Fanfic Forensics

  • blog/twitter
  • phd research
  • translations
  • cv
  • contact
Home › Under construction: conference presentation on reading fanfic as part of 'open work'

Reply to comment

Under construction: conference presentation on reading fanfic as part of 'open work'

Nele — Wed, 01/20/2010 - 13:00

Next month I'm going to Sweden for the symposium 'Textual Echoes: Fan Fiction and Sexualities' (program and abstracts), where I'll be making a case for 'The 'open work' as a framework for the interpretation of fan fiction'. For those who are interested in seeing a coherent argument emerge slowly from a morass of disconnected gibberish, I'm constructing the presentation here. Abstract:

Since the 1960s, semiotician Umberto Eco has written at length about 'open work', a largely theoretical kind of artwork characterized by open-endedness and a need for audience participation. By combining this concept with other semiotic methods of data extraction and analysis, it would seem possible to construct an alternative method of fan fiction interpretation that permits objectively verifiable data to be examined within the established theoretical framework of the 'open work' -a framework whose precepts make it uniquely suited to analysis of online amateur media such as fanfic.<br /><br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; A preliminary test of this method seems to confirm its potential for opening new perspectives on fanfic narratives and using public debate about the findings as a part of the research itself, not something that occurs only after final publication of the results. I will illustrate the method's advantages and disadvantages by detailing its use in a broader study currently underway. This study contrasts English-language fanfics published online with Japanese amateur comics (dojinshi) based on the same source material (the 'Harry Potter' series). The data sets&nbsp; examined contain a wide variety of narrative elements, including but not limited to characters, pairings, narrators, handling of canon elements, sexual activity, events, and locations.

  • open_research
  • open_work
  • presentations
  • research
  • umberto_eco
  • Nele's blog
  • Add new comment

Reply

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
Input format
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Use [fn]...[/fn] (or <fn>...</fn>) to insert automatically numbered footnotes.
  • You can use Mediawiki syntax. It is possible that not all formatting options are supported at the moment.
    Links to other pages: [[Page Title]] or [[path/to/page|Title]].
    External links: http://example.com or [http://example.com some link title].
    Interwiki links: [[site:Page Title]].
    You can use the following interwiki links: path, gdo, wp
    Images are included with [[Image:name]]. (wikipedia help)

  • Quick Tips:
    • [_] Todo task = It will show checkbox that isn't check
    • [/] Todo task = It will show checkbox that is checked
  • Twitter-style @usersnames are linked to their Twitter account pages.
  • Twitter-style #hashtags are linked to search.twitter.com.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd>
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically. (Better URL filter.)
  • Use [fn]...[/fn] (or <fn>...</fn>) to insert automatically numbered footnotes.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically. (Better URL filter.)
  • You can use Mediawiki syntax. It is possible that not all formatting options are supported at the moment.
    Links to other pages: [[Page Title]] or [[path/to/page|Title]].
    External links: http://example.com or [http://example.com some link title].
    Interwiki links: [[site:Page Title]].
    You can use the following interwiki links: path, gdo, wp
    Images are included with [[Image:name]]. (wikipedia help)

  • Use [toc list: ol; title: Table of Contents; minlevel: 2; maxlevel: 3; attachments: yes;] to insert a mediawiki style collapsible table of contents. All the arguments are optional.
  • Twitter-style @usersnames are linked to their Twitter account pages.
  • Twitter-style #hashtags are linked to search.twitter.com.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Quick Tips:
    • [_] Todo task = It will show checkbox that isn't check
    • [/] Todo task = It will show checkbox that is checked

More information about formatting options

On this site

Talk about the cultural economics of fanwork, data gathering and comparative research between Japanese dojinshi and English-language fanwork, and legal, economic and cultural policy issues related to dojinshi and to fanwork in general. This site is a personal research playground cum treasure hoard, and also a resource in the making about the function of dojinshi in Japan's system of cultural production. Warning: mature or triggering content in fanwork may be discussed here. See research ethics.

PhD research data (WIP)

  • Project basics
  • DRAFT thesis text
    • Introduction
    • Methodology
      • Methodologies commonly used for fanfic and dojinshi research
      • Development of a theoretical framework and methodology for this project
        • The 'open work' according to Umberto Eco
        • Arguments for viewing fanwork as 'open work'
        • Advantages to viewing fanwork as 'open work'
        • An open work-based methodology in practice
    • Description of samples
      • Sample selection process
    • Analysis of samples
    • Hypothesis based on analysis
    • What is this good for?
    • Conclusion
  • Fanwork data sets and dictionaries
    • Dojinshi data set
    • Fanfics data set
    • Japanese-English dictionary of dojinshi and fan studies terminology
    • Visual grammar of manga dictionary
  • References
  • Planning and to do's

Search this site

Favourite links

  • Japanese Studies K.U. Leuven
  • K.U. Leuven Japanese-Dutch dictionary
  • 同人用語の基礎知識 (Basic dojinshi terminology)
  • Organization for Transformative Works (OTW)
  • Metafandom
  • PhD Comics
  • When Fangirls Attack

Follow me on

  • FriendFeed
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Dreamwidth
  • LiveJournal
  • InsaneJournal
  • Diigo

Powered by Drupal, an open source content management system
  • blog/twitter
  • phd research
  • translations
  • cv
  • contact

Creative Commons License