historians|historians]] and other [[social scientists]] have [[Madonna Studies|studied]] the legacy of Madonna, that goes beyond music,<ref name="Batanga"/> who impact is often compared with [[The Beatles' influence on popular culture|The Beatles influence]] and [[Cultural impact of Elvis Presley|Elvis Presley's impact]] (They are the [[List of best-selling music artists|best selling acts of all time]], in general, solo male and female category respectively).<ref name="Herman">{{harvnb|Herman|2009|pp=286}}</ref> Madonna is a key figure on [[popular music]]; while critics felt retrospectively that her presence, success and contributions pave the way for every female artist and changed forever the music scene for the women in music history, as well the today pop stars. Even, [[Bibliography of Madonna|reviews of her work]] have served as a roadmap for how scrutinize women at each stage in their music career.<ref name="Noisey">{{Cite news|url=http://noisey.vice.com/blog/madonna-bedtime-stories-20th-anniversary-sex-sexuality-feminism|title=WHY MADONNA'S UNAPOLOGETIC 'BEDTIME STORIES' IS HER MOST IMPORTANT ALBUM|date=October 24, 2014|accessdate=June 22, 2013|last=von Aue|first=Mary|work=[[Vice (magazine)|Vice]] Magazine}}</ref> |
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Although Madonna has used [[cultural appropriation]], her contribution has only increased the introduction and popularization of these to an worldwide mainstream audience. She is the first multimedia [[pop icon]] in history and professionals coincide that Madonna has became the world's biggest and most socially significant pop icon, as well as the most controversial. But some intellectuals, like the French [[Georges Claude Guilbert]] felt that she has greater cultural importance, like a [[myth]], that have apparent universality and timelessness. References of Madonna in [[popular culture]] are from the arts, food, science and each branch of entertainment. In a general sense, journalist [[Peter Robinson (journalist)|Peter Robinson]] noted that "Madonna invented contemporary pop fame so there is a little bit of her in the DNA of every modern pop thing.<ref name="GuardianPopstars"/> |
Although Madonna has used [[cultural appropriation]], her contribution has only increased the introduction and popularization of these to an worldwide mainstream audience. She is the first multimedia [[pop icon]] in history and professionals coincide that Madonna has became the world's biggest and most socially significant pop icon, as well as the most controversial. But some intellectuals, like the French [[Georges Claude Guilbert]] felt that she has greater cultural importance, like a [[myth]], that have apparent universality and timelessness. References of Madonna in [[popular culture]] are from the arts, food, science and each branch of entertainment. In a general sense, journalist [[Peter Robinson (journalist)|Peter Robinson]] noted that "Madonna invented contemporary pop fame so there is a little bit of her in the DNA of every modern pop thing.<ref name="GuardianPopstars"/> |
Revision as of 07:07, 5 August 2015
Since the beginning of her career, American artist Madonna has had a social cultural impact on the world through her recordings, attitude, clothing and lifestyle. Called the "Queen of Pop", Madonna is labeled by international authors as the greatest woman in music, as well like the most influential and iconic female recording artist of all time.
Accepted as a global cultural icon, sociologists, historians and other social scientists have studied the legacy of Madonna, that goes beyond music,[1] who impact is often compared with The Beatles influence and Elvis Presley's impact (They are the best selling acts of all time, in general, solo male and female category respectively).[2] Madonna is a key figure on popular music; while critics felt retrospectively that her presence, success and contributions pave the way for every female artist and changed forever the music scene for the women in music history, as well the today pop stars. Even, reviews of her work have served as a roadmap for how scrutinize women at each stage in their music career.[3]
Although Madonna has used cultural appropriation, her contribution has only increased the introduction and popularization of these to an worldwide mainstream audience. She is the first multimedia pop icon in history and professionals coincide that Madonna has became the world's biggest and most socially significant pop icon, as well as the most controversial. But some intellectuals, like the French Georges Claude Guilbert felt that she has greater cultural importance, like a myth, that have apparent universality and timelessness. References of Madonna in popular culture are from the arts, food, science and each branch of entertainment. In a general sense, journalist Peter Robinson noted that "Madonna invented contemporary pop fame so there is a little bit of her in the DNA of every modern pop thing.[4]
However, she is not only an omnipresent figure, is a polarizing too. During her career Madonna attracted a contradictory cultural social attention of family organizations, feminist "anti-porn" and religious groups worldwide with boycott and protests. Although this attracted unprecedented world media level, the reviews have been negative resulting sometimes in censorships.
Cultural and social impact
"Madonna of all the superstars who inhabit popular culture, has attracted a volume of critical interest almost equal to the volume of recordings, videos and other materials she has sold."
