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Making European cult cinema fan enterprise in an alternative economy / Oliver Carter.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: [S.l. : AMSTERDAM UNIVERSITY PRE, (c)2018.Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9048529069
  • 9789048529063
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • PN1993 .M355 2018
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
Contents:
Subject: Fans of cult films don't just watch the movies they love-they frequently engage with them in other, more creative ways as well. Making European Cult Cinema explores the ways in which that fandom could be understood as an alternative economy of fan enterprise, through a close look at how fans produce and distribute artifacts and commodities related to cult films. Built around interviews and ethnographic observations-and even the author's own fan enterprise-the book creates an innovative theoretical framework that draws in ideas from cultural studies and political economy to introduce the concept of an 'alternative economy' as a way to understand fan productions.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number URL Status Date due Barcode
Online Book (LOGIN USING YOUR MY CIU LOGIN AND PASSWORD) Online Book (LOGIN USING YOUR MY CIU LOGIN AND PASSWORD) G. Allen Fleece Library ONLINE Non-fiction PN1993.5.8 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Link to resource Available on1090790675

Includes bibliographies and index.

Cover; Contents; Acknowledgements; Preface; Introduction; Fancademia: A Limitation of Fan Studies?; Defining the fan; Choosing a direction; Celebrating fandom; Fan studies as fan production?; The structure of the book; 1. Fan Enterprise as an Alternative Economy; Fandom as an economy; Defining the 'alternative economy'; Fans as creative workers; Fan produced texts as exchangeable artefacts; Fans transgressing rules and regulations; Conclusion; 2. Researching an Alternative Economy; A (fan) ethnographic approach; A model for fan ethnography: 'Combined ethnography'; Using combined ethnography

Limitations and ethical considerationsConclusion; 3. Defining European Cult Cinema; Trash or cult?; What is European cult cinema?; The 'giallo'; Conclusion; 4. Historicizing the Alternative Economy of European Cult Cinema Fan Enterprise; The fanzines; The significance of VHS; The British horror fanzines; Media Communications: The first fan enterprise; Media Communications and the Fantom Kiler; Dark Publications: The second fan enterprise; FAB Press: The third fan enterprise; Conclusion: Diversifying production; 5. Sharing European Cult Cinema: Encouraging and Rewarding Fan Enterprise

Commercially releasing gialli on home videoWhat is CineTorrent?; Policies, rules and, regulations; Constructing an archive; The Giallo Project; The Giallo Project and user creativity; Conclusion: CineTorrent as a fan enterprise; 6. Informal Enterprises: Selling European Cult Cinema; The shop with the Crystal Plumage; Pronto! Giallo T-shirts; From 'supply and demand' to 'demand and supply'; Tough to Kill and Lulu; European cult T-shirts on Spreadshirt; Conclusion; Conclusion: Making Fandoms; From the alternative to the formal? Crowdfunding Eurocrime; Making European cult cinema

New directions for fan studiesBibliography; Index; List of Figures and Tables; Fig. 2.1: The 'combined ethnography model'; Fig. 4.1: The evolution of European Trash Cinema; Fig. 4.2: Front covers of Go Video releases of Cannibal Holocaust and SS Experiment Camp; Fig. 4.3: Fantom Kiler DVD cover; Fig. 4.4: The Fantom Kiler; Fig. 4.5: The Fantom Kiler sequels; Fig. 4.6: Issues one and three of Flesh and Blood; Fig. 4.7: Examples of FAB Press' publications; Fig. 5.1: DVD production costs; Fig. 5.2: Safe and unsafe content; Fig. 5.3: eBay advert for the fan DVD of Red Light Girls

Fig. 6.1: Examples of Daria's t-shirt designsFig. 6.2: Daria's Pronto! t-shirt design; Fig. 6.3: Examples of Jonny's Spreadshirt designs; Fig. 6.4: My Spreadshirt designs; Fig. 6.5: Spreadshirt's design guidelines; Fig. 7.1: Eurocrime Kickstarter page; Fig. 7.2: Incremental rewards for Kickstarter donations to the Eurocrime documentary; Fig. 7.3: Making fandom model

Fans of cult films don't just watch the movies they love-they frequently engage with them in other, more creative ways as well. Making European Cult Cinema explores the ways in which that fandom could be understood as an alternative economy of fan enterprise, through a close look at how fans produce and distribute artifacts and commodities related to cult films. Built around interviews and ethnographic observations-and even the author's own fan enterprise-the book creates an innovative theoretical framework that draws in ideas from cultural studies and political economy to introduce the concept of an 'alternative economy' as a way to understand fan productions.

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