ABSTRACT

This book explores popular music fandom from a cultural studies perspective that incorporates popular music studies, audience research, and media fandom. The essays draw together recent work on fandom in popular music studies and begin a dialogue with the wider field of media fan research, raising questions about how popular music fandom can be understood as a cultural phenomenon and how much it has changed in light of recent developments. Exploring the topic in this way broaches questions on how to define, theorize, and empirically research popular music fan culture, and how music fandom relates to other roles, practices, and forms of social identity. Fandom itself has been brought center stage by the rise of the internet and an industrial structure aiming to incorporate, systematize, and legitimate dimensions of it as an emotionally-engaged form of consumerism. Once perceived as the pariah practice of an overly attached audience, media fandom has become a standardized industrial subject-position called upon to sell box sets, concert tickets, new television series, and special editions. Meanwhile, recent scholarship has escaped the legacy of interpretations that framed fans as passive, pathological, or defiantly empowered, taking its object seriously as a complex formation of identities, roles, and practices. While popular music studies has examined some forms of identity and audience practice, such as the way that people use music in daily life and listener participation in subcultures, scenes and, tribes, this volume is the first to examine music fans as a specific object of study.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

chapter |21 pages

Back in the Mix

Exploring Intermediary Fandom and Popular Music Production

chapter |18 pages

Beyond Capital, Towards Myth

EDM Fandom and Dance Practice

chapter |16 pages

Hidden Fans?

Fandom and Domestic Musical Activity

chapter |15 pages

Researching Your Favorite Artist

Methodological Observations of a Brazilian Popular Music Scholar

chapter |11 pages

Fantastic Voyeur

Lurking on the Dark Side of Biography

chapter |18 pages

Song of Praise

Musicians, Myths and the “Cult” of John Coltrane

chapter |31 pages

“I ❤ Ibiza”

Music, Place and Belonging

chapter |19 pages

Fan Words

chapter |21 pages

Record Collecting and Fandom

chapter |21 pages

After Jerry's Death

Achieving Continuity in Deadhead Identity and Community 1

chapter |9 pages

Afterword

Fans and Scholars—A Reassessment