Madonna has been described a "omnipresent" character and one of the most recognizable names and faces in the world.[6][7][8] Tetzlaff felt that "the power of the omnipresent Madonna has to do with hyperreality, but an infinite accumulation of simulacra, an overabundance of information".[9] Journalist Quico Alsedo from El Mundo in Spain felt that Madonna has build a nation, landless but densely populated.[10] Music critic T. Cole Rachel, stated in 2015, that "there’s an approximate 100% probability that any living human over the age of, say, 25 has some sort of specific Madonna-related memory... Even if you aren’t a super fan—or even a fan at all—there’s no escaping Madonna. She is everywhere."[11]
In his book Madonna As Postmodern Myth (2002) French academic Georges Claude Guilbert explain how Madonna reflects today's society,[12] while William Langley from The Daily Telegraph felt that "Madonna has changed the world's social history, has done more things as more different people than anyone else is ever likely to."[13] American poet Jane Miller compared her functions as an archetype directly inside contemporary culture with the Black Madonna.[14] Professor John R. May concluded that Madonna is a contemporary "gesamtkunstwerk",[15] and academic Sergio Fajardo labeled as "a very powerful symbol".[16] Scholar Belén González Morales of the Autonomous University of Barcelona commented that "'the infinite dissection' of Madonna is like a body paradigmatic of the global age that emanating a tremendous amount of meanings ... Madonna has been become an cultural artifact.[17] Strawberry Saroyan stated that she's a storyteller, a cultural pioneer, and the important thing is her message. "And all of those things have been brilliantly of a piece. Madonna's ability to take her message beyond music and impact women's lives has been her legacy".[18]
Authors noted that Madonna has proved a master in the cultural appropriation.[19] Also considered her "a barometer of culture that directs the attention to cultural shifts, struggles and changes."[20] American Library Association when reviewing Desperately Seeking Madonna: In Search of the Meaning of the World's Most Famous Woman, book of music journalist Adam Sexton commented: "love her or hate her, Madonna is an inescapable figure in the contemporary cultural landscape".[21] Musicologist Susan McClary suggests that Madonna is engaged in rewriting some very fundamental levels of Western thought.[22] One academic from Lehigh University, expressed that she stands behind all people and helps them fight against being ostracized in society.[23] Contribuitor from company Spin Media felt that "Madonna has changed society through her fiery ambition and unwillingness to compromise".[24] Professor Karlene Faith accerted Madonna's peculiarity is that she has cruised so freely through so many cultural terrains. She has been a 'cult' figure within self-propelling subcultures just as she became a major". She also concluded that as fans, moral critics, media journalists, or university scholars, we mediate what Madonna means to our society.[25] In general, academic radicals turned Madonna into the "cottage industry", most notable in the 1990s.[26]
In United States
Madonna is part of the Culture of United States and American icon. Authors in American Icons (2006) felt that "like Marilyn Monroe, Elvis Presley or Coca-Cola, Madonna image is immediately recognizable around the world and instantly communicates many of the values of U.S. culture".[27] Rodrigo Fresán commented: "saying that Madonna just is a pop star is as inappropriate as saying that Coca-Cola is just a soda. Madonna is one of the classic symbols of Made in USA".[28] She was included in the book 100 Entertainers Who Changed America: An Encyclopedia of Pop Culture of Greenwood Publishing Group. Historian professor Glen Jeansonne, said that "Madonna freed Americans from their inhibitions and made them feel good about having fun".[29] Editor Erin Skarda from Time felt that essentially redefined what it meant to be famous in America.[30] Author in Shaded Lives: African-American Women and Television (2002), said that only Madonna rivaled the space Oprah Winfrey occupied in the late twentieth century and in the psyche of national culture.[31] Karen Lac in her Madonna's biography concluded that she is one of those rare people who have become a part of American culture itself.[32] Jim Cullen wrote in Restless in the Promised Land: Catholics and the American Dream (2001) "few figures in American life have manage to exert as much control over their destinies as she has, and the fact that se has done so as a woman is all the more remarkable. That Madonna has done this is indisputable".[26]
In American society, she is often referenced by her sexual feminist political movement. For example, Sara Marcus from Salon.com felt that with the height of her career, Madonna brought the changes to American culture and expressed that "her revelatory spreading of sexual liberation to Middle America, changed this country for the better. And that's not old news; we're still living it.... as we can see in everything from the ubiquity of pop stars to Rihanna's career. She ends saying that "the woman [Madonna] remade American culture".[33] Andrew O'Hagan felt that "Madonna is like a heroic opponent of cultural and political authoritarianism of the American "establishment".[34] Cultural critic Annalee Newitz commented that Madonna has given to American culture, and culture throughout the world, is not a collection of songs; rather, it is a collection of images.[35] USA Today dubbed her as "our lady of constant makeovers".[26] And Lynn Spigel wrote that Madonna intervened "America's notions of sex, gender and power. Madonna publicized her appropriation of the unspoken and taboo areas of Americas's moralist rhetoric and capitalized on it through the scandalization and titillation of the consumer".[36]
Madonna as a icon
Dubbed as the most iconic female artist of all time,[37] Madonna is a synonym of vanguard in the fields of she work.[38] By her impact and contributions, she has been analyzed from the point view of several studies, including feminist, sexual, gay, queer, musical, social and postmodern etc., becoming known as an icon in all these branches. Reader editor Brian McNair wrote that "Madonna more than made up for in iconic status and cultural influence".[39] Professor Dennis Hall said that "the fact that not only her work but her person was open to multiple interpretaions contributed to the rise of Madonna Studies".[40] As Hall, Hao Huang in his 1999 book Music in the 20th Century wrote that Madonna has made a career as well as an art out of reinventing herself — as a rock diva, stage and screen star, video vixen, fashion icon, and cultural phenomenon.[41]
