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Mid-Atlantic Popular &
American Culture Association

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In Joss We Trust: Fanactivism in the 21st Century

Presenter: 
Jonathon Lundy
Presentation type: 
Paper
Abstract: 

While not exclusive to the Whedonverse, fan activism is a unifying and distinctive feature of celebrants of Joss Whedon’s auteurship. Many fans are active in the sense that they creatively resist passive media consumption or advocate for the chosen narratives however, fans of the Whedonverse, signify a contemporary wave of fanactivists that express their fandom through altruistic endeavors. One Whedonesque sub-culture is particularly illustrative of this mode of John Fiske’s (1992) semiotic productivity where fans have used the object of fandom to create social meaning in their lives.

Most Whedonites are familiar with the meta-narrative of Firefly fans and the significance of their continued existence as a culture that honors the crew of Serenity and Whedon by extension. Firefly is kept alive through discursive practices like the “Can’t Stop the Serenity” annual film screening events that benefit charities like Equality Now. Such practices ultimately enact thematic ideals and reinforce an overarching cultural ideology of altruism originally authored by Whedon whose works are treated like sacred texts, rife with parable and allusion containing implicit and explicit moral lessons. These findings have transcendent application as these practices closely resemble other cultural forms like religion. 

Inhabitants of the Whedonverse and religions alike, symbolically appropriate prevailing interpretations into their personal and cultural realities. A closer analysis of the semiotic practices of fans to particular media texts holds great potential for improving other modes of soci-political and civic engagement.
Scheduled on: 
Friday, November 4, 11:00 am to 12:15 pm

About the presenter

Jonathon Lundy

Jonathon is a doctoral student in the Communication, Culture, and Media program at Drexel University. His research interests are eclectic but he primarily concentrates on issues related to reciprocal relationship between media and culture, focusing on popular consumer culture, fandom, media literacy, and communication technology

B.A. Political Science B.A. Mass Communication/Journalism M.A. Communication * Boise State University

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