Television, Social Media, and Fan Culture
Herausgeber: Givens-Carroll, Dedria; Slade, Alison F.; Narro, Amber J.
Television, Social Media, and Fan Culture
Herausgeber: Givens-Carroll, Dedria; Slade, Alison F.; Narro, Amber J.
- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
Social media has brought about a revolution in fan culture, from fan uprisings to save programs to groups and pages dedicated to mourning lost programs and characters. This edited collection examines how fans use social media in regard to television programming, characters, na...
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Joy Keiko AsamenResearch Paradigms, Television, and Social Behaviour193,99 €
- Revolution of the Modern Sports Fan134,99 €
- Evolution of the Modern Sports Fan149,99 €
- Erika EngstromTelevision, Religion, and Supernatural152,99 €
- Janet JohnsonPolitical Rhetoric, Social Media, and American Presidential Campaigns134,99 €
- Brian JohnstonMyth, Fan Culture, and the Popular Appeal of Liminality in the Music of U2134,99 €
- Rich ShumateBarry Goldwater, Distrust in Media, and Conservative Identity122,99 €
-
-
-
Social media has brought about a revolution in fan culture, from fan uprisings to save programs to groups and pages dedicated to mourning lost programs and characters. This edited collection examines how fans use social media in regard to television programming, characters, na...
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Lexington Books
- Seitenzahl: 420
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. November 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 29mm
- Gewicht: 829g
- ISBN-13: 9781498506168
- ISBN-10: 149850616X
- Artikelnr.: 43753058
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Lexington Books
- Seitenzahl: 420
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. November 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 29mm
- Gewicht: 829g
- ISBN-13: 9781498506168
- ISBN-10: 149850616X
- Artikelnr.: 43753058
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Edited by Alison F. Slade; Amber J. Narro and Dedria Givens-Carroll - Contributions by Benjamin Brojakowski; Jason Roy Burnett; Ryan Cassella; Garret Castleberry; Matthew Collins; Ted M. Dickinson; Marsha Ducey; Dan Faltesek; Krystal Fogle; Brian Geltzeil
Chapter 1: The New Network: How Social Media is Changing-and
Saving-Television Ryan Cassella Chapter 2: Spoiler Alert: Understanding
Television Enjoyment in the Social Media Era Benjamin Brojakowski Chapter
3: Rhetorical Strengths & Limitations of Interactivity for Activism in the
Stewart and Colbert Universe Christopher A. Medjesky Chapter 4: Fandom
Communication in a Mediated Age: The Use of Twitter and Blogs for Dissent
Practices Among National Basketball Association (NBA) Fans Corey Jay
Liberman, Michael Plugh and Brian Geltzeiler Chapter 5: What Types of
#SportsFans use Social Media? The Role of Team Identity Formation and
Spectatorship Motivation on Self-Disclosure during a Live Sport Broadcast
Shaughan A. Keaton, Nicholas M. Watanabe & Brody J. Ruihley Chapter 6: The
Online Community: Fan response of Community's Unlikely Fifth Season Matthew
Collins and Danielle M. Stern Chapter 7: Game(s) of Fandom: The Hyperlink
Labyrinths that Paratextualize Game of Thrones Fandom Garret Castleberry
Chapter 8: Be Original: Examining Fan Comments on A&E's Duck Dynasty
Facebook Page After the Robertson Suspension Michel M. Haigh Chapter 9:
"The Parents Have the Dream, but the Kids are in the Nightmare": Digital
Interactivity, Toddlers & Tiaras Viewers, and Social Networking Sites
Leandra H. Hernandez Chapter 10: Zombie Fans, Second Screen, and Television
Audiences: Redefining Parasociality as Technoprosociality in AMC's
#TalkingDead Sabrina Pasztor and Jenny Ungbha Korn Chapter 11: Memes,
Tweets, and Props: How Fans Cope When Shows Go Off the Air Alane Presswood
and Steve Granelli Chapter 12: So Are the Days of Our Tweets: An
Examination of Twitter Use By American Daytime Serials and Their Fans
Marsha Ducey Chapter 13: Army Wives Connect: Lifetime Viewers' Everyday
Lives and Fandom Converge in Online Communities Darcey Morris Chapter 14:
"Butter," Facebook, and Paula Deen: Examining Fans Use of Social Media in
