Archive for category Uncategorized
CFP: Nationbending, a special edition of Transformative Works & Cultures
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on May 10th, 2010
Avatar: The Last Airbender is that rare animal: American-produced anime faithful to both its Japanese cinematic influences and its pervasive Chinese iconography. A vast amount of research was invested in bringing a fantasy Asian environment to life: martial arts master Sifu Kisu choreographed each fight and assigned specific fighting forms to each character; a Chinese calligraphy consultant wrote the signage that appeared in each episode, and the series’ creators visited China to study its traditional architecture. These elements create an enticing mash-up of genuine Asian signifiers within a fictional environment. The series’ popularity encouraged a live-action film adaptation from director M. Night Shyamalan. Fan controversy erupted when white actors were cast in roles previously “played” by characters with dark skin. Protests against this act of “racebending” included T-shirts and bumper stickers with the slogan Aang Ain’t White!, the founding of Racebending.com, and a renewed discussion among online fans about the long cinematic history of whitewashing and yellowface
This issue aims to investigate the cultural significance of A:tLA as a transforming and transformative text. Like the Avatar, A:tLA and its settings and characters have many incarnations online, on television, on film, and in print. Likewise, the definitions of anime, cartoons, Asia, and race have been bent by fans and producers alike. A:tLA is part of the ongoing transformation of American media in a global context. We welcome contributions focusing on Asian Studies; media theory and film studies; religious studies and anthropology; postcolonial and queer readings of the series, the films, and the fan works they have inspired; reviews of both canon and fanon texts; interviews with both canon and fanon producers; and reviews of relevant texts, whatever form they might take.
TWC accommodates academic articles of varying scope as well as other forms that embrace the technical possibilities of the Web and test the limits of the genre of academic writing. Contributors are encouraged to include embedded links, images, and videos or to propose submissions in alternative formats: interviews, collaborations, podcasts, comics, drawings, video, multimedia works.
Theory: Often interdisciplinary essays with a conceptual focus and a theoretical frame that offer expansive interventions in the field. Peer review. Length: 5,000-8,000 words plus a 100-250-word abstract.
Praxis: Analyses of particular cases that may apply a specific theory or framework to an artifact; explicate fan practice or formations; or perform a detailed reading of a text. Peer review. Length: 4,000-7,000 words plus a 100-250-word abstract.
Symposium: Short pieces that provide insight into current developments and debates. Editorial review. Length: 1,500-2,500 words
DUE DATES: OCTOBER 2011 (Theory, Praxis) & NOVEMBER 2011 (Symposium)
Please visit Transformative Works & Cultures to find out how to submit manuscripts. If you have any questions, contact me with “A:tLA” in the subject heading.
February 15 is your last day to participate!
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on February 9th, 2010
Fansubbers: February 15 is your last day to participate in our survey! If you’d like to make your voice heard, give us a click and give the questions some thought. And thanks to all our great participants so far! We’re really happy to hear from you!
Introducing Kyle Stedman
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on February 1st, 2010
Kyle Stedmen is a fellow member of the International Association for the Fantastic in the Arts who introduced himself to me recently after hearing about my and Lisa’s research into fansubbers. I think Kyle might be one of the few people in the field approaching fan studies from a rhetoric angle, and to me that makes his research very interesting. Good luck, Kyle!
I’m Kyle Stedman, a PhD candidate in rhetoric and composition at the University of South Florida in Tampa. I’m inviting fans of various stripes to take a 5-question survey and, if they want, to follow-up with me in an interview about their creative practices.
To understand what I’m getting at in my survey, it will help to understand the kinds of things that folks in my discipline study. In the big picture, rhetoric scholars are interested in how language works in society, especially persuasive language; I’ve recently heard of scholars studying scientific rhetoric (the language people use to shape understandings of science), political rhetoric, and online religious rhetoric. And of course, “language” can easily be expanded to mean any kind of communication–there’s a “language” of videos, songs, video games, and anything else that people purposefully create. The “composition” half of “rhetoric and composition” can refer to the many folks who apply this study of language to writing classrooms, teaching students in turn how to successfully create messages for their intended
audiences.
With that big picture in mind, it makes sense that I, an acafan, would be interested in just what goes on when fans create fic or vids or music remixes. I’m a writing teacher, and I’m always trying to help students broaden their idea of what goes into researching and writing in different settings and genres and media. So I love the idea, for this study, of asking open-ended questions to creative people who compose in fan genres; my hope is that this will help me better understand some of the diverse ways that people find and use source material when composing, and that this knowledge might even help me expand my students’ ideas of the diversity of what “writing” really looks like.
