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gnine ([personal profile] gnine) wrote2010-07-10 01:17 am
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O Mighty Flist (and beyond), I seek your assistance!

As you may or may not know, I’m currently working on my MA in Critical Media and Cultural Studies at University of London, SOAS (School of Oriental and African Studies). For my thesis, I’m delving into the question of how culture, one’s own, as well as that of the source material one is fanning on, affects how fans identify and interact with said media and the fandoms surrounding them.

I am very aware that academic scrutiny of fandom has at times been…less than pleasant, shall we say. With that in mind, I’d like to make clear that it is not my intent to place fen or fandom under the microscope, but rather to use them as one concrete example in the broader investigation of culture’s impact on the field of media studies.

The following questions I’ve split into two sections, one focused on the media itself, the other on fandom as a whole. These are just a jumping-off point; feel free to answer as many/as few of the questions as you’d like, in as much/little detail as you feel comfortable. If you’d prefer to comment anonymously or email me directly at gnine AT livejournal DOT com, that’s fine, too.

Media Questions:

How much of what you fan on is produced by your own culture/country?

How much of what you fan on is originally produced in your native language(s)?

Have either of the above changed over the course of your time in fandom?

If/When consuming material not originally produced in a language you are fluent in, how do you access it? (e.g., dubs, scanlations, muddle through the raws and just enjoy the pretty people/art/voices, etc.)

Are there any culture’s materials you particularly avoid or seek out? (e.g. you avoid anything Japanese, be it anime, manga, video games, etc.; you love anything British, TV, books, etc.)If so, why?

The first time you watched/read/listened to something produced by a culture whose material you had not previously fanned on, were there details you had to adjust to (e.g. narrative styles, character depictions, pacing, cultural references, etc.) ?

Are there any particular tropes/stereotypes/character traits/plot devices you particularly associate with a certain culture’s material?


Fandom Questions:

At a guess, are the majority of the people you regularly fan with your nationality?

Do you think this changes depending on what fandom you’re in?

If you go to live fan events/conventions/meet-ups, have you attended different fan events for media of different cultures? (E.g. have you gone to both conventions for an English-language series (such as Supernatural) and anime conventions?)If so, have you noticed any differences between such conventions?

Have you ever attended fan events/conventions/meet-ups in more than one country? If so, did you notice any differences?

Has fanning with people from various countries ever caused surprise/confusion/misunderstandings?

Do your expectations for the fandom and its fanwork change depending on the source culture?


Additionally, there are a few details that’d be helpful for everyone to include, if they could:

Nationality:
Native language(s):
Language(s) you most often fan in (e.g. write/read/discuss in):
Gender (that you're most comfortable identify yourself as):
Is it all right for me to reference you directly in the final paper:
If yes, how would you prefer to be called (e.g. LJ handle/name/nickname/anonymously, etc):
If needed, would it be alright for me to contact you for more questions/details via email/skype, etc.?



Beyond that, if there are any other details, personal experiences, general trends you’ve observed, feel free to expound. Further discussion/questions in the comments is also very welcome.

If anyone's willing to link this in their journals, I’d be grateful, as the more responses the more expansive the research.

Thanks for your help!

Re: I'm terribly sorry, this is going to be long. >.> 3/3

[identity profile] rhythmia.livejournal.com 2010-07-12 06:26 am (UTC)(link)
-Do your expectations for the fandom and its fanwork change depending on the source culture?

Yes! Anime and manga I'm used to seen lots of beautiful fanart, and fanfic, and fanvids (that are usually either funny and completely ridiculous or dramatic and beautiful, set to 90's US pop music. XD).
Western tv has led me to expect lots of fanfic, fanvids out the wazoo and the occasional comic or fanart.

Jpop and kpop, having canon that is anchored in actual entertainers with ongoing activities and not a closed fictional canon, tends to lend itself to vignette and one-shot fics. There are so few long fics compared to the fiction-based fandoms. Also there is no shortage of vids pulling out footage from idols doing silly things on variety shows. :D Also, because the idols are doing things like twitter and webpages, fic can have sections using those formats.



A random thing: every so often I've dipped a toe back into the Western media fandom side of things. It's definitely interesting to hear the different discourses compared to in East Asian media. Western media is so US-centered, in terms of cultural foundation, how things like race/class/gender/sexuality/etc. are discussions and what terms are used. In my East Asian fandoms, the cultural bases of both the source and all the many fans are different.