Crisis Michel M. Haigh & Shelley Wigley Chapter 15: Fans Can Be Journalists
Too: A Look at Fan Interaction with HBO's The Newsroom Julia E. Largent &
Jason Roy Burnett Chapter 16: It's Bigger on the Inside: Fandom, Social
Media, and Doctor Who Krystal Fogle Chapter 17: Television-inspired Cosplay
and Social Media Laura Kane and William E. Loges Chapter 18: Who Killed
@TheLauraPalmer? Twitter as a Performance Space for Twin Peaks Fan Fiction
Kathryn L. Lookadoo and Ted M. Dickinson Chapter 19: Fifty Years of "The
Man From U.N.C.L.E.": How the Ever-Changing Media Sustained and Shaped One
of the Oldest Fan Communities Cynthia W. Walker Chapter 20: Managing
Multiscreen Daniel Faltesek
Saving-Television Ryan Cassella Chapter 2: Spoiler Alert: Understanding
Television Enjoyment in the Social Media Era Benjamin Brojakowski Chapter
3: Rhetorical Strengths & Limitations of Interactivity for Activism in the
Stewart and Colbert Universe Christopher A. Medjesky Chapter 4: Fandom
Communication in a Mediated Age: The Use of Twitter and Blogs for Dissent
Practices Among National Basketball Association (NBA) Fans Corey Jay
Liberman, Michael Plugh and Brian Geltzeiler Chapter 5: What Types of
#SportsFans use Social Media? The Role of Team Identity Formation and
Spectatorship Motivation on Self-Disclosure during a Live Sport Broadcast
Shaughan A. Keaton, Nicholas M. Watanabe & Brody J. Ruihley Chapter 6: The
Online Community: Fan response of Community's Unlikely Fifth Season Matthew
Collins and Danielle M. Stern Chapter 7: Game(s) of Fandom: The Hyperlink
Labyrinths that Paratextualize Game of Thrones Fandom Garret Castleberry
Chapter 8: Be Original: Examining Fan Comments on A&E's Duck Dynasty
Facebook Page After the Robertson Suspension Michel M. Haigh Chapter 9:
"The Parents Have the Dream, but the Kids are in the Nightmare": Digital
Interactivity, Toddlers & Tiaras Viewers, and Social Networking Sites
Leandra H. Hernandez Chapter 10: Zombie Fans, Second Screen, and Television
Audiences: Redefining Parasociality as Technoprosociality in AMC's
#TalkingDead Sabrina Pasztor and Jenny Ungbha Korn Chapter 11: Memes,
Tweets, and Props: How Fans Cope When Shows Go Off the Air Alane Presswood
and Steve Granelli Chapter 12: So Are the Days of Our Tweets: An
Examination of Twitter Use By American Daytime Serials and Their Fans
Marsha Ducey Chapter 13: Army Wives Connect: Lifetime Viewers' Everyday
Lives and Fandom Converge in Online Communities Darcey Morris Chapter 14:
"Butter," Facebook, and Paula Deen: Examining Fans Use of Social Media in
Crisis Michel M. Haigh & Shelley Wigley Chapter 15: Fans Can Be Journalists
Too: A Look at Fan Interaction with HBO's The Newsroom Julia E. Largent &
Jason Roy Burnett Chapter 16: It's Bigger on the Inside: Fandom, Social
Media, and Doctor Who Krystal Fogle Chapter 17: Television-inspired Cosplay
and Social Media Laura Kane and William E. Loges Chapter 18: Who Killed
@TheLauraPalmer? Twitter as a Performance Space for Twin Peaks Fan Fiction
Kathryn L. Lookadoo and Ted M. Dickinson Chapter 19: Fifty Years of "The
Man From U.N.C.L.E.": How the Ever-Changing Media Sustained and Shaped One
of the Oldest Fan Communities Cynthia W. Walker Chapter 20: Managing
Multiscreen Daniel Faltesek
Chapter 1: The New Network: How Social Media is Changing-and
Saving-Television Ryan Cassella Chapter 2: Spoiler Alert: Understanding
Television Enjoyment in the Social Media Era Benjamin Brojakowski Chapter
3: Rhetorical Strengths & Limitations of Interactivity for Activism in the
Stewart and Colbert Universe Christopher A. Medjesky Chapter 4: Fandom
Communication in a Mediated Age: The Use of Twitter and Blogs for Dissent
Practices Among National Basketball Association (NBA) Fans Corey Jay
Liberman, Michael Plugh and Brian Geltzeiler Chapter 5: What Types of
#SportsFans use Social Media? The Role of Team Identity Formation and
Spectatorship Motivation on Self-Disclosure during a Live Sport Broadcast
Shaughan A. Keaton, Nicholas M. Watanabe & Brody J. Ruihley Chapter 6: The
Online Community: Fan response of Community's Unlikely Fifth Season Matthew
Collins and Danielle M. Stern Chapter 7: Game(s) of Fandom: The Hyperlink