But I’m not just asking fans open-ended questions about composing. I’m also one of a sub-section of scholars in rhetoric and composition who are interested in intellectual property–all those tricky questions that come up when we rely on other sources, like idea-ownership, citation, and plagiarism. In my field, scholars (including me) tend to be skeptical of oversimplified claims about intellectual property; we tend to see “ownership” of ideas as a slippery topic that, when too-harshly enforced, can stifle creativity, lead to political climates that ignore the importance of Fair Use, and treat students like criminals.
Because of that angle, I’m using this study to ask fans about their sense of ownership and creativity about the things they compose. I don’t really know what they’ll say, and I don’t plan to judge them one way or the other. I’m also especially interested the added angle of things like remix competitions, where fans specifically remix the work of other fans. What, I wonder, do composers need to keep in mind if they know their work might be remixed later on? What do remixers keep in mind when they remix the work of someone with whom they participate in a community? That’s why the project is called “Fan Culture and Remix Literacies.” I’d like to know what kinds of strategies remixers use that make their work effective (or moving, or beautiful, or whatever they’re going for). I think those strategies can be pulled together to loosely define a sort of “remix literacy” that describes the kinds of things that others should keep in mind when reading or composing effective remixes. Fun!
My approach is open-ended, and I don’t know what I’ll find. At the worst, I’ll have some intriguing conversations with a lot of people I admire, and that’s plenty.
On my project site, I’ve created 4 different surveys that are the same except for small word replacements (e.g. “fic” for “vid”). 3 surveys are designed for specific communities, where I’ve already collected data (Lost Video Island, Zelda Classic, and OCReMix). At this point, I’m most interested in getting responses for my fourth survey, designed for fic authors–especially any fic authors who have
remixed the work of others or had their work remixed. Links to all of the surveys are at my main survey page.
The IRB at my university has approved me to collect survey data anonymously, and to allow anyone I interview to choose how to be identified in any presentations or publications that come from this work. I like that–it gives the participants the power to disclose as much or as little about themselves as they like.
I’m happy to answer questions or talk through any of my ideas/strategies/methods/assumptions/craziness. Email is easiest; I’m at kstedman [at] mail [dot] usf [dot] edu.
Thanks for your help!
My main project site: http://sites.google.com/site/remixliteracies/home
My survey for fic authors: http://sites.google.com/site/remixliteracies/surveys/ficsurvey
Proposed Australian law could impact slash fans the most
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on January 19th, 2010
Note: I grabbed this post from my friend Katie Freund, a Canadian fandom scholar studying in Australia. If the law described below passes, much of Katie’s academic livelihood could vanish down the ‘tubes. Katie did not write this post, but is spreading it on behalf of a fellow academic who prefers to remain anonymous.
Alert!
In 2010 the Australian Government proposes to go ahead with a mandatory ISP-level internet filtering scheme which, if passed into law, could have a massive impact on anime, manga and slash fans. Why manga and slash fans? Because the main target of the law is to prevent the circulation of ‘child abuse sexual imagery’ – BUT in Australia ‘child abuse sexual imagery’ covers even FICTIONAL representations and includes the ‘under age’ characters in anime, manga and slash. If the law is passed, any fan site that contains or links to this material could be added to a government ‘blacklist’ and denied access in Australia.
The proposal
The Minister for Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy has recently announced measures to require internet service provider (ISP) level filtering of overseas-hosted internet material classified Refused Classification (RC) under the National Classification Scheme. Such material includes child sexual abuse imagery, bestiality, sexual violence, detailed instruction in crime, violence or drug use and/or material that advocates the doing of a terrorist act (Consultation Paper, 2009).
The problem for ACG/slash fans
‘Child sexual abuse imagery’ is a primary target of the proposed filter – as it should be when dealing with pictures of actual children. Yet, in Australia ‘child sexual abuse imagery’ is an extremely broad category that extends even to purely fictional representations of ‘under-age’ characters in violent or sexual scenarios – including animation, comics, art work and text. Hence, existing legislation targets not only a small coterie of adult paedophiles dealing in representations of actual children, but extensive communities of ACG and slash fans whose activities involve the consumption, creation and dissemination of representations of young persons that would be classified in Australia as ‘virtual’ child pornography.
Read the rest of this entry »
Happy New Year!
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on January 4th, 2010
Just so you know, we are in fact alive over here at FR.org. It was a busy fall for all of us, and I’m thinking of new ways to keep the site fresh. I also have to migrate my own website (eek!). Watch this space for news on upcoming publications and blog posts!
