About this Blog

This is the course blog for Fan Culture (FMST 85) at Swarthmore College, a space to raise questions, continue conversations, and share resources. Use the page tabs above to navigate to the syllabus and readings, or the Login / Site Admin link (under the Meta menu, below) to create a new post.

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Announcements

The Film and Media Studies Spring Screening will take place Thursday, May 8, at 7:30 in the LPAC Cinema. All are invited to come watch the Video Production Lab and senior film projects!

Important: Changes for next week

February 16th, 2008 by Bob

Please note these changes to the reading & screening lineup for next week:

Reading: Textual Poachers chapters 3 & 4 (“Fan Critics” & “Not A Fairy Tale”). Save chapter 5 (“Scribbling in the Margins”) for week 6.

Screening: Rather than gathering everyone together on Tuesday night, I would like you to view this week’s material on your own time. Here’s the plan: go to the library and view two episodes of either Beauty and the Beast or Twin Peaks. (Both box sets are on reserve at McCabe.) You can do this anytime up till Thursday’s class. On Thursday, we’ll split into groups to discuss the texts and fan-reading strategies of the different series, based on the episodes you chose to watch.

I’m making these changes after reviewing the Jenkins chapters and deciding that next week will be most productive if we collectively put together a “big picture” of the TV texts: comparing our impressions and noting patterns across multiple episodes, rather than working from a singular text as we did with “Amok Time.”

Please let me know if you have any questions about this change in plans. And as always, thanks for being flexible …

Posted in Calendar, Screenings | Comments Off

Fan-produced meanings of fan-produced texts…?

February 14th, 2008 by Ariel

One of the most intriguing things brought up in class today, to me, was Abby’s question of why fans feel like they get to prefer meanings and control access when they take that very ability away from producers. I came up with three answers:

1. Fandom is dangerous. Maybe the obscenity suit was a bit of an exaggeration (^^;;;), but imagine if the people who made Closer were kindergarten teachers. Now imagine if their principals, or parents in their communities saw this video. There would be hell to pay, not only for this but for a lot of slash and explicit fic. There are a lot of jobs and positions in society where saying “I write/draw/edit gay and/or fetish porn about fictional characters/actors/musicians/newscasters” will get you ostracized if not fired (see, this isn’t an exaggeration; note that this website about Internet crime has articles about fic on LJ). One of the primary uses of the fan community really is self-protection, at the very least from people thinking you’re weird, but on a very real level, to protect people who write Snarry from being perceived as people who would actually tie children up in dungeons and molest them. Within fandom, you get to label things with proper warnings, both to protect the producer of the fan text and to protect anyone who might not want to read it (anyone from people like Jamison, experienced fans who don’t want their souls tarnished, to actual honest-to-god innocent children). Especially concerning slash, one of the major things that slashers learn is that we’re doing things with characters that might really upset other fans, who are very invested in a different view of the text (not that they’re not doing the same to us sometimes). And, hearkening back to my fanifesto, fandom is in some sense about caring and emotional investment: we don’t want to harsh on other people’s squee by letting them accidentally read something that they don’t want to see, and we don’t want them to harsh on our squee in response.

2. Texts are produced in a capitalistic system and fan texts are not, by and large. We pay for books and movies and we watch commercials during TV, which means that we’re giving something in fair exchange for a text. In some sense, viewers “own” the text, then. If you buy a painting, the painter has no place to say that you can’t scribble all over it in crayon, because you own it, it’s your property. I think a similar thing happens with fan texts: once we invest our time and money, the text is fair game (I’m saying nothing about the actual legal definition of fair use, though). Fan texts, however, are not paid for, they are shared. You wouldn’t scribble all over a painting in someone else’s house that they’re letting you see, so why would you mess with the meaning of something shared with you (rather than bought by you)? I’m not trying to make this argument necessarily the most logical thing, but more to explain and perhaps justify a feeling of violation on the part of creators of fan works.

3. This is more an exception than an explanation, really: there are times when fans are totally okay with people re-interpreting their works. For example, there’s a practice known as “remixing” in which authors write a missing scene or a different perspective or just generally a re-interpretation of others’ fic. However, remixing is entirely consensual, as it were: authors agree to have their fic remixed. There are conventions for this sort of thing. This, to me, is a huge trend in fandom: anyone is perfectly welcome, as long as they play by the rules (for example, these LJ etiquette rules, all of which were familiar to me but had never been spoken to me at all).

