Skip navigation.
Home

.publication

Transformative Works and Cultures No. 1

|
I'm thrilled to be part of the editorial team that brings you the first issue of the new open access, international, peer-reviewed journal Transformative Works and Cultures! You can read the press release or dive straight into the table of contents. Many thanks go to our tireless editors, Kristina Busse and Karen Hellekson, without whom this project would never have come to fruition.

I'd like to call special attention to the feature I had the greatest hand in, an audio podcast of the presentations and discussion from the post-"fandebate" workshop at Console-ing Passions last Spring. It is our hope that sharing the event virtually will help inspire continuing conversations about gender and other inequalities in fan culture.

TWC is now seeking submissions for future issues including a special issue on video games and gaming. I've included the CFP below; please assist us in spreading the word!

Special Issue: Games as Transformative Works
Transformative Works and Cultures, Vol. 2 (Spring 2009)
Deadline: November 15, 2008
Guest Editor: Rebecca Carlson

Transformative Works and Cultures (TWC) invites essays on gaming and gaming culture as transformative work. We are interested in game studies in all its theoretical and practical breadth, but even more so in the way fan culture shapes itself around and through gaming interfaces. Potential topics include but are not limited to game audiences as fan cultures; anthropological approaches to game design and game engagement; on- and off-line game experiences; textual and cultural analysis of games; fan appropriations and manipulations of games; and intersections between games and other fan artifacts.

TWC is a new Open Access, international peer-reviewed online journal published by the Organization for Transformative Works. TWC aims to provide a publishing outlet that welcomes fan-related topics and to promote dialogue between the academic community and the fan community. The first issue of TWC (September 2008) is available at http://journal.transformativeworks.org/. TWC accepts rolling electronic submissions of full essays through its Web site, where full guidelines are provided. The final deadline for inclusion in the special games issue is November 15, 2008.

TWC encourages innovative works that situate popular media, fan communities, and transformative works within contemporary culture via a variety of critical approaches, including but not limited to feminism, queer theory, critical race studies, political economy, ethnography, reception theory, literary criticism, film studies, and media studies. Submissions should fit into one of three categories of varying scope:
Theory: These often interdisciplinary essays with a conceptual focus and a theoretical frame offer expansive interventions in the field of fan studies. Peer review. Length, 5,000–8,000 words plus a 100–250-word abstract.

Praxis: These essays may apply a specific theory to a formation or artifact; explicate fan practice; perform a detailed reading of a specific text; or otherwise relate transformative phenomena to social, literary, technological, and/or historical frameworks. Peer review. Length, 4,000–7,000 words plus a 100–250-word abstract.

Symposium: Symposium is a section of concise, thematically contained essays. These short pieces provide insight into current developments and debates surrounding any topic related to fandom or transformative media and cultures. Editorial review. Length, 1,500–2,500 words.
Submission information: http://journal.transformativeworks.org/index.php/twc/about/submissions

Journal Announcement and Call for Papers: Transformative Works and Cultures

|
Transformative Works and Cultures (TWC) is a Gold Open Access international peer-reviewed journal published by the Organization for Transformative Works edited by Kristina Busse and Karen Hellekson. [NB: I am part of TWC's editorial team]

TWC publishes articles about popular media, fan communities, and transformative works, broadly conceived. We invite papers on all related topics, including but not limited to fan fiction, fan vids, mashups, machinima, film, TV, anime, comic books, video games, and any and all aspects of the communities of practice that surround them. TWC’s aim is twofold: to provide a publishing outlet that welcomes fan-related topics, and to promote dialogue between the academic community and the fan community.

We encourage innovative works that situate these topics within contemporary culture via a variety of critical approaches, including but not limited to feminism, queer theory, critical race studies, political economy, ethnography, reception theory, literary criticism, film studies, and media studies. We also encourage authors to consider writing personal essays integrated with scholarship, hypertext articles, or other forms that embrace the technical possibilities of the Web and test the limits of the genre of academic writing. TWC copyrights under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 Unported License.

Theory accepts blind peer-reviewed essays that are often interdisciplinary, with a conceptual focus and a theoretical frame that offers expansive interventions in the field of fan studies (5,000–8,000 words).

Praxis analyzes the particular, in contrast to Theory’s broader vantage. Essays are blind peer reviewed and may apply a specific theory to a formation or artifact; explicate fan practice; perform a detailed reading of a specific text; or otherwise relate transformative phenomena to social, literary, technological, and/or historical frameworks (4,000–7,000 words).

Symposium is a section of editorially reviewed concise, thematically contained short essays that provide insight into current developments and debates surrounding any topic related to fandom or transformative media and cultures (1,500–2,500 words).

Reviews offer critical summaries of items of interest in the fields of fan and media studies, including books, new journals, and Web sites. Reviews incorporate a description of the item’s content, an assessment of its likely audience, and an evaluation of its importance in a larger context (1,500–2,500 words). Review submissions undergo editorial review; submit inquiries first to review@transformativeworks.org.

