Fanfiction and the author: How fanfic changes popular cultural texts
Research output: Book/Report › Book › peer-review
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Amsterdam University Press, 2017. 248 p. (Transmedia).
Research output: Book/Report › Book › peer-review
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TY - BOOK
T1 - Fanfiction and the author:
T2 - How fanfic changes popular cultural texts
AU - Fathallah, Judith
PY - 2017/3/15
Y1 - 2017/3/15
N2 - Whether you look at quantity, quality, or readership, we are in an unprecedented era of fan fiction. Thus far, however, the genre has been subject to relatively little rigorous qualitative or quantitative study—a problem that Judith M. Fathallah remedies here through close analysis of fanfiction related to Sherlock, Supernatural, and Game of Thrones. Her large-scale study of the sites, receptions, and fan rejections of fanfic demonstrate how it often legitimates itself through traditional notions of authorship even as its explicit discussion and deconstruction of the author figure contests traditional discourses of authority and opens new spaces for writing that challenges the authority of media professionals.
AB - Whether you look at quantity, quality, or readership, we are in an unprecedented era of fan fiction. Thus far, however, the genre has been subject to relatively little rigorous qualitative or quantitative study—a problem that Judith M. Fathallah remedies here through close analysis of fanfiction related to Sherlock, Supernatural, and Game of Thrones. Her large-scale study of the sites, receptions, and fan rejections of fanfic demonstrate how it often legitimates itself through traditional notions of authorship even as its explicit discussion and deconstruction of the author figure contests traditional discourses of authority and opens new spaces for writing that challenges the authority of media professionals.
M3 - Book
SN - 9789089649959
T3 - Transmedia
BT - Fanfiction and the author:
PB - Amsterdam University Press
ER -