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[ecrea] Journal of Fandom Studies 6.2 published
Tue Sep 25 04:21:18 GMT 2018
Intellect is delighted to announce that the Journal of Fandom Studies
6.2 is now available! For more information about the journal, click here
>>https://bit.ly/2xMh3MX
Special issue: Queerbaiting
Content
Introduction: Queerbaiting
Authors: Joseph Brennan
Page Start: 105
Fans employ ‘queerbaiting’ to call out media producers and performers
who they believe have deliberately inserted homoerotic subtext in order
to court a queer following and yet never actualize this subtext; it has
attracted a level of cultural currency in the popular and scholarly
field. In this introduction to the Journal of Fandom Studies special
issue on the topic, the issue’s guest editor sets out how the term has
developed in extant scholarship, including more recent expansion to
account for manifest queerness deemed negative. Articles of the present
collection, five in total, are then introduced in line with their
connection with current debates and how they advance understandings of
the term. Future research directions for scholars writing on the topic
are also considered.
A genealogy of queerbaiting: Legal codes, production codes, ‘bury your
gays’ and ‘The 100 mess’
Authors: Elizabeth Bridges
Page Start: 115
Contemporary queerbaiting is a historically situated phenomenon that in
significant ways parallels reactions to nineteenth-century legal-medical
discourse on the nature of homosexuality, and the subsequent punishment
of it through enforcement of sodomy laws and/or blackmail against
(primarily) gay men. In the twentieth century, movie and TV morality
codes enacted a parallel dynamic of enforcement and punishment, at first
with the banning of any mention of homosexuality altogether. Later, as
codes relaxed and homosexuality became visible on-screen, film and TV
moved from silencing to punishing, with the tendency kill queer
characters or otherwise present them as miserable and morally
compromised. The ‘bury your gays’ (BYG) trope, a phenomenon adjacent to
queerbaiting, developed out of these decades of the
enforcement-punishment dynamic and continues even decades after the
codes lost sway. In contemporary television, where queerness is no
longer entirely taboo, queerbaiting often gives way to canon queer
characters, who are still killed at vastly disproportionate rates
compared with their heterosexual counterparts. The fandom of one such
character – Lexa, killed off from the American CW network’s series The
100 in March 2016 – brought the dual problems of queerbaiting and BYG
into the open via a series of unprecedentedly well-coordinated media
actions that have, perhaps, led TV writers to rethink how they present
their queer characters in the context of socially aware, interactive
audiences.
The contest of queerbaiting: Negotiating authenticity in fan–creator
interactions
Authors: Michael McDermott
Page Start: 133
Queerbaiting emerged as a named phenomenon through fan communities
challenging the purportedly intentional exploitation of their queer
sensibilities and desires. Analysing how this dynamic is staged through
fan–creator interactions is paramount to understanding queerbaiting. I
suggest that ownership over and claim of a single, authentic textual
meaning and story is at the heart of the contest of queerbaiting. I
employ fans and creators of the television shows Supernatural and Teen
Wolf as case studies and analyse their interactions in online videos of
fan conventions. I argue that the authenticity and commitment to a
supposedly singular meaning is negotiated in these interactions through
the humorous sexualization of the actors and characters. My central
argument is that fan–creator contestations demonstrate that accusations
of queerbaiting ultimately rely on notions of authorial intention and
control.
‘Smile, Derek. Why don’t you smile more?’: The objectification of Derek
Hale and queerbaiting in MTV’s Teen Wolf
Authors: Jaquelin Elliott And Megan Fowler
Page Start: 145
Holding in mind Barbara Creed’s assertion that the werewolf is a
‘feminized male monster, a queer creature aligned to the primal
uncanny’, this article explores gender trouble and queerbaiting in MTV’s
Teen Wolf – a series infamous in online fan circles for baiting fan
favourite pairing Derek Hale/Stiles Stilinski (dubbed ‘Sterek’ by fans)
while largely failing to fulfil its promises of dynamic,
three-dimensional LGBTQ representation. This article enumerates the
queer cues embedded in Stiles and Derek’s narratives, paying special
attention to Stiles’ implied bisexuality and Derek’s constant
objectification by the camera, repeated sexual victimization, and the
often queered repositioning of his body into the role of ‘damsel in
distress’. By doing so, this article attempts to contextualize Teen Wolf
fans’ reasons for shipping Sterek and will argue that this queer reading
is indeed not a ‘willful misreading’, but one drawing upon a complex web
of queer affect and queerbaiting in the show. This article will also
examine the ways in which fans use both fan works and social media not
only to explore readings of Derek and Stiles as queer and fight back
against queerbaiting, but also to articulate the reparative potential of
a consensual relationship with Stiles for Derek’s healing from his
repeated trauma.
The homoerotics of the boyband, queerbaiting and RPF in pop music fandoms
Authors: Emily E. Roach
Page Start: 167
This article analyses pop music fandoms, exploring the relationship
between LGBT communities and popular music, the homoerotics of the
nineties boyband, Nick Jonas and performative allyship, the phenomenon
of One Direction and related slash ship, Larry Stylinson and the queer
appeal of solo artist and former One Direction member, Harry Styles.
Through these examples, this article explores the trends towards
marketing and styling boybands with an eye towards homosexual men and
heterosexual teenage girls and/or a large fandom producing queer works
of ‘Real Person Fiction’. This article interrogates the perilous line
between being baited for economic gain and the transformative
possibilities of queer coded pop and homoerotic subtext, which can have
an affirmational impact on queer fans. It considers the problems with
making incomplete assumptions about fandom demographics and draws out
complexities involved when real lives and sexualities are at the
forefront of anti-queerbaiting rhetoric and fan activism takes a toxic
turn. The article explains why ‘queerbaiting’, as the term has been
broadly defined in relation to fictional narratives, is not quite the
right terminology to use when interrogating the behaviour of pop stars
and their interactions with the fandoms built around them
Slashbaiting, an alternative to queerbaiting
Authors: Joseph Brennan
Page Start: 187
This article analyses discourse on gay and lesbian Internet forum
DataLounge that discusses homoeroticism in the BBC’s Merlin. Merlin is a
cult series that is commonly associated with the ‘queerbaiting’
phenomenon, a fan activist term that criticizes unrealized homoerotic
suggestiveness in mainstream texts. Textual analysis is performed on
seven relevant threads created between 2009 and 2012, which have
attracted in excess of 700 responses. The threads were authored by
predominately gay men and align with the airing of the series,
commentators posting in real time. Focus is given in the analysis to
discussion of homoeroticism in the text, in particular on how this
homoeroticism is interpreted by viewers. Notably, across this sample,
homoeroticism in Merlin is discussed in a celebratory way, with no
mention of queerbaiting or the exploitative connotations that underscore
the term. In fact, such homoeroticism is routinely described as a form
of ‘fan service’ across the sample. The study provides empirical
evidence that a sizeable proportion of the Merlin viewership (gay men)
have a more ‘playful’ approach to the queerbaiting phenomenon. The
discourse also supports the coining of a new term, ‘slashbaiting’, which
is in line with a view of homoeroticism in contemporary media as a form
of fan service, in particular for slash fans.
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