TWC has rolling submissions. Contributors should submit online through the Web site (http://journal.transformativeworks.org). Inquiries may be sent to the editors (editor@transformativeworks.org).

The call for papers is available as a .pdf download sized for U.S. Letter or European A4. Please feel free to link, download, print, distribute, or post.

FlowTV - the Battlestar Galactica issue!

|

I'm thrilled to announce the publication of "Re/Producing Cult TV: The Battlestar Galactica Issue" at the online journal <a href="http://flowtv.org">FlowTV</a>!

I am the Guest Associate Editor of this special issue, in collaboration with Guest Editor Lynne Joyrich. It includes seven essays (including pieces by me and lj users theorynut, alistern, and _mesk), plus Lynne's illuminating introduction. Perhaps most exciting, though, is a full-length interview with Mary McDonnell (Laura Roslin), in text and audio form!

You'll see the issue on the journal's front page now, and there's also a <a href="http://flowtv.org/?cat=127">table of contents</a>. Please leave us comments and spread the word!

Television Conceptions: Introduction to "Re/Producing Cult TV: The Battlestar Galactica Issue"
By Lynne Joyrich / Brown University
How has the cult television program Battlestar Galactica been conceived, generated, produced, and reproduced? An introduction to the questions of textuality and technology, history and futuricity, production and reception, love and aggression that are addressed in this special issue.

Signal to Noise: The Paradoxes of History and Technology in Battlestar Galactica
By Melanie E.S. Kohnen / Brown University
Battlestar Galactica remixes pertinent questions and concerns about the war on terror with varying degrees of verisimilitude and with varying degrees of predictability.

Toaster-Frakkers and Remote Controls: Technophilia, Cylons, and the Archival Drive
By David Bering-Porter / Brown University
Within the on-screen space of Battlestar Galactica, the Cylons illustrate questions of technophilia through the representational work that they perform both in relation to the remnants of humanity and in and of themselves.

Cataloging Knowledge: Gender, Generative Fandom, and the Battlestar Wiki
By Sarah Toton / Emory University
Thinking about the wiki as fundamentally generative brings the Battlestar Wiki much closer to fanfic and other the creative endeavors classified traditionally as “female fan initiated.

Hera Has Six Mommies (A Transmedia Love Story)
By Julie Levin Russo / Brown University
Television is learning that its offspring can be most fruitful when, like Hera, they&#039;re orphaned: disseminated outside their biologically, technologically, and patriarchally authorized families and adopted by their audiences.

Exogenesis: Mind Children and Cultured Images in Battlestar Galactica
By Alanna Thain / McGill University
As cultured images, Cylons both evoke and exceed biological and media technological reproduction alike, a viral infectious non-human form of reproduction.

Ownership and Desire: Fans' and Producers' Polymorphous Triangulations
By Anne Kustritz / University of Michigan
Battlestar Galactica's use and abuse of its viewers' affections offer one lens for thinking about the way that audiences interact with producers' intentions and genre conventions in a media environment increasingly characterized by postmodern genre hybridity and convergence.

Downloads, Copies, and Reboots: Battlestar Galactica and the Changing Terms of TV Genre
By Bob Rehak / Swarthmore College
What's striking about the many iterations of Galactica is how cleanly the coordinates of its fantasy lure have flipped over time, illustrating the ability of genre myths to reconfigure themselves around new cultural priorities.

Battlestardom: Conversations with Mary McDonnell
By Julie Levin Russo / Brown University
With Lynne Joyrich and Stephanie Nicora
FlowTV welcomes acclaimed actress Mary McDonnell in this event summary and extended interview about her perspectives on Laura Roslin and Battlestar Galactica.

<a href="http://pics.livejournal.com/cyborganize/pic/0001r6s2/"><img src="http://pics.livejournal.com/cyborganize/pic/0001r6s2/s640x480" alt="" height="480" width="409" border="0" /></a>

on paper

My installment of Henry Jenkins' "Gender and Fan Culture" blog series, a conversation with Hector Postigo about labor, technology, and desire in the late capitalist fanscape, is posted here (also livejournal mirrored).

My short reverie "Hairgate! TV's Coiffure Controversies and Lesbian Locks" is out in Camera Obscura (Vol. 22, No. 2) (excerpt).

CLick Me: A Netporn Studies Reader

|

I have an article in this anthology. It's creative commons, so you can download the entire book! info below reposted from http://post.thing.net/node/1633.

