Journal Committee

  • Spotlight on Transformative Works and Cultures

    By Jintian on Wednesday, 17 July 2013 - 3:43pm
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    Today we'd like to shine a spotlight on Transformative Works and Cultures (TWC), the OTW's international peer-reviewed academic online journal focused on media studies. In September, TWC will be publishing its 14th issue for its 5 year anniversary. A summary bibliography of all essays published by TWC can be found here on Fanlore, and a more comprehensive list of fan studies research is here on Zotero.

    TWC's co-editors Kristina Busse and Karen Hellekson kindly agreed to an interview about the journal's activities and goals, which you can read below the cut.

    Who is behind TWC?

    Our editorial team roster can be found here at TWC's Web site. We have a slate of volunteers who work on production, some of whom are OTW staffers in other contexts. We have volunteers who copyedit, HTML code/lay out the pages, and proofread.

    For the journal itself, we have prominent scholars on the Editorial Board; scholars, grad students, and acafans who peer review; and book review and Symposium editors. Kristina works on the front end (solicitation, trafficking peer review) and Karen works on the back end (production-related stuff).

    How do you get material for TWC issues?

    We solicit all the time for all aspects of the journal. If we hear an interesting paper at a conference, meet an interesting person, or read an interesting blog post that we hope might get expanded, we e-mail the writer and ask her to consider submitting a piece. With the journal established after 5 years and 13 issues, we also get unsolicited essays. We also slate guest-edited special issues, which bring new readers and reviewers to the journal who may consider submitting.

    Once an essay is submitted for the double-blind peer-reviewed sections (Praxis or Theory), we read through it to ensure it's appropriate for the journal and has a chance to make it through peer review. Sometimes we reject it at this point, but more often, we return it to the author with specific editorial suggestions for revision. If the essay is ready for double-blind peer review, we ask someone from our editorial board or someone in the field for a review. Once their reviews are submitted, we use these as a basis to either accept the essay, ask the author to revise, or reject it. An essay that has been accepted by two peer reviewers independently is accepted and sent into production.

    Not all articles are double-blind peer reviewed. Interviews and most multimedia pieces are editorially reviewed; book reviews are reviewed by the review editor; and Symposium essays are reviewed by the Symposium editor and one or two internal reviewers.

    TWC does not hold a backlog; all papers are published.

    What's the production process like for a typical issue?

    The production process, run by production editor Rrain Prior, begins 6 weeks before the publication date. First the essays are copyedited to our style (Chicago 16). The author reviews the copyedited file, and then the layout team tags the RTF file to HTML. This file is uploaded into our online publishing system, and galley pages are created by the software. These galley pages are read by the proofreader and again by the author. Karen also proofreads every issue. Rrain then inputs all the corrections at once. As a final step, Rrain assigns every document a unique DOI number and makes a DOI deposit (this ensures that the URLs will persist). Then the issue goes live.

    A plug for our software: we use Open Journal Systems (OJS), an open source software that keeps track of absolutely everything for us, from submission to print. It's crucial to our process. The author uploads her paper into the system; the peer reviewers get their assigned papers from OJS and then type their responses into a field that OJS provides; OJS inserts the peer reviewer's remarks into the letter we write to the author; and the system logs all the e-mails. Every aspect of production happens through the system. It doesn't let you skip steps, and it honors the blind peer review process.

    TWC ostensibly publishes twice a year, but you've published quite a few bonus third issues. Can you explain how these special issues come about?

    TWC publishes a general issue every September. The other issues are special guest-edited issues that focus on narrow topics. For instance, we've published special issues on games (2009), fan activism (2012), and comics (2013), and forthcoming are issues on fan labor (2014) and performativity (2015).

    These special issues are usually pitched by the special issue guest editor; there's info about this on our Web site so the guest editors know what they're in for, because they are in charge of solicitation, and they have to do quite a bit of peer review and other work.

