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Playing Fans Negotiating Fandom And Media In The Digital Age Paul Booth

  • SKU: BELL-7379382
Playing Fans Negotiating Fandom And Media In The Digital Age Paul Booth
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Playing Fans Negotiating Fandom And Media In The Digital Age Paul Booth instant download after payment.

Publisher: University Of Iowa Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.53 MB
Author: Paul Booth
ISBN: 9781609383190, 1609383192
Language: English
Year: 2015

Product desciption

Playing Fans Negotiating Fandom And Media In The Digital Age Paul Booth by Paul Booth 9781609383190, 1609383192 instant download after payment.

Fans are everywhere: fromFifty Shades of GreytoVeronica Mars,from Comic-Con to sitcom, from niche to Geek Chic, fans are becoming the most visible and important audience of the twenty-first century. For years the media industries ignored fans and fan activities, but now they’re paying attention and a lot of money to develop a whole new wave of products intended to harness the power of fandom. What impact do such corporate media efforts have on fan practice and fan identities? And are the media industries actually responding to fans as fans want them to?
InPlaying Fans, Paul Booth argues that the more attention entertainment businesses pay to fans, the more mainstream fans have become popularized. But such mainstreaming ignores important creative fan work and tries to channel fandom into activities lucrative for the companies. Offering a new approach to the longstanding debate about the balance between manipulation and subversion in popular culture, the author argues that we can understand the current moment best through the concepts of pastiche and parody. This sophisticated alternative to conceiving of fans as either dupes of the media industry or rebels against it takes the discussion of “transformative” and “affirmative” fandom in a productive new direction.
With nuanced analyses of theDoctor WhoExperience in Cardiff, the representations of fans in TV shows likeCommunityand films likeFanboys, SuperWhoLock fans’ use of gifs, and the similarities in discussions of slash fandom and pornographic parody films, this book reveals how fans borrow media techniques and media industries mimic fan activities. Just as the entertainment industry needs fans to succeed, so too do fans need—and desire—the media, and they represent their love through gif fics, crowdfunding, and digital cosplay. Everyone who wants to understand how consumers are making themselves at home in the brave new world being built by the contemporary media should read this book.

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