Wir verwenden Cookies und Analyse-Tools, um die Nutzerfreundlichkeit der Internet-Seite zu verbessern und für Marketingzwecke. Wenn Sie fortfahren, diese Seite zu verwenden, nehmen wir an, dass Sie damit einverstanden sind. Zur Datenschutzerklärung.
The Secular Religion of Fandom
Details
A fascinating exploration of 'media pilgrimage' and what it tells us about our obsessions with celebrity and our desire for meaning and identity in an uncertain world.
Media pilgrimage has become a booming business in the 21st century. Fans of television shows, rock groups and books flock to places associated with their favorite series, artist or writer, trying to embody and perhaps understand what inspired the beloved piece of work, and, more importantly, to cobble together their own personal identity, seeking meaning in an ever-more divergent and fast-paced world.
At the same time, participation in organized group activities are dropping. One of the largest down turns in the US and the UK can be seen in the steep decline of attendance at traditional religious venues. This trend dovetails with the radical uptick in on-line sites dedicated to pop culture and celebrities, as well as an array of niche-focused real-time tours allowing fans to experience the spaces, places and scenery featured in their favorite entertainment medium.
The Secular Religion of Fandom: Pop Culture Pilgrim examines the function of fandom, specifically the visiting of spaces which have been recently deemed worthy of sanctification and a newly elevated status of importance. It examines how such pilgrimages are used as a means for forming and maintaining a common language of culture, creating a replacement apparatus based on more traditional frameworks of religious worship and salvation, while becoming an ever more dominant mechanism for constructing individuality and finding belonging in a commodified culture.
Looking at television shows such as The Walking Dead and Game of Thrones, bands like The Stone Roses and Joy Division, and authors like J.K. Rowling and the Brontë sisters, The Secular Religion of Fandom: Pop Culture Pilgrim delves into these issues by examining spaces, fan communities and rituals, providing a unique and provocative investigation into how technology, media and humanistic need for guidance are forming novel ways of expressing value, forging self and finding significance in an uncertain world.
Autorentext
Dr Jennifer Otter Bickerdike is Senior Lecturer and Course Leader of Music and Brand Marketing at Buckinghamshire New University.
Embodying the unique combination of real-world experience and academic knowledge, she has over 20 years experience of working with taste-makers and cultural provocateurs like Facebook, Interscope Geffen A&M records and L.A.M.B.
Jennifer was previously program leader and Senior Lecturer of Arts and Culture Management at the University of East London, where she was voted by her students as the best lecturer at the school and was shortlisted in the category of Most Innovative Teacher in the UK by the Times Higher Education Council. Her research interests include celebrity, youth culture, popular music, popular culture, dark tourism, and the doomed heroine in British literature.
Klappentext
Media pilgrimage has become a booming business in the 21st century. Fans of television shows, rock groups and books flock to places associated with their favorite series, artist or writer, trying to embody and perhaps understand what inspired the beloved piece of work, and, more importantly, to cobble together their own personal identity, seeking meaning in an ever-more divergent and fast-paced world. At the same time, participation in organized group activities are dropping. One of the largest down turns in the US and the UK can be seen in the steep decline of attendance at traditional religious venues. This trend dovetails with the radical uptick in on-line sites dedicated to pop culture and celebrities, as well as an array of niche-focused real-time tours allowing fans to experience the spaces, places and scenery featured in their favorite entertainment medium.
The Secular Religion of Fandom: Pop Culture Pilgrim examines the function of fandom, specifically the visiting of spaces which have been recently deemed worthy of sanctification and a newly elevated status of importance. It examines how such pilgrimages are used as a means for forming and maintaining a common language of culture, creating a replacement apparatus based on more traditional frameworks of religious worship and salvation, while becoming an ever more dominant mechanism for constructing individuality and finding belonging in a commodified culture. Looking at television shows such as The Walking Dead and Game of Thrones, bands like The Stone Roses and Joy Division, and authors like J.K. Rowling and the Brontë sisters, The Secular Religion of Fandom: Pop Culture Pilgrim delves into these issues by examining spaces, fan communities and rituals, providing a unique and provocative investigation into how technology, media and humanistic need for guidance are forming novel ways of expressing value, forging self and finding significance in an uncertain world.
Zusammenfassung
A fascinating exploration of 'media pilgrimage' and what it tells us about our obsessions with celebrity and our desire for meaning and identity in an uncertain world.
Inhalt
Introduction: Mecca for Muggles
Chapter 1 Symbolic Pilgrimage
Chapter 2 Mr. Mojo Risin'
Chapter 3 For the Love of Blood Suckers
Conclusion: The Mighty Hoards
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09781473907799
- Genre Business, Finance & Law
- Sprache Englisch
- Anzahl Seiten 122
- Herausgeber SAGE Publications Ltd
- Gewicht 278g
- Größe H216mm x B153mm x T10mm
- Jahr 2015
- EAN 9781473907799
- Format Fester Einband
- ISBN 1473907799
- Veröffentlichung 19.10.2015
- Titel The Secular Religion of Fandom
- Autor Jennifer Otter Bickerdike
- Untertitel Pop Culture Pilgrim