    We help the special issue guest editor write and disseminate the call for papers. Usually the deadline for receipt of articles is about a year before the issue is supposed to come out. During that year, the essays go through peer review and then into production. The special issue editor writes an introduction/editorial and may also participate in soliciting and reviewing the non-peer-reviewed items, such as interviews, multimedia, and Symposium, as well as suggest relevant books for review.

    You're planning to release a fan fiction studies reader. Could you talk a bit about that?

    For years, we have talked about the fact that fan studies is missing an actual reader—something that collects the essays that many of us repeatedly cite and reference. Worse, many of the essays are difficult to access—they are parts of monographs or essay collections, and some are long out of print. Two years ago, the University of Iowa Press started a fan studies line, and we proposed our reader. It's a reprint anthology and it includes essays by people such as Camille Bacon-Smith, Henry Jenkins, and Joanna Russ.

    The Fan Fiction Studies Reader contains 11 essays in four sections, ranging from Fan Fiction and Literature to Fan Creativity and Performance. The essays are meant to provide a theoretical grounding so that readers can then continue with further essays in their area of interest, many of which are available online—for example, in TWC! We offer a general introduction on the history and state of the field as well as more specific introductions to the four sections, each of which covers the research in a specific field. The collection should be available by the end of the year, and all royalties will go to OTW.

    When you're not working on TWC, what do you do professionally and fannishly?

    Karen: I work full-time as a copyeditor in the scientific, technical, and medical market; mostly I edit medical journals and scholarly books. I present at scholarly conferences in the fields of fan studies and science fiction. This year I have given two talks about Doctor Who, one about the Big Finish audio alternate history Unbound line and another about fan-created Doctor Who vids that seek to recreate the missing eps. Alas, I've stepped back from fandom, in part because of TWC! It takes all the time and energy I formerly used writing fan fiction.

    Kristina: I teach in the philosophy department at the University of South Alabama and raise two teenagers. I am in the early stages of a book for the University of Iowa Press on the ethics and aesthetics of fan fiction. I'm in a bit of a fannish return to lurking, because I can't write short enough for Twitter and miss the back and forth in comments on Tumblr. Instead I read a lot on AO3.

  • TWC Releases No. 13 (Appropriating, Interpreting, and Transforming Comic Books)

    By Angela Nichols on Sunday, 16 June 2013 - 12:21am
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    Transformative Works and Cultures (TWC) today released issue No. 13, "Appropriating, Interpreting, and Transforming Comic Books," guest edited by Matthew J. Costello, Saint Xavier University, Chicago. Both comic books and films based on comic book properties are addressed in this issue. Following its regular format, this Open Access Gold online multimedia journal has collected scholarly essays, personal essays, book reviews, and interviews that seek to bridge fan and academic writers and readers. TWC is published under the umbrella of the nonprofit fan advocacy group Organization for Transformative Works

    Guest editor Costello sees comic books as transitioning in a moment of change. Comics are stereotypically created and read by white boys and men, and as an art form, the genre of comics has been slow to respond to women and people of color. Yet change is undoubtedly occurring, affecting both fandom and the industry. "I see this change as marking a big transformation in comic books," Costello remarked. "One thing that is implicit in this issue, taken as a whole, is that transformation is a political act."

    Several writers contend with the fraught topic of gender. Suzanne Scott addresses the "Fangirls in Refrigerators," and Rebecca Lucy Busker revisits and revises her "Fandom and Male Privilege" meta piece seven years after its original posting. Lyndsay Brown discusses pornographic comics written by and for women. Kate Roddy, Carlen Lavigne, and Suzanne Scott interview Will Brooker, Sarah Zaidan, and Suze Shore in their efforts "Toward a Feminist Superhero," in which they discuss building a better Batgirl. Finally, both book reviews, by Drew Morton and Daniel Stein, of recent critical books about comic books and cultural history, note the comics gender divide. Nor is gender the only fraught topic addressed: Ora C. McWilliams wonders "Who Is Afraid of a Black Spider(-Man)?"