Posted in LiveJournal fandom, Musings | 1 Comment »

Speaking of fan intertextuality…

February 14th, 2008 by Diana

This may be completely off-topic, but I just thought of this nice Star Trek Original Series and Lord of the Rings connection, which shows really well how much fans assume other fans are familiar with Fandom in general…

This is from an album released by Leonard Nimoy called “The Two Sides of Leonard Nimoy,” (sorry about the dubious link) exploring both Nimoy’s in-character, and highly folk-inflected out-of-character self.


This second one is part of a much larger oeuvre by Legendary Frog called “One Ring To Rule Them All 2.” 

What kinds of assumptions are Leonard Nimoy and Legendary Frog making by using “The Ballad of Bilbo Baggins?” Would you consider Nimoy’s recording of this song as a commercial strategy, or as an expression of his own fan tendencies? Is Legendary Frog trying to gain more knowledge cred by using a very specific Nimoy reference in an otherwise tangentially related video, or is he also just expressing membership in two fandoms?

What are some uses for intertextuality in fandom that we haven’t discussed yet?

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment »

What about pleasure and passivity, Henry Jenkins?

February 14th, 2008 by abreche1

I like Jenkins. His writing style is engaging and I appreciate his efforts to legitimize fans for academics and others. But the whole concept of textual “poaching” really does leave out a large class of fans who just like to consume media and give credence to the original author. This is an issue that has been discussed in class, and surely such  people (like me, incidentally) still qualify as fans even if they are not members of the type of fan communities that Jenkins explores, but what kind of fans are they?

Many of the fan activities described by Jenkins in the first two chapters of TP apply to me, especially gossip about texts (interesting that this is so gendered, but, a discussion for another time), but so many others do not. I think Jenkins is responsible enough to recognize that his examples hardly apply to all fans, and has wisely  chosen to present a study made up primarily of case studies rather than give readers general rules for describing fandom…but it is still frustrating.

 I am passive in many ways. I sit in front of a tv and I wait to see what Ron D. Moore and his team of writers has brought me on Battlestar Galactica this week. I enjoy watching. I talk about the show and that can involve speculation, but not fiction. I often think that the spectrum is a useful model for many academic questions, but is it necessarily the case here? Surely there is a spectrum of the level of fan activity, but is being lower on that spectrum make you a less serious or devoted fan. Am I lower on the spectrum of fandom because I find the material produced by “the establishment” more compelling than that produced by fan writers.

 It is an honest question. I would be interested in learning what people think actually constitutes a “hardcore fan” Just a thought….

Posted in Uncategorized | 5 Comments »

Gabe Koerner–”The ‘Trekkies’ Kid”

February 12th, 2008 by Greg

Just a quick post to update those of us who were speculating on the future of Gabriel Koerner, the teenager with the impressive 3D modeling skills and precise pronunciation featured in “Trekkies.”

After a google search on his name, I found his website (personal or professional, you choose!). Be sure to check out his reflections (sorry, I couldn’t make this one link: from his personal page, click ‘bio’) on his appearance in “Trekkies.”

Notice that he deftly he avoids the issue of his Trek fandom, which I find interesting considering that he worked on Star Trek: Enterprise (again, no link: from professional page, click ‘resume,’ scroll 1/3 of the way down).

As far as his fandom goes, I didn’t find anything that smacked of fan activity in a few quick searches, but maybe this discussion is itself fan activity?

Posted in Uncategorized | 9 Comments »

Prompts for Week 4

February 12th, 2008 by Bob

First, a note about tonight’s screening: due to rotten weather, I handed projection duties over to Natan, whose own schedule will make it necessary to screen Trekkies before “Amok Time.” (I had planned to show them the other way around, but I want to respect Natan’s needs.) You won’t be watching the slash vid “Closer” at tonight’s screening, so please view it on your own before Thursday’s class. Lauren has posted an immensely valuable guide to the “Closer” debate and provided a number of resources on fan vids, so please check out her post before you watch the vid.

As usual, feel free to respond to any of the prompts below with your comments, or raise other questions / share other perceptions about the week’s screening and articles.

