书籍 Fans, Bloggers, and Gamers的封面

Fans, Bloggers, and Gamers

Henry Jenkins

出版社

NYU Press

出版时间

2006-09-01

ISBN

9780814742846

评分

★★★★★
书籍介绍

Henry Jenkins's pioneering work in the early 1990s promoted the idea that fans are among the most active, creative, critically engaged, and socially connected consumers of popular culture, and that they represented the vanguard of a new relationship with mass media. Though largely invisible to the general public at the time, today, media producers and advertisers, not to mention researchers and fans, take for granted the idea that the success of a media franchise depends on fan investments and participation. Bringing together the highlights of a decade and a half of ground-breaking research into the cultural life of media consumers, "Fans, Bloggers, and Gamers" takes readers from Jenkins's progressive early work defending fan culture against those who would marginalize or stigmatize it, through to his more recent work, combating moral panic and defending Goths and gamers in the wake of the Columbine shootings. Starting with an interview on the current state of fan studies, this volume maps the core theoretical and methodological issues in Fan Studies. It goes on to chart the growth of participatory culture on the web, discuss blogging as perhaps the most powerful illustration of how consumer participation impacts mainstream media, and debate the public policy implications surrounding participation and intellectual property.

用户评论
Jenkins is incredibly excellent. It's hard to imagine 13 years ago, he has already started to tackle the topic like slash phenomenon. The most valuable part is that he does not research from a high stance as being a scholar, but an authentic fandom. With more of the understanding about the depiction of female characters on TV, I felt more sad.
读完《Textual Poachers》后的补充阅读,没有《Textual Poachers》惊艳,但依然很启发,在新媒体平台用户研究泛滥的当今,依然是一部有参考意义的作品。
毕业论文阅读书目,记忆犹新😂
Thesis reference
Jenkins我是你的脑残粉!!!!❤❤❤ 论文靠你了
Critiques: This book includes the idea that he is excessively celebratory about fan culture; and the idea that there is no real sense of social class in his case studies, as there was in the founding work of cultural studies – so there’s a worry that he’s looking at middle-class fan culture.