    Although the fandom for comic books dates from the early 1960s and is among the first modern fandoms, the fandoms for films based on comic books are strong and growing, particularly in the ongoing Avengers movieverse releases. Catherine Coker discusses "The Creation and Evolution of the Avengers and Captain America/Iron Man Fandom," Kayley Thomas discusses the filmic Loki on Tumblr, and Babak Zarin discusses a Steve Rogers/Tony Stark (Captain America/Iron Man) Avengers movieverse slash story by hetrez in terms of advocacy. The topic of advocacy is also addressed by Forrest Phillips, who discusses the use of the figure of Captain America as a spokesman for both the Tea Party and Occupy movements.

    Specific comics texts and artists are analyzed as well. Amanda Odom analyzes Garth Ennis's The Pro in terms of the ways the text plays with and subverts comic book conventions, and Tim Bavlnka discusses fans' attempt to organize Grant Morrison's work for DC Comics into a single sweeping continuity known as the Hypercrisis. Editor Costello's interview with comics artist Lee Weeks discusses not only Weeks's career, but also current trends in the comics industry.

    Founded in 2007, The Organization for Transformative Works (OTW), is a nonprofit established by fans to serve the interests of fans by providing access to and preserving the history of fan works and fan culture in its myriad forms. Advocating on behalf of fans, the OTW believes that fan works are transformative and that transformative works are legitimate.

    No. 14 is slated to be a general nonthemed issue and will appear September 15, 2013. The topics of the first two issues of 2014 are "Fandom and/as Labor" (guest edited by Mel Stanfill and Megan Condis) and "Materiality and Object-Oriented Fandom" (guest edited by Bob Rehak).

  • April Membership Drive: Spotlight on Fanhackers

    By Claudia Rebaza on Thursday, 4 April 2013 - 2:40pm
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    The OTW launched the Symposium blog in 2010 to give fans and academics a place to publish meta together, and to signal-boost great ideas and info on fans that weren't finding an audience. This year, we've revamped the blog into the shiny Fanhackers.

    More insightful and relevant academic, fannish and other meta is being created now than ever before, but a lot of these useful ideas never get beyond the borders of wherever they were published. Academic meta on fans remains hard to access — it's often locked in expensive books and journals, or written in needlessly complicated and inaccessible language. Fannish meta is scattered all around the internet. Activists working on topics like copyright and open culture often publish ideas that are incredibly relevant to fans, but many of those ideas never reach fannish spaces. We have so much info, and yet so much of it goes to waste.

    Fanhackers is a small project with big dreams. We want to experiment with new ways to get info on fans from wherever it is to whoever needs it, in a way that really makes a difference. That means sharing the good ideas in formats that people are actually likely to read, like short quotes with the key parts from long books or articles. It also means sharing the good ideas in places where people are actually likely to stumble across them — like Tumblr, Twitter, Pinboard, LiveJournal or Dreamwidth — instead of locking them up on separate websites. It also means making sure that people who need help finding an inaccessible resource like an expensive academic paper have a place to get help. Because Fanhackers is very much an experimental project, we can try things out at will to see what works and what doesn't, which is a pretty liberating way to work.

    Fanhackers started out small, but it's already been a far busier first month than we expected. And there's so much around the corner: expanding onto Twitter, translating quotes and short posts from meta in Japanese (and hopefully other languages), publishing a tagged and sorted bibliography of academic works on fans to make those even easier to find, and exploring all the great things in the newest issue of Transformative Works and Cultures, to name just a few.

    Fanhackers and Transformative Works and Cultures proudly honour the OTW's commitment to encourage and share fannish and academic analysis of fan culture. We love fandom, and everything it stands for — to help us continue Fanhackers and other labours of love, please donate today!

