Duggan Jennifer
Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway.
Telev New Media. 2022 Nov;23(7):703-720. doi: 10.1177/15274764211016305. Epub 2021 May 19.
Cultural studies scholars have long been interested in the nexus between people's online activities and their identities. One activity that has drawn attention is reading/writing fan fiction (fictions written by and for fans that build upon the characters and worlds depicted in commercial texts). While fan fiction and its surrounding communities have long been understood as resistant to heteronormativity, previous work exploring the fans who produce and consume fan fiction has largely insisted that most of these fans are adult ciswomen. Little has been written about the experiences of trans and genderqueer fans. To remedy this elision, this article explores two trans and genderqueer individuals' experiences with fan fiction. It closely examines the roles reading, and especially reading fan fiction, has or has not played in their understandings of themselves, their identities, and their places in the world.
文化研究学者长期以来一直对人们的网络活动与其身份之间的联系感兴趣。一种引起关注的活动是阅读/撰写同人小说(由粉丝创作并为粉丝创作的小说,基于商业文本中描绘的角色和世界)。虽然同人小说及其周边社区长期以来被认为是抵制异性恋规范的,但之前探索创作和消费同人小说的粉丝的研究大多坚持认为,这些粉丝中的大多数是成年顺性别女性。关于跨性别和性别酷儿粉丝的经历,相关著述甚少。为了弥补这一疏漏,本文探讨了两位跨性别和性别酷儿个体的同人小说经历。它仔细研究了阅读,尤其是阅读同人小说,在他们对自己、身份以及在世界上的位置的理解中所扮演或未扮演的角色。