  • Trekkies sets out to document the Star Trek fan community. What are some of the strengths and weaknesses of its approach? How would you characterize its overall take on media fandom? And what similarities and differences do you see between Trekkies and other “portraits” we’ve been exposed to, from Shatner’s “Get a Life” sketch and Jenkins’s recuperation of it to the more “objective” accounts offered by Radway and Seiter?
  • Can you place Trekkies (which was released in 1997) on the time scale of fan studies offered in the introduction to Fandom (“fandom is beautiful” and so on)? How does the documentary’s rhetorical position reflect a particular moment of mainstream culture’s reaction to media fans?
  • How are the fans featured in Trekkies creative? What kinds of material practices characterize their fandom?
  • Picking up on our discussion of authority, how are various kinds of authority invoked in the film? What role do Trek’s professionals (writers, actors, etc) play in establishing this authority?
  • Once you have watched both “Amok Time” and “Closer” (and followed some of the links provided by Lauren), can you evaluate the vid as an instance of what Jenkins calls “poaching”? How does it differ from the kinds of fan activity described in Chapters 1 & 2 of Textual Poachers?
  • Given your experience of fandom (as participant or observer), where do you see poaching happening today? Does the poaching model still hold up? How could we revise/improve it?
  • Chapter 2 of Textual Poachers identifies a number of reading traits associated with “excessive” fandom: the collapse of critical distance; the in-depth study of a show; the recording and remixing of media; gossip. Do you see these behaviors reflected in contemporary fandom? How have they been transformed in the years since 1992? Do the technologies available to fans play a role?
  • Finally, what did you think of the Star Trek episode? (I’m particularly interested to hear reactions from people who have never seen the 1960s series!) Can you imagine yourself in the various interpretive and affective positions of the historical fan? Does the show “scan” for you as a fan object?

Posted in Prompts | 6 Comments »

The Creator as Nomadic Reader

February 12th, 2008 by Fletcher

Our discussion of Jenkins’ definition of the ‘nomadic reader’ got me thinking. Jenkins specifically defines nomadic readers as producers that “assert their mastery over the mass-produced texts which provide the raw materials for their own productions” (23). This definition fascinated me, because it has implications for a number of published (and even critically acclaimed!) works.

Alan Moore is a well regarded writer of comic books/graphic novels; his work Watchmen was named by Time magazine as one of the 100 greatest English-language works of fiction produced since1923 (the only comic included on the list), and one of his stories was the basis for the film V for Vendetta.

One of Moore’s recent works, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, has given rise to two sequels and a terrible, terrible Sean Connery movie. The first volume of the series featured a number of early 20th Century pulp-fiction characters (Mr. Hyde, Captain Nemo, etc.) banding together against the Sherlock Holmes villain Moriarty. Moore expanded upon the idea with subsequent volumes, however, and eventually the series would include characters from works by Virginia Woolf, Kurt Vonnegut, H.P. Lovecraft, P.G. Wodehouse and William Shakespeare, among countless others. The books are very entertaining, both as stories and a game of ’spot-the-character’. If anyone’s interested, I found a website of dubious legality where you can download all three volumes; you’ll need a .cbr file reader, which you can easily find on Google.

Moore uses these characters, not to expand upon the original sources, but to actually develop his own unique text. I don’t think it would be helpful to get into the details of the plot, but Moore creates a remarkably coherent whole from his diverse sources. He develops a consistent fictional ‘universe’ from countless texts. As he describes in an interview:

“The planet of the imagination is as old as we are. It has been humanity’s constant companion with all of its fictional locations, like Mount Olympus and the gods, and since we first came down from the trees, basically. It seems very important, otherwise, we wouldn’t have it. Fiction is clearly one of the first things that we do when we stand upright as a species – we tell each other stories. Now, Nature doesn’t do things for decorative purposes, except like giving peacocks wonderful plumage so they can attract a mate, but since there seems to be little point to telling each other stories all the time — except there must be. We have depended upon them and to some degree the fictional world is completely intertwined and interdependent with the material world. A lot of the dreams that shape us and, presumably, our world leaders, are fictions. When we’re growing up, we perhaps base ourselves on an ideal, and even if that ideal is a real living person, there is every chance that living person may have based themselves on a fictional ideal. This is actually ground that we do cover in ‘The Black Dossier,’ and in the final soliloquy, which is delivered by Duke Prospero. We’re talking about this very thing: the interdependence between the world of fiction and the world of fact. It is something that interests me, and has come to dominate my thinking on the series. I’m not exactly sure why, but it feels as if it might be important.”