Labyrinths that Paratextualize Game of Thrones Fandom Garret Castleberry
Chapter 8: Be Original: Examining Fan Comments on A&E's Duck Dynasty
Facebook Page After the Robertson Suspension Michel M. Haigh Chapter 9:
"The Parents Have the Dream, but the Kids are in the Nightmare": Digital
Interactivity, Toddlers & Tiaras Viewers, and Social Networking Sites
Leandra H. Hernandez Chapter 10: Zombie Fans, Second Screen, and Television
Audiences: Redefining Parasociality as Technoprosociality in AMC's
#TalkingDead Sabrina Pasztor and Jenny Ungbha Korn Chapter 11: Memes,
Tweets, and Props: How Fans Cope When Shows Go Off the Air Alane Presswood
and Steve Granelli Chapter 12: So Are the Days of Our Tweets: An
Examination of Twitter Use By American Daytime Serials and Their Fans
Marsha Ducey Chapter 13: Army Wives Connect: Lifetime Viewers' Everyday
Lives and Fandom Converge in Online Communities Darcey Morris Chapter 14:
"Butter," Facebook, and Paula Deen: Examining Fans Use of Social Media in
Crisis Michel M. Haigh & Shelley Wigley Chapter 15: Fans Can Be Journalists
Too: A Look at Fan Interaction with HBO's The Newsroom Julia E. Largent &
Jason Roy Burnett Chapter 16: It's Bigger on the Inside: Fandom, Social
Media, and Doctor Who Krystal Fogle Chapter 17: Television-inspired Cosplay
and Social Media Laura Kane and William E. Loges Chapter 18: Who Killed
@TheLauraPalmer? Twitter as a Performance Space for Twin Peaks Fan Fiction
Kathryn L. Lookadoo and Ted M. Dickinson Chapter 19: Fifty Years of "The
Man From U.N.C.L.E.": How the Ever-Changing Media Sustained and Shaped One
of the Oldest Fan Communities Cynthia W. Walker Chapter 20: Managing
Multiscreen Daniel Faltesek
Saving-Television Ryan Cassella Chapter 2: Spoiler Alert: Understanding
Television Enjoyment in the Social Media Era Benjamin Brojakowski Chapter
3: Rhetorical Strengths & Limitations of Interactivity for Activism in the
Stewart and Colbert Universe Christopher A. Medjesky Chapter 4: Fandom
Communication in a Mediated Age: The Use of Twitter and Blogs for Dissent
Practices Among National Basketball Association (NBA) Fans Corey Jay
Liberman, Michael Plugh and Brian Geltzeiler Chapter 5: What Types of
#SportsFans use Social Media? The Role of Team Identity Formation and
Spectatorship Motivation on Self-Disclosure during a Live Sport Broadcast
Shaughan A. Keaton, Nicholas M. Watanabe & Brody J. Ruihley Chapter 6: The
Online Community: Fan response of Community's Unlikely Fifth Season Matthew
Collins and Danielle M. Stern Chapter 7: Game(s) of Fandom: The Hyperlink
Labyrinths that Paratextualize Game of Thrones Fandom Garret Castleberry
Chapter 8: Be Original: Examining Fan Comments on A&E's Duck Dynasty
Facebook Page After the Robertson Suspension Michel M. Haigh Chapter 9:
"The Parents Have the Dream, but the Kids are in the Nightmare": Digital
Interactivity, Toddlers & Tiaras Viewers, and Social Networking Sites
Leandra H. Hernandez Chapter 10: Zombie Fans, Second Screen, and Television
Audiences: Redefining Parasociality as Technoprosociality in AMC's
#TalkingDead Sabrina Pasztor and Jenny Ungbha Korn Chapter 11: Memes,
Tweets, and Props: How Fans Cope When Shows Go Off the Air Alane Presswood
and Steve Granelli Chapter 12: So Are the Days of Our Tweets: An
Examination of Twitter Use By American Daytime Serials and Their Fans
Marsha Ducey Chapter 13: Army Wives Connect: Lifetime Viewers' Everyday
Lives and Fandom Converge in Online Communities Darcey Morris Chapter 14:
"Butter," Facebook, and Paula Deen: Examining Fans Use of Social Media in
Crisis Michel M. Haigh & Shelley Wigley Chapter 15: Fans Can Be Journalists
Too: A Look at Fan Interaction with HBO's The Newsroom Julia E. Largent &
Jason Roy Burnett Chapter 16: It's Bigger on the Inside: Fandom, Social
Media, and Doctor Who Krystal Fogle Chapter 17: Television-inspired Cosplay
and Social Media Laura Kane and William E. Loges Chapter 18: Who Killed
@TheLauraPalmer? Twitter as a Performance Space for Twin Peaks Fan Fiction
Kathryn L. Lookadoo and Ted M. Dickinson Chapter 19: Fifty Years of "The
Man From U.N.C.L.E.": How the Ever-Changing Media Sustained and Shaped One
of the Oldest Fan Communities Cynthia W. Walker Chapter 20: Managing
Multiscreen Daniel Faltesek