  • TWC Releases No. 12 (Transnational Boys' Love Fan Studies special issue)

    By Curtis Jefferson on Friday, 15 March 2013 - 10:23pm
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    Transformative Works and Cultures (TWC) today released issue No. 12, "Transnational Boys' Love Fan Studies," guest edited by Kazumi Nagaike and Katsuhiko Suganuma, both of Oita University, Oita, Japan. This issue features academic articles on the growing interest in and engagement with Boys' Love (BL) within international fan communities. Following its regular format, this open-access online multimedia journal has collected scholarly essays, personal essays, and book reviews that seek to bridge fan and academic writers and readers. TWC is published under the umbrella of the nonprofit fan advocacy group Organization for Transformative Works.

    Whereas BL fans have been studied in its original country of Japan as well as within the US American context, little has been published looking at other national responses and languages neither Japanese nor English. The editors, Kazumi Nagaike and Katsuhiko Suganuma, describe how personal encounters with transnational BL fans convinced them of “compelling necessity for BL critics to expand their own horizons” in order to acknowledge and study the “cross-cultural diversity of BL fan and community cultures that both globalization and localization propel.”

    As a result, the contributions span countries and continents, moving between official products and fan versions, addressing the monetization of fan cultures and the pirating of commercial products alike. Björn-Ole Kamm and Paul M. Malone, for example, look at BL reception in Germany, whereas Erika Junhui Yi discusses Chinese BL writers. Lucy Hannah Glasspool and Toshio Miyake focus on the way Japanese culture gets constructed within international reception and translation. The remaining pieces focus on the possibilities of new venues for BL research, including character bots (Keiko Nishimura), the relationship between Yaoi and gay culture (Akiko Hori) and the controversial reception of Fujoshi within Japan (Midori Suzuki).

    Kazumi Nagaike and Katsuhiko Suganuma are both at the Center for International Education and Research at Oita University. Nagaike has taught there since 2004 and focuses on analyzing female acts of fantasizing male-male eroticism in literature and popular culture; Suganuma joined the university in 2009 and studies the post-1945 encounter of Japanese and Western queer cultures. As such, both brought to the project an interest in the transnational elements of queer representations and male-male eroticism.

    Founded in 2007, The Organization for Transformative Works (OTW), is a nonprofit established by fans to serve the interests of fans by providing access to and preserving the history of fan works and fan culture in its myriad forms. Advocating on behalf of fans, the OTW believes that fan works are transformative and that transformative works are legitimate.

    No. 13 is slated to be a special issue on "Appropriating, Interpreting, and Transforming Comic Books," guest edited by Matthew Costello, and will appear June 15, 2013. The 14th issue of TWC will feature more general submissions and is scheduled for release on September 15, 2013.

  • Introducing Fanhackers, a directory of informative things about fans

    By Claudia Rebaza on Friday, 1 March 2013 - 6:33pm
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    The Journal committee is proud to announce that Fanhackers, the shinier and more experimental new incarnation of the Symposium blog, is now open for business!

    Short version

    Fanhackers is a place for fans, academics, activists, and anyone else with an interest in info on fans to share and discover new ideas. It's is a group blog where you can do the following things:

    • Post, search and discuss good fannish or academic meta about fans. Tl;dr allowed. This is the old Symposium blog, but much easier to post to.
    • Post and answer requests for copies of inaccessible academic papers that you need.
    • Post and explore quotes from long, hard to find, or otherwise hard-to-read works on fans. Just the really good bits, no tl;dr allowed.
    • Post and follow links to resources on fans, tools for writing and research, and news that may be of interest to people who like info and analysis on fans.

    Read more about Fanhackers and the other functionality we're planning on the About page. You can keep track via the WordPress mirror, the Tumblr mirror, Twitter, the DW and LJ feeds, or the RSS and e-mail subscription options detailed here.

