Schwarzenegger Syndrome: Politics and Celebrity in the Age of Contempt
By (Author) Gary Indiana
The New Press
The New Press
13th September 2005
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Cultural studies
306.2
Hardback
160
Width 140mm, Height 195mm
270g
From the California recall circus, in which Gary Coleman, Larry Flynt, and Arianna Huffington vied with over 100 other candidates to replace a supposedly inept governor, Arnold Schwarzenegger emerged triumphant. How did this onetime bodybuilding champion and gay pin-up, with no political experience and a string of mediocre action movies to his name, come to take over the world's fifth-largest economy In The Schwarzenegger Syndrome, celebrated journalist and novelist Gary Indiana makes the case that this tale is a product of a media-soaked culture, in which image matters more than substance. The recall process, a parody of direct democracy, gave Schwarzenegger the chance of a lifetime. With so many candidates in the race, he certainly wasn't the most qualified, the most articulate, or the most credible - but he was the most famous. And for the majority of Californians, that was enough. A witty and biting travelogue through the culture of celebrity where it intersects with American political life, The Schwarzenegger Syndrome lays bare the dark implications of Schwarzenegger's rise to power in the Golden State.
"It's the most difficult [decision] I've made in my entire life, except the one I made in 1978 when I decided to get a bikini wax. -Arnold Schwarzenegger, announcing his candidacy for governor of California in 2003"
Gary Indiana, whose essays have appeared in the Village Voice, the Los Angeles Times Book Review and the London Review of Books, is the author of six novels and several nonfiction books.