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This book is a practical and theoretical guide for anyone interested in researching popular media, popular culture, audiences, and fans. Unlike most books,
Theoretical Perspectives does not talk about media texts or fan communities. Instead, it critically explores the workings of fan scholarship: research on popular media and fan culture done by scholars who are often fans themselves, showing and challenging how we have constructed certain ideas about what fans and fandom are, and how to study them/as a fan. Analysing scholarship on two transmedia franchises (The Marvel Cinematic Universe and the BBC's Sherlock) with the help of extensive international participant discussion,
Theoretical Perspectives explores and unravels established, popular theoretical frameworks and value systems on taste and legitimacy, subversion, filtering and safe spaces, neoliberal capitalist realism, and fannish dispositions to offer new approaches for anyone who wants to create a better understanding of fans, fandom, and themselves.
List of contents
Introduction, Chapter 1 Conceptualising Fandom: Community and Resistance, Chapter 2 Theorising Fandom: From Capital to Disposition, Chapter 3 Fan scholars and the Fannish Disposition: The Case of BBC's Sherlock, Chapter 4 The Good Fan and the Safe Space, Chapter 5 Fan Scholarship and Neoliberal Realism: The case of the MCU, Chapter 6 Reflexivity and Fannish Disposition, Conclusion, Bibliography, Index.
About the author
Sophie Charlotte is an independent researcher with a PhD in Media, Culture and Communication from the Huddersfield Research Centre for Participatory Culture (and some technical diplomas). She works in IT and Control, speaking frequently on society and technology. She is single, gym fit, loves cats, philosophy, home DIY, and Warhammer40k.