    Longer version

    Making sure reliable info on fans gets made and reaches the right people has always been a priority for the OTW. The OTW blog reports regularly on important news that fans may want to know about. Fanlore is a place for fans to preserve their own history in their own words. The legal advocacy team works tirelessly to get correct info on fans to activists and governmental organizations whose actions can have an impact on fans. The fan video and multimedia project has prepared a range of practical and educational resources for and about vidders, and so on.

    The Journal committee has been especially concerned with creating good info and getting it out there. Among other things, we made a whole new open access academic journal about fans, we helped get the vidding bibliography off the ground and are working to expand it into a broader resource on all things fan studies, and we made the Symposium blog as a place for fans and academics to share meta in a less formal setting.

    We can and need to do better than that, though. There's never been this much insightful and relevant academic, fannish and other meta on fans being created. However, a lot of the useful ideas from inside that meta never get beyond the borders of wherever they were published and don't reach the people who want or need to hear them. Academic meta on fans remains hard to access because it's often locked in expensive books and journals, or written in often needlessly complicated and inaccessible language. Fannish meta is scattered all around the internet. Activists working on topics like copyright and open culture often publish ideas that are incredibly relevant to fans, but many of those ideas never reach fannish spaces. We have so much info, and yet so much of it goes to waste.

    Fanhackers wants to experiment with new ways of making sure that info on fans reaches the people who need it - not just when they know the info exists and are actively looking for it, but also when they have no idea yet that there's something about fans that they need to know.

    We want to make sure that everyone who's looking for good info or analysis on fans can find what they need as quickly and as cheaply as possible, whether they need fannish or academic meta, a particular piece of information, or help. We want to make sure that fans and academics can cooperate and share their info, meta, publishing tools, and research tools, so that the wealth of work and experience that we already have is put to better use. We want to make sure that academic meta on fans is published in usable and useful ways, openly and in formats that make it easy to share and improve the info, so that fans can access what’s being said about them and academics can see their hard work put to use by many people. We want to make sure that anyone can discover what info on fans is already out there, so that all that work can get built upon rather than duplicated. And we want a place to talk about all the important, amusing, and informative things about fans that we stumble across.

    Fanhackers is a space for us to experiment with how we can make those things happen. We'll be changing and adding functionality as we figure out what works. Please drop by, browse around, share the info you have, and tell us how we can make this more useful and enjoyable.

  • TWC Releases No. 11

    By Claudia Rebaza on Saturday, 15 September 2012 - 4:51pm
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    Transformative Works and Cultures has released No. 11, a general issue with essays that focus on a variety of topics, including lip dubbing, fan fiction, early modern romance, pro fiction that includes fans as characters, and author's notes. The issue comprises six theoretical essays, four Symposium pieces, and two book reviews.

    • Natasha Simonova, in "Fan Fiction and the Author in the Early 17th Century: The Case of Sidney's Arcadia," argues for the early modern era as a point of origin for fan fiction with Sir Philip Sidney's romance, The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia.
    • Nicolle Lamerichs's "The Mediation of Fandom in Karin Giphart's Maak me blij" looks for fannish tropes and narrative structures in nonfannish fiction, in this case a 2005 Dutch novel that features fans as characters, thus self-reflexively looking at the connections between lesbian fiction and fan fiction.
    • Kyra Hunting's "Queer as Folk and the Trouble with Slash" addresses the discrepancy between a show that already includes queer and explicit sexualities and its fan fictions by analyzing mpreg stories.
    • Alexandra Elisabeth Herzog's "'But this is my story and this is how I wanted to write it': Author's Notes as a Fannish Claim to Power in Fan Fiction Writing" studies the particular genre of author's notes to address the power struggle between readers and writers used to generate meaning.
    • Mark C. Lashley's "Lip Dubbing on YouTube: Participatory Culture and Cultural Globalization" reads lip dubbers as transnational creators as they appropriate and alter popular songs, thus resituating them within their own cultural contexts and performing them with their own, often non-Western, bodies.
    • Finally, Heather Osborne looks at virtual performances in online gaming, in particular gender expressions within the games, in "Performing Self, Performing Character: Exploring Gender Performativity in Online Role-Playing Games," and analyzes data from an online survey that addresses gamers' gender and sexualities as well as their respective representations.