Edited by Katrien Jacobs, Marije Janssen, Matteo Pasquinelli
Editorial Assistance: Geert Lovink, Sabine Niederer
Copy Editing: Wietske Maas - Design: Kernow Craig
Publisher: Institute of Network Cultures<br />Supported by: Paradiso, Amsterdam
ISBN: 978-90-78146-03-2

Order a copy of this book by sending an email to: info@networkcultures.org
A PDF of this publication can be downloaded for free at [NOT SAFE FOR WORK!]
low-res, 2MB: http://www.networkcultures.org/_uploads/24.pdf
hi-res, 9MB: http://www.networkcultures.org/clickme/pdf/clickmeReader_9MB.pdf

C'Lick Me: A Netporn Studies Reader is an anthology that collects the best materials of two years debate: from The Art and Politics of Netporn conference held in 2005 in Amsterdam to the 2007 C'Lick Me festival in Paradiso, Amsterdam. C'Lick Me opens the field of 'Internet pornology'. Based on non-conventional approaches, mixing academics, artists and activists, the C'Lick Me Reader reclaims a critical post-enthusiastic, post-censorship perspective on netporn, a dark field that has been dominated thus far by dodgy commerce and filtering. The C'Lick Me reader covers the rise of the netporn society from Usenet underground to the blogosphere, analyses economic data and search engines traffic, compares sex work with the work of fantasy, disability and accessibility. The C'Lick Me reader also expands the no tion of digital desire, and smashes the predicatable boundaries of porn debates, depicting a broader libidinal spectrum from fetish subcultures to digital alienation, from code pornography to war pornography. The reader concludes by re-contextualising the queer discourse into a post-porn scenario.

Contributions by: Adam Arvidsson, Franco 'Bifo' Berardi, Manuel Bonik, Mikita Brottman, Florian Cramer, Samantha Culp, Barbara DeGenevieve, Mark Dery, Michael Goddard, Stewart Home, Katrien Jacobs, Marije Janssen, Julie Levin Russo, Regina Lynn, Sergio Messina, Mireille Miller-Young, Tim Noonan, Francesco Macarone Palmieri aka Warbear, Matteo Pasquinelli, Audacia Ray, Andreas Schaale, Nishant Shah, Tim Stuettgen, Matthew Zook.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction

SECTION 1: THE RISE OF THE NETPORN SOCIETY

Regina Lynn
Sex Drive: Where Sex and Tech Come Together

Mark Dery
Naked Lunch: Talking Realcore with Sergio Messina

Nishant Shah
PlayBlog: Pornography, Performance and Cyberspace

Audacia Ray
Sex on the Open Market: Sex Workers Harness the Power of the Internet

Adam Arvidsson
Netporn: the Work of Fantasy in the Information Society

Manuel Bonik and Andreas Schaale
The Naked Truth: Internet Eroticism and the Search

Tim Noonan
Netporn, Sexuality and the Politics of Disability: A Catalyst for Access, Inclusion and Acceptance?

Matthew Zook
Report on the Location of the Internet Adult Industry

SECTION 2: DIGITAL DESIRE BEYOND PORNOGRAPHY

Mark Dery
Paradise Lust: Pornotopia Meets the Culture Wars

Matteo Pasquinelli
Warporn! Warpunk: Autonomous Videopoiesis in Wartime

Florian Cramer and Stewart Home
Pornographic Coding

Florian Cramer
Sodom Blogging: Alternative Porn and Aesthetic Sensibility

Mikita Brottman
Nightmares in Cyberspace: Urban Legends, Moral Panics and the Dark Side of the Net

Michael Goddard
BBW: Techno-archaism, Excessive Corporeality and Network Sexuality

Franco ‘Bifo’ Berardi
The Obsession of the (Vanishing) Body

SECTION 3: NETPORN AFTER THE QUEER BOOM

Mireille Miller-young
Sexy and Smart: Black Women and the Politics of Self-Authorship in Netporn

Katrien Jacobs
Porn Arousal and Gender Morphing in the Twilight Zone

Barbara DeGenevieve
Ssspread.com: The Hot Bods of Queer Porn

Julie Levin Russo
'The Real Thing': Reframing Queer Pornography for Virtual Spaces

Samantha Culp
First Porn Son: Asian-man.com and the Golden Porn Revolution

Francesco Macarone Palmieri aka Warbear
21st Century Schizoid Bear: Masculine transitions Through Net Pornography

Tim Stuttgen
Ten Fragments on a Cartography of Post-Pornographic Politics

BIOGRAPHIES
WEBOGRAPHY

This publication is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial Non Derivative Works 2.5 Netherlands License. No article in this reader may be reproduced in any form by any electronic or mechanical means without permission in writing from the author.

We would like to thank all the participants of the conferences 'Art and Politics of Netporn' (2005) and ‘C’Lick Me’ (2007). A special thanks to our director, Emilie Randoe, School of Interactive Media, Amsterdam Polytechnic, for supporting our netporn research programme; to Pierre Ballings and Maarten van Boven, Paradiso, Amsterdam, for hosting the C’Lick Me event and supporting the production of the reader. Thanks to all the authors of the book for collaborating with us over the years, as well as to all the photographers and image-producers on the web whose works have been cited in the different articles.

Syndicate content