Full Description
From Frank Sinatra in the 1940s to Harry Styles in
the 2020s, many of the biggest male stars in the world built their early
careers on their romantic appeal to young women. The lovestruck teenager gazing
at pictures of her idol in magazines or screaming in hordes at a concert is a
stock character in the textbooks of fame. And yet no history book has, until
now, told her story from the start.
Swoon revisits six defining moments in book, film and
music history to uncover the story of how the fangirl became the most enduring
yet disdained icon of pop culture. From the Byromaniacs of Regency London to
the screamers of Beatlemania, these women were tastemakers, visionaries and
cultural disruptors. Their obsessions shaped literary canons, built Hollywood
icons and turned musicians into messiahs long before social media came along.
But with power came panic. Fandom became a moral and cultural battleground.
What was at stake was women's right to want things they weren't supposed to
want, feel things they weren't supposed to feel and express these things
loudly, shamelessly and in public.
Part cultural history, part joyful reclamation, Swoon
returns the silly, swooning, screaming girl to her rightful place in
feminist history - because behind every sigh and every squeal, the seeds of a
revolution were stirring.