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224 Chapter 10 The politics of the popular
Fans do not just read texts, they continually reread them. This changes profoundly
the nature of the text–reader relationship. Rereading undermines the operations of
what Barthes (1975) calls the ‘hermeneutic code’ (the way a text poses questions to
generate the desire to keep reading). Rereading in this way thus shifts the reader’s atten-
tion from ‘what will happen’ to ‘how things happen’, to questions of character rela-
tions, narrative themes, the production of social knowledges and discourses.
Whereas most reading is a solitary practice, performed in private, fans consume texts
as part of a community. Fan culture is about the public display and circulation of
meaning production and reading practices. Fans make meanings to communicate with
other fans. The public display and circulation of these meanings are crucial to a fan
culture’s reproduction. As Jenkins explains, ‘Organised fandom is, perhaps first and
foremost, an institution of theory and criticism, a semistructured space where com-
peting interpretations and evaluations of common texts are proposed, debated, and
negotiated and where readers speculate about the nature of the mass media and their
own relationship to it’ (86).
Fan cultures are not just bodies of enthusiastic readers; they are also active cultural
producers. Jenkins notes ten ways in which fans rewrite their favourite television shows
(162–77):
1. Recontextualization – the production of vignettes, short stories and novels which
seek to fill in the gaps in broadcast narratives and suggest additional explanations
for particular actions.
2. Expanding the series timeline – the production of vignettes, short stories, novels
which provide background history of characters, etc., not explored in broadcast
narratives or suggestions for future developments beyond the period covered by
the broadcast narrative.
3. Refocalization – this occurs when fan writers move the focus of attention from the
main protagonists to secondary figures. For example, female or black characters
are taken from the margins of a text and given centre stage.
4. Moral realignment – a version of refocalization in which the moral order of the
broadcast narrative is inverted (the villains become the good guys). In some ver-
sions the moral order remains the same but the story is now told from the point
of view of the villains.
5. Genre shifting – characters from broadcast science fiction narratives, say, are re-
located in the realms of romance or the Western, for example.
6. Cross-overs – characters from one television programme are introduced into
another. For example, characters from Doctor Who may appear in the same narra-
tive as characters from Star Wars.
7. Character dislocation – characters are relocated in new narrative situations, with
new names and new identities.
8. Personalization – the insertion of the writer into a version of their favourite televi-
sion programme. For example, I could write a short story in which I am recruited
by Doctor Who to travel with him in the Tardis on a mission to explore what has
become of Manchester United in the twenty-fourth century. However, as Jenkins