Yet however thoughtfully developed and skilfully written these stories are, its hard to categorize them as anything but fan fiction (albeit one sold through the Warner Brothers corporation and made into a multi-million dollar motion picture). Moore did not create these characters or stories, and in despite his critical acclaim as an author he is no more justified using them than a 13-year-old fan-fiction writer is. (In a poetic final twist, it seems that the terrible, terrible League film has actually managed to spawn its own fan fiction.)

I discuss Alan Moore because he’s the most obvious example of this phenomena, but there is a long, long list of published and acclaimed authors reworking other writers’ stories. Among the examples I can think of off of the top of my head are John Gardner’s Grendel, which tells the story of Beowulf from the antagonist’s perspective; March, in which Geraldine Brooks retells Little Women; and Gregory Maguire’s novels, particularly his popular Wizard-of-Oz reworking Wicked. Shakespeare borrowed from historical events and mythology in his plays. Even James Joyce’s Ulysses owes its structure and a number of its themes to Homer’s Odyssey.

My point, if I have one, is that fandom and the fannish interpretation of texts has a significant place in the development of Western culture. It is easy, and sometimes appropriate, to dismiss fan productions as wish fulfillment or escapism. But the internalization and reinterpretation of texts by other creators has produced interesting and vital work (and, in the case of Joyce and Shakespeare, sometimes outright masterpieces). More than anything else I am reminded of Hall’s explanation of the active text, by which creator and consumer exchange ideas in an endless cycle; viewed from this perspective fandom, or at least fannish engagement with text, is an inevitable and vital part of our creative culture.

Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments »

Kirk/Spock video controversy

February 12th, 2008 by lsmith1

The Kirk/Spock video of Kathy’s last post caused some controversy in 2006 when it was uploaded to YouTube without its creators’ permission. The people who make and distribute fan videos have maintained a general standard of secrecy about it, for various material/legal reasons, and some were irritated at what they saw as their complicated art being flattened and misread without the context that gave it meaning. (This fan sums it up: “I’ve done the whole show-vids-to-nonfans thing, and most of them are boggled and confused. They’re not seeing the same vids we are.”) Henry Jenkins wrote an excellent post on the affair, which I really highly recommend at least skimming before/after you watch the YouTube link.

Of course, I confess, I’m always interested in the analysis fans themselves have to offer regarding their own situations, so I dug around for some fan commentary on the situation.

Metafandom is a popular digest-style roundup of fannish discussions happening on LiveJournal. (We often call those discussion “fannish meta”: hence the name.) These conversations range from the trivial to the deeply philosophical, fandom-specific or genre-spanning. The digest’s moderators try to be as inclusive as possible, so there’s a lot of noise to wade through, but when any big controversy hits LiveJournal media fandom– whether it’s about racist re-casting of characters in alternate-universe fanfiction, “clip theft” in fan videos, or the mores of fanfiction about real people– you can find traces of the discussion as it went down by looking up Metafandom’s archives.

So I visited the archives on the same day of Jenkin’s blog post, to see what the fans were saying. Scroll down to “Fan Vids”: a smattering of opinions about the visibility of fanvideos– a form of art long underground as a matter of course– in the age of mainstream internet media. This fan and this fan digest the Jenkins post for their readers– I’d especially recommend glancing at the comments to those posts, where other fans praise or criticize some of Jenkins’s individual points. This post, and its comments, shed a little more light on the historical reasons that video-makers dig privacy.

Finally, one of my favorite essays on the subject: this post (by a Swarthmore graduate!) will offer a bridge for us in the coming weeks to Convergence Culture and other discussions about money and fandom (which I am fascinated by from a feminist perspective). She quotes, from the very first post I linked to:

It’s been bothering me increasingly in recent months, as fanvids get posted on YouTube (not by the creators), that my non-fannish friends link to them as just another cool internet video. Of course, how would non-fannish folks recognise the incredible violation of fannish etiquette involved in posting a vid to YouTube? They’re insider creations, not intended for general consumption, and so why would non-insiders know the etiquette involved?

And answers:

Well, first what it is is we have to start adjusting to the fact that we’re not insiders anymore — the world got really small really fast, and we are right there in the spotlight, or, as Punk put it, they can see us now. We’ve been on the cutting edge, “hiding” on the internet with our creations, but here in Web 2.0, the user-created web, we can’t hide anymore, we are the internet. And so of course people are going to try and find ways to popularize us — eventually, they will try and find ways to use us to make money.

