From writing fan fiction to campaigning for better media representation, fandom and participatory culture have long been seen as tools to resist dominant narratives and fight for a better future. But participatory culture is not always socially and politically progressive; rather, as
Participatory Culture Wars demonstrates, it can be politically regressive and socially reactive. Communities coalesce around the exclusionary and the misinformed.
Fans, fandoms, and fan practices are no longer the realm of media and popular culture; they have been adopted and co-opted across the contemporary political terrain. This volume offers specific examples and suggests approaches that can help make sense of the constantly shifting interaction between fandom and politics.
Contributors: Alfred Archer, Renee Barnes, Simone Driessen, Xing Fan, Monica Flegel, Zoe Hurley, Bethan Jones, Sklaerenn Le Gallo, Judith Leggatt, Georgina Mills, Peng Qiao, James Rendell, Mel Stanfill, Michelle Stewart, Rebecca Williams, Christina Wurst
About the AuthorSimone Driessen is assistant professor in media and popular culture at Erasmus University Rotterdam. She lives near Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
Bethan Jones is research associate at Cardiff University and an honorary research fellow at Amgueddfa Cymru Museum Wales. She is author of The Truth Is Still Out There: Thirty Years of The X-Files. Jones lives in Aberdare, South Wales.
Benjamin Litherland is lecturer in film and media at Manchester Metropolitan University. He is author of Wrestling in Britain: Sporting Entertainments, Celebrity and Audiences. Litherland lives in Manchester, United Kingdom.