    TWC's Symposium section features shorter, often personal essays that address particularly fannish connections.

    • D. Wilson's highly personal meditation on "Queer Bandom: A Research Journey in Eight Parts" merges the author's personal journeys of following several bands around the country with meditations on queer space and time in the shifting discourses of online band fandom.
    • Sharon Wheeler, in "From Secret Police to Gay Utopia: How a Professionals Slash Writer Disrupts Readers' Expectations" focuses on The Professionals (1977–1983) and provides a close reading of an alternate universe fan fiction series.
    • Paul Mason looks toward the beginnings of tabletop role-playing games in "RPG Transformations: Fan or Pro?" Mason offers an important historical overview of the early years of Dungeons & Dragons and its fans.
    • Finally, Staci Stutsman also addresses the unclear boundaries of authorship in "Blogging and Blooks: Communal Authorship in a Contemporary Context," in which she studies popular blogs and the tendency to turn blog posts, including selected comments, into publications.

    Two reviews appear in this issue. Francesca Coppa reviews Paul Booth's Digital Fandom (Peter Lang, 2010), focusing on the use of fan cultures, and in particular multimedia digital fan works, to address the general tenets of media studies. Michael Z. Newman and Elana Levine look at the shifting demands of media studies in the convergence age in their book Legitimating Television (Routledge, 2011), reviewed by Melanie E. S. Kohnen.

    The next two issues of TWC, Nos. 12 and 13, will appear in spring 2013 as guest-edited special issues: Kazumi Nagaike and Katsuhiko Suganuma coedit the special issue on Transnational Boys' Love, and Matthew Costello's special issue focuses on transformation and comics.

    TWC No. 14 will be an open, unthemed issue, and we welcome general submissions. We particularly encourage fans to submit Symposium essays. We encourage all potential authors to read the submission guidelines. The close date for receipt of copy for No. 14 is March 15, 2013.

  • TWC releases No. 8 (Race and Ethnicity/Textual Echoes special issue)

    By Kristen Murphy on Wednesday, 23 November 2011 - 12:54pm
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    Transformative Works and Cultures has released No. 8, a special guest-edited double issue comprising Race and Ethnicity in Fandom (edited by Robin Anne Reid and Sarah N. Gatson) and Textual Echoes (edited by Cyber Echoes, a collective comprising Berit Åström, Katarina Gregersdotter, Malin Isaksson, Maria Lindgren Leavenworth, and Maria Helena Svensson).

    Race and Ethnicity in Fandom comprises four research essays covering topics such as race, identity, and construction in fandom, gaming, and Web series.

    Mel Stanfill, in "Doing Fandom, (Mis)doing Whiteness: Heteronormativity, Racialization, and the Discursive Construction of Fandom," provides an interdisciplinary analysis of film and television shows to assess fandom as a form of performativity that both undercuts and reinforces white privilege.

    "Fandom as Industrial Response: Producing Identity in an Independent Web Series," by Aymar Jean Christian, expands the definition of fan by analyzing a made-for-Web series based on the TV show Sex and the City.

    Thomas D. Rowland and Amanda C. Barton, in "Outside Oneself in World of Warcraft: Gamers' Perception of the Racial Self-Other," provide survey results showing how gamers' racial attitudes intersect with avatar and interavatar creation.

    Sun Jung, in "K-pop, Indonesian Fandom, Social Media," performs an ethnographic study, also drawing on material on Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube, to analyze K-pop fandom from the perspective of Indonesian youth.

