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[Commlist] CFP Edited Collection: Participatory Culture Wars: Controversy, Conflict and Complicity in Fandom
Fri May 07 13:21:28 GMT 2021
****Call for papers and contributions for an edited collection****
*Participatory Culture Wars: Controversy, Conflict and Complicity in Fandom*
*Edited by Dr Simone Driessen, Bethan Jones, Dr Benjamin Litherland.*
It has become increasingly clear that fandoms and participatory culture
are sites of controversy, conflict and even complicity, complicating
earlier assessments that sought to celebrate creativity, collegiality,
and community. As we continue to make sense of the consequences of web
2.0, the study of fans – the affective bonds, identities, and productive
cultures of a highly mediated and networked society – is vital in
understanding our current moment, whether expressed in debates about
“cancel culture” or ongoing “culture wars”. Fans have had to rethink and
reassess their relationships to fan objects, consider their role in
reproducing global systems of inequality, and reflect on the meaning of
participation in an era that is marked by both moral ambivalence and
political earnestness.
Implicitly and explicitly, fannish practices are involved in a variety
of key social, political, and cultural issues across the globe. They can
be seen in politics, ranging from QAnon’s role in the storming of the US
Capitol building, conspiracy theories relating to the covid pandemic,
and the continued expansion of the global reactionary and populist
right, from Britain to India to Brazil. They can be seen in new cultural
terrains produced by networked movements like #MeToo, Black Lives
Matter, #OscarsSoWhite, and the accompanying activism and responses as
fans come to terms with the crimes, misdemeanors, and disagreements of
former faves, like Xiao Zhan, Joss Whedon, or JK Rowling. They are
expressed in the strategies and tactics of inter- and intra-fandom
conflicts, whether Meghan Markle and the Royal Family or some Chinese
fan responses to BTS talking about the Korean war. And, pressingly, fan
tourism, collector culture, and the energy use of digital culture all
contribute to the ongoing climate crisis.
Scholars of participatory culture can play a key role in assessing many
and more of these issues, but they will also have significant and
ongoing impact on the way we conceptualize fans, fandoms, and
participatory culture. This work builds on developing themes in the
field. Ongoing scholarship about racism, sexism, and homophobia in
prominent fan spaces is vital (Massanari, 2017; Pande, 2020; Scott,
2019), and Jonathan Gray’s conception of anti-fandom (2003; 2005; 2007)
is an important moment in indicating the darker underbelly of fan
cultures. Yet scholarship on QAnon and Trump fandom (Reinhardt,
forthcoming; Miller, 2020), cancel and commenting culture (Clark, 2020;
Ng, 2020; Barnes, 2018), reactionary fandom (Stanfill, 2020), ethical
consumption (Wood, Litherland & Reed, 2020; Tyler, 2021) and serial
killer fandom (Nacos, 2015; Rico, 2015) pose important questions which
cannot be answered simply by reference to anti- or toxic fandom.
This collection brings together some of these authors and perspectives
while developing and extending these debates. We are keen to broaden the
scope of the issue so that studies of fans of film and television are
included alongside studies of music, literary, theatre, sports and
politics. And we are especially eager to include case studies beyond the
anglophone and global north. We are also interested in the practices of
organizations in fan-adjacent areas such as marketing, production,
branding and influencer culture. We welcome traditional essays and
research papers and non-traditional formats, such as roundtables,
interviews, and think-pieces, from people inside and outside of the
academy. Topics might include but are not limited to:
·Conspiracy theories and/as fandom.
·‘Culture wars’, intra- and inter-fan conflicts, and other broader
disagreements or discontent about the meaning and values of popular
cultural texts.
·The consequences of anti-fandom and toxic fandom.
·Expressions and practices of ethical consumption, whether via “cancel
culture”, commodity activism or similar.
·The moral economies of fandom, and their consequences for the media and
cultural industries.
·The ethical implications of participation, whether through fan
activism, dark fandom or other.
·The environmental impact of fandom, from NFTs to fan tourism.
Please send an abstract of 300 words, along with a short author
biography of 150 words to (participatoryculturewars /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(participatoryculturewars /at/ gmail.com)> by 31 July 2021. Please also
address any queries to this email address.
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