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[Commlist] CFP: Fandom and Controversy - Special issue of American Behavioral Scientist
Thu Jan 09 17:38:41 GMT 2020
*CFP: Fandom and Controversy*
*Special issue of American Behavioral Scientist edited by Rebecca
Williams and Lucy Bennett*
In 2005, /American Behavioral Scientist/ published a special issue on
Fandom, which contained articles that continue to resonate and influence
the field today. This proposed special issue seeks to offer a follow-up
to that foundational issue, offering new perspectives on fan cultures
which respond to the changes that have happened in the fifteen years
since its publication and acknowledging the complex cultural, social and
political landscape that we currently occupy. The issue seeks to
showcase voices from both established and emerging scholars, offering
work that addresses these key concerns from a range of perspectives. Its
focus is on the relationship between fandom and moments of fissure or
controversy, including how this intersects with the current political
and cultural moment.
Although fandom can very often involve admiration and pleasure towards a
person or text, there are also moments where disappointment, shame, and
displeasure occur (Jones 2018). In the past decade accusations of sexual
harassment and assault surrounding celebrities such as Michael Jackson,
R, Kelly, and the spread of the #metoo hashtag, have caused some fans to
re-evaluate their attachments to famous figures and celebrities,
challenging how we conceive of concepts such as ‘anti-fandom’ (Gray
2003), so-called ‘cancel culture’, or the spread of formsof ‘toxic
fandom’ (Proctor and Kies 2018) or ‘reactionary fandom’ (Stanfill 2019).
However, other fans have sought to maintain their fandom for these
celebrities, offering justifications and solidarity to their object of
fandom in the face of these controversial moments.
Indeed, the wider current social and political landscape offers a set of
unique challenges that has a clear impact on how we understand the
discourses and practices of fandom. As the United Kingdom deals with the
consequences of Brexit and leaving the European Union, as Europe itself
negotiates its future, and as the United States faces a series of new
challenges under the Trump Presidency, the political and the personal
intersect like never before. Meanwhile protests in Hong Kong have
captured the world’s attention as fannish modes of communication
including memes are appropriated for political and cultural purposes
(Teixeira 2019). The issue thus encourages scholars from a range of
national perspectives, especially those from non-Western countries and
those outside of the Global North.
The emerging overlaps between fandom, controversy and the political
moment can be seen in the use of fannish language to describe key
politicians such as those who support the UK Labour Leader Jeremy Corbyn
as Corbynistas (see Hills 2017, Sandvoss 2017, Dean 2017), fans of the
previous Leader Ed Miliband which led to the so-called Milifandom (see
Hills 2015, Wahl-Jorgensen 2019, Sandvoss 2015), or the emergence of
young female fans of former UK Prime Minister Theresa May, referred to
as Mayllenialls (Smith 2017). The approaches of Fan Studies have been
employed to understand loyal supporters of President Donald Trump
(Wahl-Jorgensen 2019), whilst the tools of online fandoms such as
forums, social media, memes and hashtags have been employed by a range
of groups with varying political viewpoints and agendas (Sandvoss 2013,
Booth et al 2018, Wilson 2018). The increasing celebrification of
politics has perhaps reached its nadir in the star status of Barack
Obama (Sandvoss 2012) and the election of Donald Trump to the office of
President (see Negra 2016) but the blurring of boundaries between the
political and the famous continues as rumours swirl about the intentions
of famous figures as diverse as Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and
Disney CEO Bob Iger to run for office.
Meanwhile, existing fandoms continue to mobilise both political and
activist efforts (Jenkins 2012, Hinck 2019) to combat human rights
violations and respond to natural disasters (e.g. the efforts of the
/Supernatural/ fandom in raising money for relief for victims of
Hurricane Harvey in Texas). Other fan groups often find themselves
thrown into unforeseen controversial political moments, as in the
juncture of singer Ariana Grande fans with narratives around
international terrorism after the bombing of her concert in Manchester,
or the co-option of Taylor Swift by members of the alt-right.
Given these intertwining threads, this issue focuses on the confluence
of fandom and controversy. Seeking contributions from a range of
disciplines including media and cultural studies, fan studies, politics,
celebrity studies and beyond, contributors are invited to submit
proposals on any of the above examples, the following topics, or any
other aspect of the linkages between fandom, controversy and politics
(in all its forms):
* Celebrity/fan connections
* Discourses of “superfandom”
* Disappointment and shame within fandom
* Links between fandom, controversy and the public sphere (e.g. fandom
of certain figures or political parties, fannish resistance to
political readings of texts)
* Fandom as citizenship/fans as citizens
* Forms of anti-fandom or non-fandom
* The intersections between celebrity, fandom and political culture
* Fan activism
* The use of social media and its language (e.g. memes, hashtags, GIFs)
* Affect and emotion
* The importance of places and spaces, both physical and virtual
* The creation of transformative works (e.g. fanfiction, fan videos)
that address these issues
* Material cultures
* The ethics of studying these forms of participatory culture and fandom
* Stan culture
* Fandom and cancel culture
* Toxic fandom
Please send abstracts of no more than 300 words in length, plus a short
author biography to Dr Rebecca Williams at
(Rebecca.williams /at/ southwales.ac.uk)
<mailto:(Rebecca.williams /at/ southwales.ac.uk)>and Dr Lucy Bennett at
(BennettL /at/ cardiff.ac.uk) <mailto:(BennettL /at/ cardiff.ac.uk)>by *31^st March
2020*. Notifications of acceptance will be sent out by *30^th April 2020*.
