Previous Entry | Next Entry

Banality in fan studies

  • Oct. 8th, 2009 at 6:40 PM
crypto: (sarah looks ahead)
Michael Bérubé has posted a lengthy response to criticisms of the CHE essay "What's the Matter with Cultural Studies?" that I'd linked to last month, with bonus elaborations and clarifications. And for those playing along at home, special guest appearances from Lisa Duggan, Jody Berland, and Simon During!

I'm just going to highlight here this one section that touches on fan & television studies, and emphasizes the history of their critique by and within cultural studies:

My complaint about Frank’s account of cultural studies in One Market Under God (in a review essay reprinted in Rhetorical Occasions, titled “Idolatries of the Marketplace”) was (a) that it relies almost entirely on Bob McChesney’s “Is There Any Hope for Cultural Studies?” and (b) that Frank was simply unaware of the rich tradition, in cultural studies itself, of criticism of the field’s cultural populist wing. So here’s the relevant passage from The Left At War (I tell you, the book covers absolutely everything in the world. The second edition will cover all the other stuff):
It is, without question, a serious political and theoretical mistake to overestimate the importance of popular culture and the power of its consumers (even if they are also, in some ways, its producers), and to strain to find world-historical political consequences in the film Basic Instinct or televised “reality” shows. But it is a still more egregious and lamentable mistake to ignore a vast terrain of popular culture and popular experience altogether, or to determine in advance (and in ignorance) that it can serve only reactionary ends, or to decide that certain cultural phenomena might be worth the attention of conscientious leftists—but only if they (the phenomena) have nothing to do with corporations. At the time McChesney penned his attack, cultural studies had more than its share of enthusiastic celebrants of the “active audience” thesis, it is true; they had already been repeatedly criticized by other cultural studies theorists, as when Tony Bennett complained about his colleagues’ “sleuth-like searching for subversive practices just where you’d least expect to find them” (“Putting Policy into Cultural Studies,” 32) or when Simon Frith wrote of “defending popular culture from the populists” [footnote]. But it also contained plenty of people who understood that the struggle against the Reagan-Bush right could not be engaged exclusively on the terms of electoral politics, let alone defeated on the economic front by dragging out the charts and showing Americans that their real wages were falling while CEO wages were skyrocketing.
The Frith quote is footnoted like so: “Simon Frith, ‘The Good, the Bad, and the Indifferent: Saving Popular Culture from the Populists.’ diacritics 21.4 (1991): 101-15. Other classic critiques of populism in cultural studies include John Frow, Cultural Studies and Cultural Value; Larry Grossberg, It’s a Sin; Jim McGuigan, Cultural Populism; Meaghan Morris, ‘Banality in Cultural Studies’; and, alphabetically last but chronologically first out of the box, Judith Williamson, ‘The Problems of Being Popular,’ from way back in 1985.” In fact, McGuigan’s book, proclaiming itself “a sympathetic critique of cultural populism,” nevertheless argues that “neo-Gramscian hegemony theory’s approach to subcultural analysis was deconstructed and reoriented toward what became an uncritical understanding of youth cultural consumption. A similar trajectory is traced in the construction of ‘popular television’ as an object of study, exemplified by the turn toward ‘the active audience,’ which in spite of its evident advantages neglects the economic, technological and political determinations of televisual culture. The uncritical endorsement of popular taste and pleasure, from an entirely hermeneutic perspective, is curiously consistent with economic liberalism’s concept of ‘consumer sovereignty’” (6).
So, okay, but what's happened to fan studies? Sure, a lot of later work dialed back on the rhetorical excesses of "active audience" boosterism, but so much of it still seems governed by a "the fans are alright" orientation. On the one hand, you have Henry Jenkins and friends, the Convergence Culture coterie, whose collective intelligence has apparently led them to stop worrying and embrace the brand extensions, and wherever possible to embrace industry itself. On the other hand, you've got the cult of the fanwork, where transformative is the new subversive, pleasure becomes its own politics, and the material/economic domain is largely reduced to questions of copyright and creativity. Sure, that's a gross generalization of a lot of really interesting work being done -- but I look at the (excellent) fan(works) studies articles from the In Focus section of the latest Cinema Journal (pdf), and I see, albeit posed in more sophisticated and nuanced terms, yet another valorization of active audiences which, all in all, doesn't seem to have moved very far beyond the orbit traced by Jenkins' Textual Poachers, published nearly two decades ago.

Am I missing something? Has fan studies simply defected from cultural studies, rejected its presuppositions and preoccupations as inadequate or irrelevant, or shrugged off the '90s critiques of cultural populism?

