Conceptualising Fan Persona

The entanglement of identity and performance within fandoms have been central components of fan studies, whether these fans are focused on sports, music, film, television, literature, celebrity, or something else. Their shared interest and investment in the fan object provide fans with common groun...

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Main Authors: Kim Barbour, Mark Stewart
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Deakin University 2025-01-01
Series:Persona Studies
Online Access:https://ojs.deakin.edu.au/index.php/ps/article/view/2125
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author Kim Barbour
Mark Stewart
author_facet Kim Barbour
Mark Stewart
author_sort Kim Barbour
collection DOAJ
description The entanglement of identity and performance within fandoms have been central components of fan studies, whether these fans are focused on sports, music, film, television, literature, celebrity, or something else. Their shared interest and investment in the fan object provide fans with common ground on which to build a collective identity, while the fan object can be a rich source of identity markers, from logos and colour schemes to moral values and philosophical positions. As argued by Busse and Gray in The Handbook of Media Audiences (2011, p. 426), being a member of a fandom facilitates “a particular identity that affects and shapes its members in ways beyond shared media consumption”. In this issue, we invited scholars to bring understandings of identity from fan studies into conversation with ideas of a strategic performance of self, extending existing work on fan personas from both within the Persona Studies journal and beyond. By doing so, we wished to explore how a ‘fan persona’ might be utilised by fans for specific purposes or in different interactions, or to frame individual perspectives, beliefs or interpretations within collective spaces.
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spelling doaj-art-160fa8ca7b944d4da0c7ed4543f8d7402025-02-02T06:01:32ZengDeakin UniversityPersona Studies2205-52582025-01-0110210.21153/psj2024vol10no2art2125Conceptualising Fan PersonaKim Barbour0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1072-0672Mark Stewart1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0188-5926The University of AdelaideThe University of Waikato The entanglement of identity and performance within fandoms have been central components of fan studies, whether these fans are focused on sports, music, film, television, literature, celebrity, or something else. Their shared interest and investment in the fan object provide fans with common ground on which to build a collective identity, while the fan object can be a rich source of identity markers, from logos and colour schemes to moral values and philosophical positions. As argued by Busse and Gray in The Handbook of Media Audiences (2011, p. 426), being a member of a fandom facilitates “a particular identity that affects and shapes its members in ways beyond shared media consumption”. In this issue, we invited scholars to bring understandings of identity from fan studies into conversation with ideas of a strategic performance of self, extending existing work on fan personas from both within the Persona Studies journal and beyond. By doing so, we wished to explore how a ‘fan persona’ might be utilised by fans for specific purposes or in different interactions, or to frame individual perspectives, beliefs or interpretations within collective spaces. https://ojs.deakin.edu.au/index.php/ps/article/view/2125
spellingShingle Kim Barbour
Mark Stewart
Conceptualising Fan Persona
Persona Studies
title Conceptualising Fan Persona
title_full Conceptualising Fan Persona
title_fullStr Conceptualising Fan Persona
title_full_unstemmed Conceptualising Fan Persona
title_short Conceptualising Fan Persona
title_sort conceptualising fan persona
url https://ojs.deakin.edu.au/index.php/ps/article/view/2125
work_keys_str_mv AT kimbarbour conceptualisingfanpersona
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