Academics felt that Oxford English Dictionary's recent definition of "icon" as a "person or thing" or an "institution", etc., considered worthy of admiration or respect or "regarded as a representative symbol", esp. of a culture or movement” (OED 2009), and this include Madonna.[42] Alyson Welsh from The Guardian commented that "she is an amazing role model, and a cultural icon".[43] The program Australasian Journal of American Studies (AJAS) remember that it's not an accident that Mickey Mouse and Madonna are worldwide icons.[44]
Professors from Heidelberg University shows how Madonna's "iconicity" is indeed that of a "meta-icon" in the sense that the self-reflexive imitation of celebrity poses. Calls this strategy "iconizing", in analogy to the concept of "vogueing". The essay also inquires into the blend of biography and performativity that can be said to underlie Madonna's "iconizing" in relation to the performance artists.[42] Michelle Goldberg said that "Andy Warhol did an enormous amount to change that idea in highbrow circles, but Madonna made it conventional wisdom to conflate art and commerce. She pioneered this kind of multimedia, 'life as performance art'."[18]
Before closing the 20th century, Q magazine declared her as one of the most important cultural figures of this century.[45] Miranda Sawyer, Jefferson Hack and others authors called to her as a 21st-century icon.[46][47] Andrew Morton wrote in his book Madonna (2002) that "she is the undisputed female icon of the modern age". Also cited as one of the most fascinating women and enigmatic in current history.[48] Madonna in Art (2004) is a book by Mem Mehmet where included the work art by over a hundred artists, including Andrew Logan, Sebastian Krüger, Al Hirschfeld, and Peter Howson. The book is a testament to her unique global impact.[49] French biographer Anne Bleuzen wrote that she is "interplanetary",[50] and Italian author Francesco Falconi felt that she is an icon eternal.[51] Editor Eduardo Gutiérrez Seguro from Latin magazine Quién wrote:
Her Majesty: music and pop culture would not be the same [without Madonna]. Madonna set a precedent never seen for a singer, before her, eroticism was not a must—per very disguised form it takes, in the scenes videos or lyrics—. Feminism underwent a complete makeover and the formula surprise/offense the public has she placed in the Everest of show businness.[52]
Music
"Madonna’s influence reigns supreme on today’s artists, her impact on pop culture through film and fashion may never be topped, and Madonna changed the role of women in pop music. She gave women power, the ability to do more than just record dance hits, and brought about change in the industry that gave birth to every single pop star today."
Rolling Stone described her as a musical icon without peer,[53] while RTL Television Belgium said that "Madonna is a key figure in the music".[54] Bill Wyman, editor of Chicago Reader, wrote that she is a "genuinely freakish figure in popular music".[55] According to international media and critics, Madonna is the most influential female recording artist of all time,[37][56][57] and the greatest woman in music history.[58][59]
Her contributions on music are generally praised by critics, which have also been known to induce controversy. Tony Sclafani from company MSNBC felt that her Madonna’s impact and effect on the future direction of music bests The Beatles, even that quarter century after Madonna emerged, artists still use her ideas and seem modern and edgy doing so.[60] Laura Barcella in her book Madonna and Me: Women Writers on the Queen of Pop (2012) wrote that "really, Madonna changed everything the musical landscape, the '80s look du jour, and most significantly, what a mainstream female pop star could (and couldn't) say, do, or accomplish in the public eye."[61] Similar to Barcella, Joe Levy Blender editor in chief, "opened the door for what women could achieve and were permitted to do".[62]
In music industry, Madonna was the first female to have complete control of her music and image.[63][64] Authors noted that before Madonna, records labels determined every step of artists, but she introduced her style and conceptually directed every part of her career. Although It took video banned on MTV and songs censored in major radios. For the music industry was the foundation to permanently change the way the record companies treat artists.[1] Journalist Carol Benson wrote that Madonna entered the music business with definite ideas about her image, but it was her track record that enabled her to increase her level of creative control over her music.[65] Many years afer, she founded Maverick Records became the most successful "vanity label" in the history of music. While under Madonna's control it generated well over $1 billion for Warner Bros. Records, more money than any other recording artist's record label.[66][67]
Critics felt in retrospect that Madonna's presence is defined for changing contemporary music history for women's, mainly rock, dance and pop scene.[24][60][61][68][69][70][71] Also, she is cited that open the doors for the future hip-hop explosion and approach to sex to her music.[60] Erin Vargo from online magazine in popular culture, felt that "Madonna has fought for freedom of expression by female artists. Her legacy has paved the way for today’s pop, hip-hop, and rock artists to get into their own groove".[72] The Times stated: "Madonna, whether you like her or not, started a revolution amongst women in music ... Her attitudes and opinions on sex, nudity, style and sexuality forced the public to sit up and take notice".[73] The New York Post writer Brian Niemietz, who found that Madonna revolutionized dance music much the same way Elvis Presley invented gospel and rock and roll.[74]
Pop star
Madonna is a pop star icon.[75] She is the first multimedia figure in the history of popular culture.[6] Peter Robinson from The Guardian felt that "Madonna pretty much invented contemporary pop fame so there is a little bit of her in the DNA of every modern pop thing".[4] Rolling Stone of Spain wrote that "Madonna became the first viral Master of Pop on history, years before the Internet was massively used." Madonna was everywhere; in the almighty music television channels, 'radio formulas', magazine covers and even in bookshops. A pop dialectic, never seen since The Beatles's reign, which allowed her to keep on the edge of tendency and commerciality".[71] Also, Caryn Ganz from the same magazine wrote that "Madonna is the most media-savvy American pop star since Bob Dylan and, until she toned down her press-baiting behavior in the nineties, she was the most consistently controversial one since Elvis Presley.[76] Music critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine felt that "one of Madonna's greatest achievements is how she has manipulated the media and the public with her music, her videos, her publicity, and her sexuality".[64] Becky Johnston from Interview magazine commented: "[F]ew public figures are such wizards at manipulating the press and cultivating publicity as Madonna is. She has always been a great tease with journalists, brash and outspoken when the occasion demanded it, recalcitrant and taciturn when it came time to pull back and slow down the striptease".[77]