Please note than acceptance of an abstract does not guarantee
publication. All submissions will undergo double blind peer review once
completed articles are submitted.
*References*
Booth, Paul, Amber Davisson, Aaron Hess and Ashley Hinck (2018)
/Poaching Politics: Online Communication During the 2016 US Presidential
Election/, Peter Lang.
Dean, Jonathan (2017) ‘Politicising Fandom’, /The British Journal of
Politics and International Relations/, 19 (2) 408–424.
Gray, Jonathan (2003) ‘New audiences, new textualities: anti-fans and
non-fans’, /International Journal of Cultural Studies/, 6 (1): 64-81.
Hills, Matt (2015) ‘The ‘most unlikely’ or ‘most deserved cult’:
citizen-fans and the authenticity of Milifandom’, /Election Analysis/
2015,
http://www.electionanalysis.uk/uk-election-analysis-2015/section-7-popular-culture/the-most-unlikely-or-most-deserved-cult-citizen-fans-and-the-authenticity-of-milifandom/
Hills, Matt (2017) ‘It’s the stans wot (nearly) won it’, /Election
Analysis/,
http://www.electionanalysis.uk/uk-election-analysis-2017/section-8-personality-politics-and-popular-culture/its-the-stans-wot-nearly-won-it/
Hinck, Ashley (2019) /Politics For the Love of Fandom: Fan-Based
Citizenship in a Digital World/, LSU Press.
Jenkins H (2012) ‘Cultural acupuncture’: Fan activism and the Harry
Potter Alliance. /Transformative Works and Cultures /10. Available at:
http://journal.transformativeworks.org/index.php/twc/article/view/305/259
Jones, Bethan (2018) ‘Navigating Grief and Disgust in Lostprophet’s
Fandom’. In: Williams, R. ed. /Everybody Hurts: Transitions, Endings,
and Resurrections in Fan Cultures/. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press,
pp. 43-60.
Negra, Diane (2016) ‘The Reality Celebrity of Donald Trump’, /Television
and New Media/, 17 (7).Show all authors*Diane Negra*
<https://journals.sagepub.com/action/doSearch?target=default&ContribAuthorStored=Negra%2C+Diane>**
Sandvoss, Cornel (2012) ‘Enthusiasm, Trust, and its Erosion in Mediated
Politics: On Fans of Obama and the Liberal Democrats’. /European Journal
of Communication/, 27(1): 68-81.
Sandvoss C (2013) Toward an understanding of political enthusiasm as
media fandom: Blogging, fan productivity and affect in American
politics. /Participations: Journal of Audience & Reception Studies
/10(1):252–296.
Sandvoss, Cornel (2015) ‘It’s the neutrosemy, stupid!: fans, texts and
partisanship in the 2015 General Election’, /Election Analysis/,
http://www.electionanalysis.uk/uk-election-analysis-2015/section-7-popular-culture/its-the-neutrosemy-stupid-fans-texts-and-partisanship-in-the-2015-general-election/
Sandvoss, Cornel (2017) ‘Corbyn and his fans: post-truth, myth and
Labour’s hollow defeat’’, /Election Analysis/,
http://www.electionanalysis.uk/uk-election-analysis-2017/section-8-personality-politics-and-popular-culture/corbyn-and-his-fans-post-truth-myth-and-labours-hollow-defeat/
Smith, Patrick (2017) ‘The "Mayllennials" Are Young Women Who Love
Theresa May And It's The Most Unlikely Fandom Of 2017’, /Buzzfeed News/,
10 May
2017https://www.buzzfeed.com/patricksmith/the-maylennials-are-young-women-who-love-theresa-may-and
Stanfill, Mel (2019) ‘Introduction: The Reactionary in the Fan and the
Fan in the Reactionary’, /Television & New Media, /Online First, pp. 1 –
12. DOI: 10.1177/1527476419879912
Teixeira, Lauren (2019) ‘China Is Sending Keyboard Warriors Over the
Firewall’, /Foreign Policy/, 26 August 2019,
https://foreignpolicy.com/2019/08/26/china-is-sending-keyboard-warriors-over-the-firewall/
Wahl-Jorgensen, Karin (2019) /Emotions, Media & Politics/, Cambridge:
Polity Press.
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