I remember in Western fandom there was a big thing over the creation of Archive of Our Own and legality of fanfic and whether to include (Western) bandom and there was a long of arguing and wankery. And that entire conversation didn't even touch the are of jpop fandom I was in, except through the few people like me who kept a toe in each sandbox. Probably because writing fanfic doesn't really...violate copyright on real people. There's a different mess instead involving subbing and sharing media with other fans, because videos, on the other hand...

Occasionally I encounter an interesting blanket acceptance of the quirks and issues of Japanese or Korean culture, and then there's some dust-up and then posters come out of the woodwork and things seesaw between calls for cultural relativism versus 'oh that's horrible! Here in the US etc etc' and I just facepalm all over the place.

Oh man, tl;dr. XDDD;;; I should add that being part of jpop fandoms have changed the way I use emoticons, in that I picked up a new vocabulary of them and have a sad tendency to tack them on the end of all my sentences, because it's like the way I speak Cantonese and there are mood markers that you can place on the end of a sentence to nuance it. Also because it's so hard to tell someone's tone of voice/intention from text sometimes. I didn't used to do this when I was just in anime/manga fandoms though!

Last thing! You can call me rhythmia, I'm from the US, fan in English, though I speak English and Cantonese natively and read English much better than I can read Chinese. Go right ahead about using my input and please ask me to expand. If there are more topics you're interested in, just ask, because I'm sure I have lots of thoughts, but I need questions to tease them out, hehe. I hope this helps! ^_^

Re: I'm terribly sorry, this is going to be long. >.> 3/3

[identity profile] gnine.livejournal.com 2010-07-12 04:47 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you so so very much for the detailed responses! Rather than tl;dr, it's ridiculously helpful! Seriously, THANK YOU! You'll probably hear more from me in the next week or so with more questions/discussion as I go through all the data I'm getting. ^__^

Re: I'm terribly sorry, this is going to be long. >.> 3/3

[identity profile] rhythmia.livejournal.com 2010-07-13 04:39 pm (UTC)(link)
Heee, great! I've been having a great time reading through other people's responses, and I linked it in my journal to see if anyone on my flist will bite (and haha, [livejournal.com profile] kegom already did, I figured she would get a kick out of this study). Just reply back here with more, or PM me or whatever you want. If you do so here, I'd be curious to see if discussions get sparked in the comments, as people compare notes, as it were. :D

Re: I'm terribly sorry, this is going to be long. >.> 3/3

[identity profile] gnine.livejournal.com 2010-07-13 08:34 pm (UTC)(link)
Thanks so much for the linkage! And yeah, I'm curious about discussions as well! ^__^

Re: I'm terribly sorry, this is going to be long. >.> 3/3

[identity profile] gnine.livejournal.com 2010-08-26 09:00 pm (UTC)(link)
So I know this is ridiculously after the fact (busy summer/additional research/the fact that I'm a horrible procrastinator and more all account for it) but if you have the time/inclination, I have a few follow-up/additional questions that would be a big help if you could answer:

In what ways (if any), for you personally, do your fannish practices change depending on the source culture of the material you're fanning on? (e.g. do you watch more music vids for anime, do you read/write particular kinds of fic for western shows, do you seek out cons for only certain types of fandoms, etc.) The more specific the examples, the better.

Semi-related to the above question, in what ways, if any, has your fannish practices changed over your time in fandom? (both in general over the years you've been in fandom and in specific fandoms. ) And have these changes at all coincided with differences in source culture? (eg for western fandoms, you've always just watched/read fic w/out much change over time but with Japanese fandom, you started watching anime then moved on to music vids then progressed to
helping scanlate manga because you went on to learn Japanese, etc.)

And one or two questions on one topic I might be exploring in a bit more detail, so:

Are you interested in/have any experience with/in slash/Boys Love/yaoi/ m/m etc.? If yes, do you notice a difference in how it is approached/explored depending on the source culture of the material? Examples/details appreciated.

Do you personally approach it differently/have different expectations for how it's depicted in fan works depending on the culture? If so, in what ways?

Oh, also, if I don't already know it (ie know you in person) and you're comfortable sharing it, what gender do you identify yourself as?

Again, thanks for your time, any details you have already or can additionally provide are a big big help! ^_____^