Academic Becca Cragin explain that "Madonna has managed to hold the public's attention for 30 years now, in large part because of her skillful use of the visual in expressing herself and marketing her music".[19] French academic Georges-Claudes Guillbert wrote that taking some elements and transforms them into commercial products. Cultural critic, Douglas Kellner explained that Madonna's popularity also requires focus on audiences, not just as individuals, but as members of specific groups.[78] Journalist Mark Watts felt that the rise and (perceived) decline of Madonna has gone, so to say, hand-in-hand with that of postmodern theory.[79] According to journalist Annalee Newitz, "the academics in the fields of theology to queer studies have written literally volumes about what Madonna's fame means for gender relations, American culture, and the future".[35] As Newitz, author in Images of women in American popular culture (1995) said that Madonna had reached such staggering celebrity that scholarly and popular assessments of the meaning of her work for the future of feminism, for the sexual values of the young.[80] In this way, many authors, including Alvin Hall and Matthew Rettenmund (Encyclopedia Madonnica; 1995), agree that Madonna is "the world's greatest artist" while others classify her as "the most powerful celebrity or famous woman in the world".[21][81][82] Music editor Bill Friskics-Warren wrote that "Madonna's megastardom and cultural ubiquity had made her as much a social construct as anything else, a "person-turned-idea," as Steve Anderson put it, along the iconic lines of Elvis Presley or Marilyn Monroe".[83]
Mainstream
Called to as a "mainstream hero" by professor Karlene Faith,[25] Madonna is the best-selling woman artist in the history,[37] and the most successful female recording artist of alltime certified by Guinness Book of Worlds Records.[85] With several critics feeling that she paved the way for every female artist,[68] Time magazine expressed that "every pop star of the last two or three decades has Madonna to thank in some part for his or her success".[86] She is cited like an influence by many other artists worldwide.
Her superstardom also is cited as the motivation of the success commercial and popularised or introduction of several things like branches, terms, groups, cultures, persons and products. For example, the media cited her acting in the movie Evita, that popularised Argentinian politics and she put the nation Malawi on the map while she launched the trend for celebrity adoption.[37][87] Madonna's success open to other celebrities such as singers, actors and politicians have successfully dabbling in the publishing field for young audiences.[88] Her first book Sex changed publishing history.[89] Her album Something to Remember set a trend of releasing ballad albums afterward, such as the 1996 albums Love Songs by Elton John and If We Fall in Love Tonight by Rod Stewart.[90]
She popularizing the Voguing. Academic Stepehn Ursprung from Smith College felt that "Madonna created a market for Voguing in the commercial entertainment world". Analized that "through a close connection with the continued commercial success of Madonna, Voguing has left its mark on the world largely... Voguing was first appropriated by pop culture by pop music icon Madonna".[91] The website Wallblog (Haymarket Media Group) from United Kingdom called tentatively in a question, to Yahoo! like the "Madonna of digital media".[92] Even, is cited that she has carried the burlesque to mass culture.[93] As is cited that MTV helped her, some authors like Josue Rich from Entertainment Weekly felt that Madonna helped make MTV (alongside Michael Jackson).[94] Biographer Mick St Michael wrote that "girl power began with Madonna".[95] Also, she has credit for the introduction of electronic music to the stage of popular music,[96] and innovated the rave culture.[97][98] Similar, music critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine felt that Madonna introduced the dance pop to mainstream scene.[99]
According to intellectuals, the phenomenon of femininity inspired by South Asia as a tendency in Western media could go back to February 1998 when the pop icon Madonna released her video for "Frozen". They explained that "although Madonna did not initiate the Indian fashion accessories beauty [...] took the public eye to attract the attention of the global media.[100] Yahoo! contributor Anne Masuda, added that "with Madonna revealed that practicing yoga in her free time, contributed to the growth of American fascination with Eastern culture. Many people began to imitate her style, using henna and clothing with Asian designs".[84] The Spanish style of Madonna in the video "La Isla Bonita" became popular and was reflected in fashion trends of the time in the form of "boleros", skirts with tables and rosaries and crucifixes as accessories.[101] According to the official website of the city Safed, Madonna popularized the Jewish mysticism.[102] Madonna set a trend that influenced people to take interest in the sexuality of women's bodies.[84] In general, some authors like entertainment critic Rogelio Segoviano felt that "the fever for queen of pop does not yield to the passage of time".[103]
Fashion
Time included her as one of the Top 100 Icons of all time in fashion, style and design.[30] Critics praised Madonna's style during her career, while became the defining look in the 80s.[87] This gave rise to the term of Madonna wannabe. For experts, in the 1990s, her use of fashion was even more eclectic.[104]
Journalist Michal Pye, felt that "the face that launched a thousand fashions. To a large extent Madonna not only makes fashion, she is fashion.[105] Editor of Vogue magazine Anna Wintour declared:
She's a perfect example of how popular culture and street style now influence the world of fashion. Over the years, Madonna has been one of the most poten style setters of our time. She, just as much as Karl Lagerfeld, makes fashion happen.[105]
Professors in Oh Fashion (1994) book wrote that "the Madonna phenomenon suggests that in a postmodern image culture identify is constructed through image and fashion, involving one's look, pose, and attitude. Fashion and identiity for Madonna are inseparable from her aesthetic practices, from her cultivation of her image in her music videos, films, TV appearances, concerts, and other cultural interventions".[104] Billboard declared that "no pop diva has reinvented her fashion image with the consistency and creativity of Madonna... she evolved into a fashion-forward icon whose sense of style became as influential as her chart-topping tunes".[106] Similar editor The Huffington Post Dana Oliver comment why Madonna is the ultimate style chameleon and added that "no one has transformed herself like Madonna. She has had about as many looks as she has records. Her ability to constantly reinvent herself and her music has helped to secure her status as an icon, and she has influenced a generation of copycats. (We're looking at you, Lady Gaga, Rihanna and Miley Cyrus!) In short, no one has had more diverse looks than Madonna".[107]
