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'The queen', aging femininity and the recuperation of the monarchy

Dolan, Josie

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Authors

Josie Dolan



Contributors

Aagje Swinnen
Editor

John A Stotesbury
Editor

Abstract

Located in the ideologically saturated discourses of historical truth and the cinematic conventions of authenticity mobilised by the biopic genre, Stephen Frear’s 2006 film, The Queen, contributes to the hegemonic recuperation of the British monarchy from its republican nadir in the early 1990s. With both the Queen and Princess Diana variously manifesting the ordinary/ extraordinary paradox of royal celebrity, a series of oppositions between tradition/modernity, age/youth, is produced. This resonates with the dominant public memory of a vulnerable Princess Diana victimised by a powerful and domineering monarch. However, representations of the Queen as an ordinary and vulnerable, ageing woman, burdened with the joint responsibilities of family and state are held in counterpoint to constitutions of Princess Diana as a potentially calculating and exploitative celebrity divorcee. This move unsettles previous binary alignments and effectively, the Queen is established as the embodiment of a conservative modernity: as a necessary bulwark against the excesses of a self-serving celebrity culture that threatens to undermine the valuable traditions and protocols of British monarchical nationalism.

Citation

Dolan, J. (2012). 'The queen', aging femininity and the recuperation of the monarchy

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Jan 1, 2012
Deposit Date Dec 12, 2012
Publicly Available Date Feb 10, 2016
Journal Ageing Studies in Europe
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 2
Pages 39-52
Series Title Aging Studies in Europe
Series Number 1
Book Title Aging Studies in Europe
ISBN 9783643501875
Keywords women, old-age, femininity, biopic monarchy, Helen Mirren, The Queen
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/952701
Publisher URL http://www.lit-verlag.de/isbn/3-643-90176-7

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