Results 1 to 10 of about 43 (38)

Mind perception and fan fiction: a survey using the IDOLM@STER series

open access: yesCogent Social Sciences
This study focuses on the relationship between the impression a character makes on players of a game and the percentage of hetero and homosexualistic fan fiction that uses that character, particularly in the case of femslash works in homosexual ...
Tetsuya Matsui
exaly   +3 more sources

"Carmilla" fandom as a lesbian community of feeling

open access: yesTransformative Works and Cultures, 2021
The fandom of the contemporary lesbian web series, Carmilla (2014–16), is an affective community built on a set of inclusions and exclusions. Carmilla, a 121-episode web series shot in vlog format, follows the relationship between a human girl and a ...
Sneha Kumar
doaj   +1 more source

Femslash Fan Fiction's Expansive Erotic Imaginary

open access: yesTransformative Works and Cultures, 2022
As a genre largely unregulated by market trends and commercial interests, fan fiction can explore forms of bodily pleasure that might not otherwise be viewed as viable in mainstream pornography or romance.
Emily Coccia
doaj   +1 more source

Femslash goggles: Fan vids with commentary by creators

open access: yesTransformative Works and Cultures, 2017
This gallery opens with a curatorial essay offering a metaphorical theory of vidding as an AR technology and contextualizing femslash fan vids. The selection of works with artist notes includes "Come On" by here's luck (2002); "These Two Arms" by Killa ...
Julie Levin Russo
doaj   +2 more sources

Bisexual erasure in queer sci-fi "utopias"

open access: yesTransformative Works and Cultures, 2017
I discuss the paradoxes of queer representation in contemporary science fiction television by analyzing bisexual female protagonists of the CW's The 100 (2014–), BBC America's Orphan Black (2013–), and SyFy's Wynonna Earp (2016–).
Victoria Serafini
doaj   +2 more sources

Envisioning queer female fandom

open access: yesTransformative Works and Cultures, 2017
Editorial for "Queer female fandom," edited by Julie Levin Russo and Eve Ng, special issue, Transformative Works and Cultures, no. 24 (June 15, 2017).
Eve Ng, Julie Levin Russo
doaj   +2 more sources

Femslash Fandom and the Cultivation of White Queer Genealogies: Longing for Histories, Reading for Futures

open access: yesTransformative Works and Cultures, 2022
The recent surge in fan activity around historical figures like Emily Dickinson and Anne Lister reveals an ongoing desire for and investment in cultivating queer histories as a way of addressing the harms of erasure.
Emily Coccia
doaj   +1 more source

Female-centered fan fiction as homoaffection in fan communities

open access: yesTransformative Works and Cultures, 2017
In the scholarship of fan studies, a lot has been said about why female fan communities enjoy writing about male characters and relationships in fan fiction.
Ria Narai
doaj   +2 more sources

Unseen international music idol femslash

open access: yesTransformative Works and Cultures, 2017
One sector of femslash appears to have developed in relative isolation from the rest. This sector is international music idol femslash.
Elaine Han Lin
doaj   +1 more source

Fans of color in femslash

open access: yesTransformative Works and Cultures, 2019
This roundtable discussion brings together a group of fans of color to discuss their experiences specifically in femslash fandom.
Mel Stanfill
doaj   +1 more source

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