Chloe Wyma from Louise Blouin Media commented that Madonna's chameleon attitude to transform her fashion has become a universally recognized fact.[108] Ana Laglere from Batanga Media expressed that "each new Madonna's style is a trend and is used by major designers as inspiration, flooding our world with innovative ideas".[1] Cynthia Robins from San Francisco Chronicle said that "when Madonna came along, all fashion hell broke loose. Thus far, her influence on fashion —high, low and otherwise—. has transmogrified from 'Who's That Girl?´' to what in the world will Madonna wear next?".[109] Alessandra Codinha from Vogue named as "the master of reinvention".[110]
Feminism
Madonna as a feminism icon has generated variety of opinions worldwide. Frequently she is associated with the feminist movement and she is considered a revolutionary figure who questioned the boundaries of gender. She is also responsible for a change in the mentality and behavior of women and how society interprets these changes.[1] Professor Sut Jhally felt that "Madonna is as an almost sacred feminist icon".[111] Academic Camille Paglia from University of the Arts called Madonna a "true feminist" and noted that "she exposes the puritanism and suffocating ideology of American feminism, which is stuck in an adolescent whining mode". According to her, "Madonna has taught young women to be fully female and sexual while still exercising total control over their lives".[112] Psychologist Jule Eisenbud in Sex Symbols (1999) noted that Madonna refusing to accept that power and femininity equals masculinity she has managed to maintain her sex symbol status.[113]
Jessica Valenti wrote in her book Madonna and Me: Women Writers on the Queen of Pop (2012) "sure, one Madonna gave birth to Jesus... but our Madonna gave birth to "femme-inism".[61] Spanish newspaper Periódico Diagonal convened a researchers panel discussion her as a feminism icon.[93] One of the comments, included that "she democratized the idea of women as protagonists and as agent of their own action", while some ambiguous included that she contributed to women's empowerment of a few Western women, straight and gay middle class, but that empowerment is not feminism, because it is individualistic. Madonna was included in The Guardian list of the Top 100 women and editor Homa Khaleeli declared "no matter the decade or the fashion, she has always been frank about her toughness and ambition". She is still one of the most famous women on the planet and "she inspires not because she gives other women a helping hand, but because she breaks the boundaries of what's considered acceptable for women".[114] Also, was included in the Time magazine list of the 25 most powerful woman in 20th century.[86]
Sex symbol
Madonna has been referred to as a sexual icon,[31][115] and sex symbol; most notable in the decade of 1980s and 1990s.[116] Also, she is cited as an icon of sexual freedom and expression.[51] Author Courtney E. Smith in the 2011 book Record Collecting for Girls noted that most people associate Madonna with sex.[117] Chuck Klosterman in his book Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs (2003) wrote that "whenever I hear intellectuals talk about sexual icons of the present day, the name mentioned most is Madonna".[118] Even, Karen Fredericks from socialist newspaper Green Left Weekly in comment with her sexual attitude said that Madonna capturing an enormous mainstream audience, has had a perhaps surprising impact in progressive circles.[119]
Artists Adam Geczy and Vicki Karaminas in Queer Style (2013) noted Madonna transmogrified from virgin to dominatrix to Über Fran, each time achieving iconic status. Added Madonna was the first woman to do so-and with mainstream panache and approbation.[31] bell hooks teach that her "power to the pussy" credo worked only to solidify Madonna's positioning on the backs of the marginalized. The sexual icon she constructed may indeed, then, accord power to the pussy.[31] Academics from European School of Management and Technology felt that Madonna became in one of the world's first performers to manipulate the juxtaposition of sexual and religious themes.[8] American editor Janice Min wrote that "long before Sex and the City, Madonna owned her sexuality. She made people cringe but also think differently about female performers. Her role as a provocateur changed boundaries for ensuing generations. She was a one-woman reality show."[62] As Min, Shmuel Boteach, author of Hating Women (2005), felt that Madonna was largely responsible for erasing the line between music and pornography. He stated: "Before Madonna, it was possible for women more famous for their voices than their cleavage to emerge as music superstars. But in the post-Madonna universe, even highly original performers such as Janet Jackson now feel the pressure to expose their bodies on national television to sell albums".[120]
During her career, Madonna has several provocative works. Perhaps, her book Sex is most notorious, considered by many as the artist's most controversial and transgressive period.[121] Some authors noted that Sex helped Madonna make a name in the porn industry,[122] and earned her the title of S&M's first cultural ambassador.[123] Steve Bachmann, on his book Simulating Sex: Aesthetic Representations of Erotic Activity pointed out that "perhaps one of the most interesting aspects of Madonna's sexual phenomenon is the extent to which her book marked a new threshold in the pornographic franchise".[124] Brian McNair, author of Striptease Culture: Sex, Media and the Democratisation of Desire (2012) praised this period of Madonna's career, saying that she had "porno elegance" and that "Sex is the author of a cultural phenomenon of global proportions [due to the critics] and thanks to this Madonna established her iconic status and cultural influence.[39] Professors in Oh Fashion (1994) book felt that "Madonna is a toy for boys, but on another level boys are toys for her".[104]
Queer and Gay
According to The Advocate, Madonna is the greatest gay icon of all time.[125] New Statesman reported that Madonna became the supreme gay icon, and the Madonna Studies analyzed and support these.[126] Scholars Carmine Sarracino and Kevin Scott in The Porning of America (2008), wrote that Madonna "gained particular popularity with gay audiences, signaling the creation of a career-long fan base that would lead to her being hailed as the biggest gay icon of all time".[127] Out magazine wrote that Madonna "stuck her neck out and positioned herself to be a gay icon before it was cool to be one".[128]
Associate professor Judith A. Peraino wrote that "no one has worked harder to be a gay icon than Madonna, and she has done so by using every possible taboo sexual in her videos, performances, and interviews".[129] Similar, Alex Hopkins from Time Out magazine denoted that gay community labeled her as [Their] 'Glorious Leader', "Madge is part of our subculture's rich history of diva worship. She has referenced every sacred monster from Dietrich to Monroe, revelled in upfront, often transgressive sexuality and demonstrated a highly developed sense of camp. No wonder we loved her". Also, her lack of inhibition helped inspire a generation of gay men and women to live on their own terms.[130] Social anthropologist Carlos Granés felt that "it is no coincidence that pop divas often become gay icons. Madonna reinvented homosexuals as effectively Warhol".[131]
Madonna is also referred to as a queer icon and icon of queerness. Theologist, Robert Goss wrote: "For me, Madonna has been not only a queer icon but also a Christ icon".[132] Similar Sheila Whiteley from Sexing the Groove: Popular Music and Gender (2013) felt that "Madonna came closer to any other contemporary celebrity in being an above-ground queer icon".[133]
Postmodern
According to Lucy O'Brien: Much has been made of Madonna as a postmodern icon, yet all her reference points have been resolutely modernist—from Steinbeck and Fitzgerald to Virginia Woolf and Sylvia Plath, to her predilection for narrative, psychoanalysis, and.[134]
Canadian editor Richard Appignanesi wrote that for some "Madonna is the cyber-model of the New Woman.[135] Similar, senior lecturers Stéphanie Genz and Benjamin Brabon in Postfeminism: Cultural Texts and Theories (2009) felt that "whether it is as a woman, mother, pop icon or fifty year old, the American singer challenges our preconceptions of who 'Madonna' is and, more broadly, what these identity categories mean within a postmodern context".[136]
Pop icon and honorific nicknames and titles on popular culture
Madonna as a pop icon and figure on popular culture has generated scrutine analysis, but some journalists and critcs like Carol Clerk wrote that "during her career, Madonna has transcended the term 'pop star' to become a global cultural icon".[137] However, academics from Rutgers University comments that "Madonna has become the world's biggest and most socially significant pop icon, as well as the most controversial".[138] Critical theorist Douglas Kellner described her as "a highly influential pop culture icon" and "the most discussed female singer in popular music".[139] Even, in 2012 Latin critics felt that Madonna is the most influential presence of current popular culture.[93] Historian Jasmina Tešanović like others authors, noted that Madonna's changes are well-calculated in order to be ahead of the curve, of the game, to dictate the fashion, to be a trendsetter and called her as one of the most honest performers in pop culture.[19] VH1 listed her behind David Beckham as the greatest pop icon of all time.[140]
William Langley from The Daily Telegraph noted that Madonna "remains a permanent fixture on every list of world's most powerful/admired/influential women."[141] For example, The Sun listed her in the topping of "the 50 female singers who will never be forgotten".[142] American journalist Edna Gundersen felt that Madonna is "durable pop triumvirate".[62] Also, she has been referred to as a "modern Medusa" or "queen of gender disorder and racial deconstruction".[20]
Madonna has several titles, subjectives and superlatives, many of them explain and explore her large impact in many fields. Blogger Richard Pérez-Feria posted on The Huffington Post that "over the course of her remarkable career, Madonna has been called many things... whore, which, for vastly different reasons. What Madonna ultimately achieved is nothing less than reigning as the universe's Queen of Pop, as in music, culture, life".[143] Chilean newspaper of politics, economy and culture, Qué Pasa stated in 1996, that "to Madonna can be attributed many titles and never be exaggerated. She is the undisputed queen of pop, sex goddess, and of course marketing".[144] Music blogger Alan McGee from The Guardian felt that Madonna is post-modern art, the likes of which we will never see again. He further asserted that Madonna and Michael Jackson invented the terms Queen and King of Pop.[145] Like a corollary, her most notable nickname in world popular culture is Queen of Pop. Carlos Otero from Divinity Channel wrote that "Madonna has secured for life the title of Queen of Pop. He further asserted that "after 30 years of career would take another three decades to meet her influence and legacy".[146]
Mathew Donahue, one of 12 faculty members of Bowling Green State University's Pop Culture Studies program, gives lectures about Madonna in many of his music and culture classes has qualified her as the "Queen of all Media".[19] Also, she was named as the mother of "kingdom technological".[147] Madonna is also referred to as the Queen of MTV. CNN commented that MTV could stand for "Madonna Television".[148] Julían Ruíz from Spanish newspaper El Mundo said that she is our "Lady Madonna".[149]
- The Queen[150]
- Queen of Pop[145]
- Queen of Videos[151][152]
- Queen of Concerts tours[153]
- Queen of MTV[154]
- Queen of Reinvention[152]
- Queen of Billboard charts[155]
- Queen of Marketing[144]
- Queen of all Media[19]
- Queen of Everything[156]
- Queen of Appropriation[135]
- Queen of the Obscene[87][122]
- Queen of Controversy[157]
- Queen of controversial music videos[87]
- Goddess of Pop[49]
- Sex Goddess[144][158]
- Majesty[37][87]
- Dancing Queen[159]
- Material Girl[87]
Contradictory perspective
Professors in American Icons noted that she was not only an omnipresent figure but a polarizing one. For example, in 1993, she was the subject of the I Hate Madonna Handbook and the following year the inspirations for I Dream of Madonna.[40] Lynn Spigel noted that Madonna is a producer of cultural ambiguity and openness.[160] Rabbi Isaac Karudi —the highest authority of the Orthodox Kabbalah— described her as a "depraved cultural icon".[161] Social critic and critical theorist, Stuart Sim noted that "Madonna now attained the status of cultural icon, she is however, an extremely problematic one, as her delight in simultaneously evoking and transgressing cultural stereotypes of feminity makes her exceedingly difficult to categorize; depending on one's point of view".[162] Cultural critic Fausto Rivera Yánez from El Telégrafo said that "Madonna has labeling usurper, since much of its aesthetic and musical approach draws on religious imagery of black cultures, discourses of sexual diversity and circumstantial geopolitical contexts".[163] Maureen Orth explain her the contradiction as a cultural and social impact:[164]
"Madonna’s celebrity is unique in that it seems to depend as much on repugnance as on acceptance. Her fame frame, unlike that of most other mega-stars, rests very much on people who love to hate her—while monitoring her every move—and on others who hate to love her, as well as on the traditional adoring fans. Perhaps it’s not surprising that even academics are doing a brisk trade in 'Madonna-ology'.