    Textual Echoes comprises four research essays and two Symposium essays. The special issue grew out of a three-day symposium hosted by Umeå University, Sweden, which included a keynote address by TWC's own Kristina Busse.

    Charles W. Hoge reads fan fic as play in "Whodology: Encountering Doctor Who Fan Fiction through the Portals of Play Studies and Ludology" by applying the criteria of theorist Roger Caillois's for game and play.

    The three Praxis essays address themes of desire, sexuality, and identity in relation to fan works. Bridget Kies ("One True Threesome: Reconciling Canon and Fan Desire in Star Trek: Voyager") analyzes desire in terms of fan fic about the Tom Paris–Harry Kim–B'Elanna Torres triad.

    Mark McHarry, in "(Un)gendering the Homoerotic Body: Imagining Subjects in Boys' Love and Yaoi," discusses dōjinshi, fan comics with young male characters, by performing a reading of Maldoror's Freeport (based on the anime Gundam Wing) via Grosz, Kristeva, and Foucault.

    Kate Roddy's essay, "Masochist or Machiavel? Reading Harley Quinn in Canon and Fanon," discusses Harley Quinn (the Joker's girlfriend in the Batman canon) in relation to medical and feminist discourses about female submissiveness.

    In the Symposium section, Maria Lindgren Leavenworth discusses The Vampire Diaries and its fan fiction in "Transmedial Texts and Serialized Narratives," assessing mythos, topos, and ethos in terms of the story world. And Nele Noppe, in "Why We Should Talk about Commodifying Fan Work," sees opportunities for fans to build hybrid economies via Web-based commerce.

    TWC No. 8 also includes two book reviews: Melanie Kohnen reviews The Young and the Digital by S. Craig Watkins, and Laurie B. Cubbison reviews Adolescents and Online Fan Fiction by Rebecca Black.

  • TWC No. 7 Released

    By .fcoppa on Thursday, 15 September 2011 - 2:34pm
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    Transformative Works and Cultures releases its seventh issue today, September 15, 2011. The new issue features a diverse array of articles: on cosplay and hurt/comfort, on music fandom, Buffy, Twilight, and Iron Man. More information beneath the cut!

    Several essays in this issue focus on the nature of performance: Jen Gunnels and Carrie J. Cole, in "Culturally Mapping Universes: Fan Production as Ethnographic Fragments," consider fans as what they call ethnodramaturgs, thus emphasizing the performative aspect of fan creation and interpretation; and Nicolle Lamerichs's "Stranger than Fiction: Fan Identity in Cosplay" analyzes the performance and play inherent in costuming and cosplay.

    Two essays focus on music fandom: Kristine Weglarz's "Lifting the Curse: Pearl Jam's 'Alive' and 'Bushleaguer' and the Marketplace of Meanings" analyzes Pearl Jam's fan reaction to an overtly political statement, where the band removed ambiguity of interpretation. Lucy Bennett, in "Delegitimizing Strategic Power: Normative Identity and Governance in Online R.E.M. Fandom," analyzes Murmurs, a fan site, and its self-policing attempt to normalize fan behavior.

    Two essays focus on particular fandoms. Amanda L. Hodges and Laurel P. Richmond, in "Taking a Bite out of Buffy: Carnivalesque Play and Resistance in Fan Fiction," apply Bakhtinian theory to fan fiction. Jacqueline Marie Pinkowitz, in "'The rabid fans that take [Twilight] much too seriously': The Construction and Rejection of Excess in Twilight Antifandom," analyzes a specific antifan group and the way they present themselves as arbiters of taste.

    The Symposium essays in this issue take on the genre of hurt/comfort (Judith May Fathallah, "H/c and Me: An Autoethnographic Account of a Troubled Love Affair"), perform a close reading of _Iron Man_ fan fic (Hui Min Annabeth Leow, "Subverting the Canon in Feminist Fan Fiction: 'Concession'"), apply the medieval concept of the lover to assess old and new ways of collaboration (Vera Keller, "The 'Lover' and Early Modern Fandom"), and confront TWC's ethical guidelines (Francesca Musiani, "Editorial Policies, 'Public Domain,' and Acafandom").

