Chapter 1: The New Network: How Social Media is Changing—and
Saving—Television
Ryan Cassella
Chapter 2: Spoiler Alert: Understanding Television Enjoyment in the
Social Media Era
Benjamin Brojakowski
Chapter 3: Rhetorical Strengths & Limitations of Interactivity for
Activism in the Stewart and Colbert Universe
Christopher A. Medjesky
Chapter 4: Fandom Communication in a Mediated Age: The Use of
Twitter and Blogs for Dissent Practices Among National Basketball
Association (NBA) Fans
Corey Jay Liberman, Michael Plugh and Brian Geltzeiler
Chapter 5: What Types of #SportsFans use Social Media? The Role of
Team Identity Formation and Spectatorship Motivation on
Self-Disclosure during a Live Sport Broadcast
Shaughan A. Keaton, Nicholas M. Watanabe & Brody J. Ruihley
Chapter 6: The Online Community: Fan response of Community’s
Unlikely Fifth Season
Matthew Collins and Danielle M. Stern
Chapter 7: Game(s) of Fandom: The Hyperlink Labyrinths that
Paratextualize Game of Thrones Fandom
Garret Castleberry
Chapter 8: Be Original: Examining Fan Comments on A&E’s Duck
Dynasty Facebook Page After the Robertson Suspension
Michel M. Haigh
Chapter 9: “The Parents Have the Dream, but the Kids are in the
Nightmare”: Digital Interactivity, Toddlers & Tiaras Viewers, and
Social Networking Sites
Leandra H. Hernandez
Chapter 10: Zombie Fans, Second Screen, and Television Audiences:
Redefining Parasociality as Technoprosociality in AMC’s
#TalkingDead
Sabrina Pasztor and Jenny Ungbha Korn
Chapter 11: Memes, Tweets, and Props: How Fans Cope When Shows Go
Off the Air
Alane Presswood and Steve Granelli
Chapter 12: So Are the Days of Our Tweets: An Examination of
Twitter Use By American Daytime Serials and Their Fans
Marsha Ducey
Chapter 13: Army Wives Connect: Lifetime Viewers’ Everyday Lives
and Fandom Converge in Online Communities
Darcey Morris
Chapter 14: “Butter,” Facebook, and Paula Deen: Examining Fans Use
of Social Media in Crisis
Michel M. Haigh & Shelley Wigley
Chapter 15: Fans Can Be Journalists Too: A Look at Fan Interaction
with HBO’s The Newsroom
Julia E. Largent & Jason Roy Burnett
Chapter 16: It's Bigger on the Inside: Fandom, Social Media, and
Doctor Who
Krystal Fogle
Chapter 17: Television-inspired Cosplay and Social Media
Laura Kane and William E. Loges
Chapter 18: Who Killed @TheLauraPalmer? Twitter as a Performance
Space for Twin Peaks Fan Fiction
Kathryn L. Lookadoo and Ted M. Dickinson
Chapter 19: Fifty Years of “The Man From U.N.C.L.E.”: How the
Ever-Changing Media Sustained and Shaped One of the Oldest Fan
Communities
Cynthia W. Walker
Chapter 20: Managing Multiscreen
Daniel Faltesek
Alison F. Slade is adjunct at Faulkner State Community College.
Dedria Givens-Carroll is associate professor at the University of
Louisiana at Lafayette.
Amber J. Narro is associate professor of communication at
Southeastern Louisiana University.
Comprising essays written by faculty, graduate students, and
independent scholars, this collection reflects the current trend in
fan studies to use fan practices to examine everyday life in a
mediated age (as distinguished from using them to examine different
fan communities). It is debatable whether the term 'fan culture'
holds any meaning at this stage of academic examination. As the
practices that made the subculture distinct have been absorbed into
the mainstream or died off, 'fan' is becoming a generic term: a
viewer who does anything more than view is a fan. Whereas most of
the contributors frame their analyses within traditional fan
communities formed through shared affinity for a specific
television text, the focus of the book as a whole is on the
interaction of social media and the medium of television—that is,
how social media are used by fans to view and create content and by
producers to market their content and monetize viewer engagement.
Television programs and genres discussed include Game of Thrones,
Dr. Who, Man from U.N.C.L.E., Duck Dynasty, Tiaras and Toddlers,
The Daily Show and The Colbert Report, soap operas, and sports.
Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates and
above.
*CHOICE*
Today’s fans are actively engaging with television through social
media. Drawing on the diverse expertise of a variety of
researchers, Television, Social Media, and Fan Culture explores
this engagement from multiple vantage points, and extends and
develops new avenues in fan and media studies research. Sure to
spark debate, this volume speaks to the importance of fan studies
as a discipline and the crucial role that social media plays in
this development.
*Paul Booth, DePaul University*
This engaging collection lies at the forefront of an emerging and
essential cultural and technological dialogue. The trio of editors
have assembled an impressive critical chorus, whose case studies
chronicle and contextualize the complex triangulation of activity
and interactivity between the evolving broadcast and cable
programming environment, passionate fan communities, and the
revolutionary ripples of an array of New Media platforms. The
perspectives in the twenty essays are fresh and forward-looking and
the views vast and varied. No network, link, site, genre, or fan
base is overlooked. This impressive volume is trending, streaming,
and tuned-in to the times. #Bigfan.
*George Plasketes, Auburn University*
Regardless of which fandom you belong to, you should read
Television, Social Media, and Fan Culture. All fans of television
or pop culture will revel in the intellectual fanaticism. Media and
culture are inseparable, and the studies included in this edited
collection acknowledge the pedagogy of popular cultural products
and the new participatory fan culture.
*Elizabeth Barfoot Christian, Louisiana College, editor, Rock
Brands: Selling Sound in a Media Saturated Culture*
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |