2nd Edition

Textual Poachers Television Fans and Participatory Culture

By Henry Jenkins Copyright 2013
    424 Pages
    by Routledge

    422 Pages
    by Routledge

    The twentieth anniversary edition of Henry Jenkins’s Textual Poachers brings this now-canonical text to a new generation of students interested in the intersections of fandom, participatory culture, popular consumption and media theory.

    Supplementing the original, classic text is an interview between Henry Jenkins and Suzanne Scott in which Jenkins reflects upon changes in the field since the original release of Textual Poachers. A study guide by Louisa Stein helps provides instructors with suggestions for the way Textual Poachers can be used in the contemporary classroom, and study questions encourage students to consider fan cultures in relation to consumer capitalism, genre, gender, sexuality, and more.

    20th Anniversary Introductionary Interview between Henry Jenkins and Suzanne Scott Introduction (1992)  1. "Get a Life!": Fans, Poachers, Nomads  2. How Texts become Real  3. Fan Critics  4. "It's Not a Fairy Tale Anymore": Gender, Genre, Beauty and the Best 5. Scribbling in the Margins: Fan Readers/Fan Writers  6. "Welcome to Bisexuality, Captain Kirk": Slash and the Fan-Writing Community  7. "Layers of Meaning": Fan Music Video and the Poetics of Poaching  8. "Strangers No More, We Sing": Filk Music, Folk Culture, and the Fan Community  9. Conclusion: "In My Weekend-Only World...": Reconsidering Fandom  10. Study Guide by Louisa Stein

    Biography

    Henry Jenkins is the Provost's Professor of Communication, Journalism, Cinematic Arts, and Education at the University of Southern California. He was director of MIT's Comparative Media Studies Program for more than a decade. His books include: Hop on Pop: The Politics and Pleasures of Popular Culture, Convergence Culture: Where Old and New Media Collide, and Fans, Bloggers, and Gamers: Exploring Participatory Culture.

    Suzanne Scott is a Mellon Digital Scholarship Postdoctoral Fellow at Occidental College. She serves on the board of Transformative Works and Cultures, and is currently working on a book project based on her dissertation, "Revenge of the Fanboy: Convergence Culture and the Politics of Incorporation," addressing the gendered tensions surrounding contemporary fan culture and fan studies.

    Louisa Ellen Stein is Assistant Professor of Film and Media Culture at Middlebury College, and is coeditor of the collections Teen Television and Sherlock and Transmedia Fandom. Her current book project, Millennial Media, explores digital authorship and fandom in the millennial generation.

     

     

    "There are few books that open new fields and set agendas for years after their publication. Even fewer have done so while being fun to read. Textual Poachers is such a book. Jenkins articulated the culture of participation that the internet has made common years before it took hold, and this work continues to shape how we understand these shifts." --Nancy Baym, Principal Researcher, Microsoft Research New England