    Two book reviews of timely titles round out the issue: Nancy K. Baym's Personal Connections in the Digital Age (Polity Press, 2010, reviewed by Elizabeth Ellcessor) and Sarah Lynne Bowman's The Function of Role-Playing Games (McFarland, 2010, reviewed by Sean Duncan).

    TWC No. 8, a special double guest-edited issue on Race and Ethnicity in Fandom (Sarah Gatson and Robin Anne Reid) and Textual Echoes (Berit Åström, Katarina Greggersdotter, Malin Isaksson, Maria Lindgren Leavenworth, and Maria Svensson), is slated for release on November 15, 2011. In 2012, look for two more guest-edited issues in addition to our usual September general issue: Remix/Fan Video (Francesca Coppa and Julie Levin Russo) and Fan Activism (Henry Jenkins and Sangita Shresthova).

    Interested in submitting to a future issue? Check out the submission guidelines, or ping the editors with questions or ideas. TWC is always looking for interviews and meta!

  • Special TWC issue "Games as Transformative Works" released!

    By .fcoppa on Sunday, 15 March 2009 - 6:05pm
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    The second issue of Transformative Works and Cultures (TWC) has just been released! The March 15, 2009, special issue, entitled "Games as Transformative Works," is edited by Rebecca Carlson and combines TWC's general interest in fan works and fan cultures with a focus on games. Anthropology is the issue's dominant disciplinary approach, but literary and cultural studies also frame the discussion. Although several essays address the role of production, the voices of the fans and the gamers themselves remain ever important.

    The Praxis articles address many of the issues that surround computer games: editor Rebecca Carlson, for example, studies the complex position of gaming journalists, who are simultaneously fans and advertisers; Casey O'Donnell looks at the ambiguous role of game producers; and Robertson Allen's study of the use of games in Army recruiting similarly complicates the social role of games and their real life effects. Three other Praxis essays focus on particular games and the communities surrounding them: World of Warcraft (Mark Chen), Kingly Quest (Anastasia Marie Salter), and tabletop role-playing game Exalted (Michael Robert Underwood). Kevin Driscoll and Joshua Diaz focus on fan creativity in their introduction to and explanation of chiptunes.

    The Symposium section looks back and forward: pieces include Will Brooker's recollection of early computer games of the 1980s and what specific effects these games had on a particular generation; Thien-bao Thuc Phi's powerful analysis and personal response to the depiction of Asians in computer games; and Braxton Soderman's meditation on fan labor and fan activities in various online computer games. Several essays focus directly on fan responses and productions, such as Rebecca Bryant's account of the way players have rejected and circumvented recent Dungeons & Dragons updates; Amanda Odom's look at the sensory experiences of live-action role playing; Joe Bisz's description of player productivity in card collecting; and Julia Beck and Frauke Herrling's provocative suggestion that reads role-playing game characters through the lens of fan fiction criticism.

    The issue also features interviews with Paul Marino, cofounder and executive producer of Academy of Machinima Arts and Sciences (AMAS); Doris Rusch, gaming scholar and video game designer; business professor Tony Driscoll; and Diane E. Levin, professor of early childhood education.

    Check out the entire Table of Contents here.

    The third issue of TWC will feature more general submissions and is scheduled for release on September 15, 2009. No. 4 is slated to be a special issue on the WB television show Supernatural, "Saving People, Hunting Things," guest edited by Catherine Tosenberger, and will appear on March 15, 2010 (call for papers available here). TWC has also just issued a call for papers for a special historical issue, "Fan Works and Fan Communities in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction," slated for spring 2011, guest edited by Nancy Reagin and Anne Rubenstein (call for papers available here).

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