University of South Carolina offers Lady Gaga course
November 2nd, 2010 - 1:29 pm ICT by ANI
London, Nov 2 (ANI): Now you can enroll in a course on Lady Gaga at a US university.
A sociology professor at the University of South Carolina is offering a course titled ‘Lady Gaga and the Sociology of Fame’, reports the Telegraph.
“We’re going to look at Lady Gaga as a social event. Other people say that Gaga’s the new Madonna. I see it more like there’s people who have this very individual thing. Frank Zappa had it. Prince had it. Miles Davis had it. Jimi Hendrix had it. And Lady Gaga has it,” said Professor Mathieu Deflem, who has met the ‘Poker Face’ singer several times.
The prospectus says: “The central objective is to unravel the sociologically relevant dimensions of the fame of Lady Gaga.” (ANI)
- Course in Lady Gaga offered at US university - Nov 02, 2010
- Lady Gaga biopic in progress - Oct 06, 2011
- Baltimore's tribute to Frank Zappa - Sep 21, 2010
- Lady Gaga denies rumors of her feud with Madonna - Nov 21, 2011
- Lady Gaga looks like Madonna with sculpted bustier, high blond ponytail - Feb 15, 2011
- Lady Gaga spent time at a Cleveland yoga studio before her sold-out performance - Jul 25, 2010
- Kylie Minogue irked by comparisons to Gaga - Feb 23, 2011
- Grammys change rules; Gaga ineligible for new artist award - Jul 08, 2010
- Lady Gaga splits with creative director - Nov 15, 2011
- Lady Gaga is 'true original' says performance artist Marina Abramovic - Mar 28, 2011
- Lady Gaga's 'Telephone' to make India debut April 7 - Mar 30, 2010
- FBI spied on Beatles, Michael Jackson, even KFC boss - Apr 14, 2011
- Lady Gaga Gets Infuriated Over Costume Ban At Her Concert - Jun 04, 2010
- Now, Lady Gaga turns into a comic character! - Jan 06, 2010
- Beyonce now subject of university course - Jan 28, 2012
Tags: central objective, course london, fame, frank zappa, jimi hendrix, lady gaga, mathieu deflem, miles davis, new madonna, nov 2, poker face, prince, prospectus, relevant dimensions, several times, sociology professor, telegraph, university of south carolina