American Pulitzer Prize-winning critic for The New York Times Michiko Kakutani, felt that Madonna is incredibly popular. Or: "Clearly, Madonna is not universally loved." Or: "The politics of sex and gender representations as they relate to identity has not been lost on Madonna."[20] Authors in Representing gender in cultures (2004) noted that "Madonna has been consistently denied a status of a 'real' musician and even accused of using, in a vampire-like way, fashionable musicians to update her sound".[165]
During her career, Madonna attracted the attention of family organizations, feminist "anti-porn" and religious groups worldwide with boycott and protests. Professor Bruce David Forbes author of Religion and Popular Culture in America (2005) felt that "some of the most important and interesting texts in recent American culture which have overlapping concerns with liberation theologies are by Madonna".[166] Karen Fredericks from socialist newspaper Green Left Weekly questioned if does the "Madonna phenomenon" advance the cause of women's liberation within Western societies? she said that clearly, there's no point going to Madonna for help. She asserted that the artist is a commodity in a capitalist market which has been influenced, at least to some extent, by the demands of the women's movement.[119] Sociologist John Shepherd wrote that Madonna's cultural practises highlight the sadly continuing social realities of dominance and subordination.[22] In 1988, one Italian sculptor planned a statue of Madonna in Pacentro, where are from her paternal grandparents, who said "Madonna is a symbol of our children and represents a better world in the year 2000". The major of the city at this time declared: "it is absolutely untrue that the city administration of Pacentro is willing to host the statue to the singer Madonna as some maintain".[167][168]
Academic Audra Gaugler from Lehigh University advocated for Madonna, wrote that "she has faced much criticism throughout her career, but much of it is unjust. Instead of Madonna's actions eliciting criticism, they should elicit praise because she radically tries to change society by blurring the boundaries that separate different groups of people in society and she urges all people to gain power in their, lives and lift themselves out of subordinate positions. Madonna blurs the boundaries that exist in society and separate people in society in two distinct ways". She noted that there exists a large band of critics that at first praised her, but then became disillusioned with her as she became more and more controversial.[23]
References in popular culture
French academic Georges Claude Guilbert felt that Madonna has long been accepted as a pop culture icon, but he expressed that she has greater cultural importance, like a myth —that have apparent universality and timelessness—.[169] Accerted that "the power of Madonna resides very largely in that planetary Madonnology: everyone has an opinion on Madonna. Her likeness is now exhibited in museums Madonna has become the ultimate reference in several domains".[9] Music journalist Adam Sexton said that Madonna has been interpreted in almost every way possible... "from cartoons, to academic essays to tabloid journalism".[21] As these authors, others academics felt that she passed the popular culture and throughout society, there are many varied images of Madonna.[23]
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suggested) (help) - ^ Orth, Maureen (October 1992). "Madonna in Wonderland". Vanity Fair. Retrieved April 17, 2015.
- ^ H. Oleksy, Elżbieta; Rydzewska, Joanna (2004). "Representing gender in cultures". Peter Lang: 134. ISBN 3631506678. Retrieved June 22, 2015.
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(help) - ^ Forbes 2005, pp. 75
- ^ W. Speers (January 6, 1988). "Statue Of Madonna Is Debated". Philadelphia Media Network. Retrieved June 17, 2015.
- ^ Associated Press (AP) (January 8, 1988). "Statue of Madonna won´t stand in Italy". The Gettysburg Times. Retrieved June 17, 2015.
- ^ Claude 2002, pp. 5
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: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Aguilar Guzmán, Marcela (2010). Domadores de historias. Conversaciones con grandes cronistas de América Latina (in Spanish). RIL Editores. ISBN 956-284-782-9.
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: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Bachmann, Steve (2002). Simulating Sex: Aesthetic Representations of Erotic Activity. Unlimited Publishing LLC. ISBN 1588320634.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Barcella, Laura (2012). Madonna and Me: Women Writers on the Queen of Pop. Soft Skull Press. ISBN 1-59376-475-8.