I'll close with a bit of Meaghan Morris' most excellent "Banality in Cultural Studies":

If banality keeps on coming back around in our polemics, it is less because of the residual elitism of individual intellectuals, and populist reaction to it, and more because "banality" as mythic signifier is always a mask for the question of value, and of value-judgement, or "discrimination". If I find myself in the contradictory position of wanting to reject the patronising idea that "banality" is a useful framing concept to discuss mass media, and yet go on to complain myself of "banality" in cultural studies, the problem may arise because the critical vocabulary available to people wanting to theorise the discriminations that they make in relation to their own experience of popular culture -- without debating the "validity" of that experience, even less that culture as a whole -- is still, today, extraordinarily depleted. It seems to me, therefore, that the worst thing one can do in this context is to accuse people trying to develop a critique of popular culture of succumbing to "elitism" or pessimism.

Comments

crypto: Amy Pond (Default)
[personal profile] crypto wrote:
Oct. 9th, 2009 06:28 pm (UTC)
Well, for a textual outlet there was quite a bit of talk about gift economies & profit & piracy. :)

Also, I want Ellen/Dean, so where does that leave me????

Hey, I'd read that too! *g*
cathexys: Lee Adama, nude torso (bsg_lee)
[personal profile] cathexys wrote:
Oct. 9th, 2009 06:31 pm (UTC)
But that was...how did you say "hallow and undertheorized" :P

Too bad neither one of us is writing! Because while I think Dean has chemistry with a tree, I thought he and Ellen were...very, very lovely! (And i'm not a usual big fan of the older woman/younger man pairing...Lee and Roslin notwithstanding :)
crypto: Amy Pond (Default)
[personal profile] crypto wrote:
Oct. 9th, 2009 06:46 pm (UTC)
Well, "shallow" as in I wish it had gone deeper (I'm thinking especially of the "gift economy" discussion), and "undertheorized" as in "wow, we're a long way from the Birmingham School's engagements with Marxist theory, and maybe 'needs moar historicized critique of neoliberalism' or whatever isn't necessarily the only way to go, but it does feel as though something valuable has been lost along the way" (I'm thinking especially of basically any reference to FanLib).

I haven't been watching this season of SPN, so I'll happily take your word on their recent scenes together. I think I've only read one Ellen/Dean fic, so long ago that I can't remember who wrote it, but it was a solid PWP.
cathexys: dark sphinx (default icon) (Default)
[personal profile] cathexys wrote:
Oct. 9th, 2009 06:53 pm (UTC)
that was me sucking at C&P :)

I am feeling like you're doing a bit of the why no gen Ellen fic now, yes. Because these essays were doing an awful lot in the space of 3000 words a piece. I mean, we're talking about a potential audience who doesn't know what a vid is. Who has never heard of FanLib. So yes, these authors could have done more. But I'm not sure how without either losing large parts of their audiences or writing an entirely different essay...
crypto: actor glynn turman (glynn turman)
[personal profile] crypto wrote:
Oct. 9th, 2009 10:55 pm (UTC)
I take your point -- I don't mean to single out those essays, or fault them for falling short of unrealistic expectations. As I said to Francesca above, I referenced the CJ section specifically because so many of the topics did verge on cultural studies terrain & analyses, yet didn't read to me like cultural studies (in the hazy "I know it when I see it" way *g*).

So for "deeper" I'm less interested in length than orientation -- I wanted a more historicized, critical, reflexive approach to the gift economy question, and I felt like it was presented as a "gift economy yay!" blend of the resistant fan and 2nd wave-style valorization of female values. And this is one place where I see a role for a fan studies more grounded in cultural studies.

Similarly, I'd love to see Francesca (or someone else) take the provocative ideas in her essay about the historical role of the VCR in fannish consumption and production -- with all of its social, spatial, temporal, and technological/material implications -- and really run with them, connect them to the work of people like Lynn Spigel and broader feminist television and technology studies, historicize them and extend them through current DVD/DVR/digital/online modes, etc. That's sort of what I have in mind for productive encounters between fan studies & cultural studies.
cathexys: T.W. Adorno: negative dialectics (adorno)
[personal profile] cathexys wrote:
Oct. 9th, 2009 11:49 pm (UTC)
Yeah, I'm really not the right person to ask these questions :) As I said, Cultural Studies was what the 'other' part of my department, the one who decided to single me out as the only person to not get a fellowship (and lo and behold, pretty much the only one of my year to finish...), the side whose books we read almost in secrecy because between Derrida and Hegel and Heidegger and Lacan, that was near heresy.

So while I'm engaged with historicizing and contextualizing and am certainly partial to old school left winged theories (mandatory icon check), I'm not really the one to make the CS connections :)

So, yes, I think I agree with you--but I need someone else to do the Dean/Ellen :P (I'll instead be podficcing...whether it's transformative, derivative, or just plain something else :)
executrix: (invisible lack)
[personal profile] executrix wrote:
Oct. 10th, 2009 01:58 pm (UTC)
BTW, Zizek will be at the publication party at the Brecht Forum in NYC for his new book, "First as Tragedy, Then As Farce" this coming Wednesday (10/15):

http://brechtforum.org/zizek?bc=