She herself gets followup from new posts like this, this, and this one (which I quoted at the very beginning of this post).

At any rate– I hope I’ve given you a sense of the conversation that goes around LiveJournal fandom under the skin of big controversies. We talked a little bit in class about the voice of the subject as represented in ethnography like Seiter’s or Radway’s. I think it’s appropriate here to check in with some fannish voices, to accompany Henry Jenkins wearing his ethnographer’s hat.

Posted in Gender, LiveJournal fandom, Vids, Visibility | 3 Comments »

Kirk/Spock and fan vids

February 11th, 2008 by Kathy

Since we are watching Amok Time this week it seemed appropriate to bring up fan vids. Fan vids, are videos made by fans, particularly music videos that show slash. One major example is Kirk/Spock slash fan vids. Most of them cut together different bits of episodes (particularly from Amok Time, which is why I thought of it) with a song playing over it to create the slash story. Some bring in other bits of film (m/m sex scences) but many just re-edit the “canon material” ie episode footage, in an inventive way to tell a totally different story. Definately a different medium for fan fiction that theoretically only uses the canon. The link below is a Kirk/Spock video set to the Nine Inch Nails song Closer

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1PwpcUawjK0

Posted in Uncategorized | 4 Comments »

Fan Artifact (Ari Klafter and Greg Albright)

February 11th, 2008 by Ari

The first thing that one notices when watching the “Get A Life” Saturday Night Live skit with William Shatner is its disparaging portrayal of Star Trek fans. In the first part of the sketch—which unfortunately we were unable to locate—“one man laughs maliciously about a young fan he has just met who doesn’t know Yeoman Rand’s cabin number” (Jenkins, 9). We thus see fans portrayed as collectors of trivial and obscure bits of knowledge from the canon, who establish a social hierarchy within the fan community based on the mastery of this knowledge. The implication is of course that the fans are “losers” in real life and therefore turn to fandom for an opportunity to be “winners”, in this case to secure a high rank within this social hierarchy. The other implication is that this knowledge is of little use aside from being an indicator of fan status and that these people are wasting their time focusing on it.

As Henry Jenkins notes, William Shatner’s tirade in this skit expresses and enforces common stereotypes about fans, particularly Trekkers. Shatner describes Star Trek fans as immature and socially inept beings who instead of leading productive lives in the real world, live vicariously in a fantasy one structured around a particular text. But the scathing portrayal of Trekkers doesn’t end with this rant; when Shatner returns and tells the crowd that everything they just witnessed was actually a “recreation of the evil Captain Kirk from episode 37, ‘The Enemy Within’”, they accept this all too willingly. The implication is that the Star Trek fans are gullible and eager to crawl back into their fantasy world and escape the truths of reality once again.

At a second glance, Saturday Night Live’s “Get A Life” sketch may appear to be fannish, even as its most obvious message is anti-fan. It is using a popular text (Star Trek, and Shatner’s portrayal of Captain Kirk) to craft its own meanings, and is somewhat subversive in the process; consider Shatner’s exasperated return to the podium at the insistence of the booking agent. The joke, in the end, was not only on the fans, but on Shatner (whose message in the sketch is that of the dominant culture). This pro-fan reading does not so much contradict Jenkins’ reading as it does expand the reading by altering the focus of analysis, a fan tactic in itself.

Despite the fannish character of the sketch’s ideology, SNL’s methodology shows it to be operating on a level that is more strategic than tactical. The studio had the funds to secure Shatner as a performer and had the airtime on a broadcast medium that reached thousands. Either of these would have been out of reach for a fan community of the time. The Trekkers of today are equipped with such a broadcast medium, so it makes sense that they would use it to reinvent the “Get A Life” sketch (see the b/w recut below posted below), to defend their reputations. That a self-proclaimed “hard fan of the Star Trek series” (see “About This Video” here) would post this video is a mystery to me—indeed, without this fan, the “Get A Life” sketch in its original (if pared-down) form would not be easy to find. Is the posting of this video an acknowledgment of existing stereotypes? An instance of pointing out “extreme otherness” to justify one’s own “relative normality” (Jenkins 19)? Maybe even ironic fandom of the very thing that is othering fans?

The sketch:

The fan rewrite:

Posted in Fan Artifact Presentations | Comments Off

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