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: Invalid|ref=harv
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{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Benson, Carol (2000). Madonna the Companion Two Decades of Commentary. Music Sales Group. ISBN 0825671949.
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: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Benstock, Shari; Ferriss, Suzanne (1994). Oh Fashion. Rutgers University Press. ISBN 0813520339.
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(help) - Boteach, Shmuel (2005). Hating women: America's hostile campaign against the fairer sex. HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-06-078122-4.
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: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Blackmore, Hazel; de Castro, Rafael Fernández (2008). ¿Qué es Estados Unidos? (in Spanish). Fondo de Cultura Economica. ISBN 978-968-16-8461-7.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Claude, Guilbert-Georges (2002). Madonna As Postmodern Myth: How One Star's Self-Construction Rewrites Sex, Gender, Hollywood and the American Dream. McFarland & Company. ISBN 0786414081.
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(help) - Clerk, Garol (2002). Madonnastyle. Omnibus Press. ISBN 0-7119-8874-9.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Clúa Ginés, Isabel; Pitarch, Pau (2008). Pasen y vean. Estudios culturales (in Spanish). Open University of Catalonia. ISBN 84-9788-726-3.
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(help) - Forbes, Bruce David (2005). Religion and Popular Culture in America. University of California Press. ISBN 0520246896Template:Inconsistent citations
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help)CS1 maint: postscript (link) - Forman-Brunell, Miriam (2001). Girlhood in America: A-G. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 1576072061Template:Inconsistent citations
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help)CS1 maint: postscript (link) - Fouz-Hernández, Santiago; Jarman-Ivens, Freya (2004). Madonna's Drowned Worlds. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. ISBN 0-7546-3372-1.
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: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Friskics-Warren, Bill (2006). I'll Take You There: Pop Music and the Urge for Transcendence. A&C Black. ISBN 0826419216Template:Inconsistent citations
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: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Geczy, Adam; Karaminas, Vicki (2013). Queer Style. A&C Black. ISBN 1472535340.
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(help) - Hammer, Thomas; Kellner, Douglas (2009). Media/cultural Studies: Critical Approaches. Peter Lang. ISBN 9780820495262.
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(help) - Hall, Dennis (2006). American Icons. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 0313027676.
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(help) - Harrison, Thomas (2011). Music of the 1990s. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0313379420.
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(help) - Herman, Gary (2009). Historia trágica del rock (in Spanish). Ediciones Robinbook. ISBN 8496924521.
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(help) - Huang, Hao (1999). Music in the 20th Century, Volume 2. M.E. Sharpe. ISBN 0765680122.
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(help) - Izod, John (2011). Myth, Mind and the Screen: Understanding the Heroes of Our Time. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521796865.
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: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Jeansonne, Glen (2006). A Time of Paradox: America Since 1890. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 0742533778.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Jhally, Sut (2006). The Spectacle of Accumulation: Essays in Culture, Media, And Politics. Peter Lang. ISBN 0-8204-7904-7.
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: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Kaplan, Arie (2012). American Pop: Hit Makers, Superstars, and Dance Revolutionaries. Twenty-First Century Book. ISBN 1467701483Template:Inconsistent citations
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help)CS1 maint: postscript (link) - Kellner, Douglas (1995). Media Culture: Cultural Studies, Identity, and Politics Between the Modern and the Postmodern. Routledge. ISBN 0-415-10570-6.
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: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Klosterman, Chuck (2003). Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs. Routledge. ISBN 0-7432-3600-9.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Landrum, Gene N. (2007), Paranoia & Power: Fear & Fame of Entertainment Icons, Morgan James Publishing, ISBN 1-60037-273-2
- Lysloff, Rene T.; Gay, Leslie C. (2003). Music and Technoculture. Wesleyan University Press. ISBN 0819565148.
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: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - May, John R. (1997). The New Image of Religious Film. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 1-55612-761-8.
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: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - McNair, Brian (2002). Striptease Culture: Sex, Media and the Democratisation of Desire. Routledge. ISBN 9781134559473.
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: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - O'Brien, Lucy (2007). Madonna: Like an Icon. Harper Collins. ISBN 0-593-05547-0.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Peraino, Judith A. (2005). Listening to the Sirens: Musical Technologies of Queer Identity from Homer to Hedwig. University of California Press. ISBN 0520921747.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Regalado, Jojo (2002). Pietro. iUniverse. ISBN 0595223524Template:Inconsistent citations
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help)CS1 maint: postscript (link) - Sarracino, Carmine; Scott, Kevin M. (2008). The Porning of America: The Rise of Porn Culture, what it Means, and where We Go from Here. Beacon Press. ISBN 0807061530.
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: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Shepard, John (2003). Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World: Performance and production. Volume II. A&C Black. ISBN 0826463215.
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: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Sim, Stuart (2013). The Routledge Companion to Postmodernism. Routledge. ISBN 113454569X.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Smith, Courtney E. (2011). Record Collecting for Girls: Unleashing Your Inner Music Nerd, One Album at a Time. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 0547502230.
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(help) - Smith-Shomade, Beretta E. (2002). Shaded Lives: African-American Women and Television. Rutgers University Press. ISBN 0813531055.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Spigel, Lynn; Brunsdon, Charlotte (2007). Feminist Television Criticism: A Reader. McGraw-Hill Education. ISBN 0335225454.
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: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Whiteley, Sheila (2011). Sexing the Groove: Popular Music and Gender. Routledge. ISBN 113510512X.
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(help)