Understanding Media Fandom - FMS478/SOC578 Fall 2025
Course

This course explores fandom, particularly media fandom. In a world suffused in popular culture, fans are those who have invested themselves most heavily in enjoying and making meaning from popular culture. Why do they? Are they just weird, just different than us? Or is it simply a more intense expression of how we all make meaning from culture? Drawing on some of the seminal theorists of fan studies (including Michel de Certeau, Pierre Bourdieu, Camille Bacon-Smith, John Fiske, Henry Jenkins, Matt Hills, and D. W. Winnicott), this course seeks to understand fans as meaning-makers as they watch, play, write, create, blog, form communities and hierarchies, even quasi-religions, to understand the object of their fan-desire.
Here is the course outline:
1. Unit 1 - An Introduction to Fandom |
2. Unit 2 - The Popular Perception of Fans |
3. Unit 3 - More Context for Fan Studies: Hegemony, Imagination, Reception |
4. Unit 4 - First Wave Fan Theory: Fan as Trickster-Hero |
5. Unit 5 - Fan Community |
6. Unit 6 - Fan Productivity |
7. Unit 7 - Second Wave Fan Theory |
8. Unit 8 - Third Wave Fan Theory |
9. Unit 9: Toxic Fandom and Other Adventures |
10. Unit 10 - Fandom Self-Ethnography |
11. Unit 11: Fandom as Religion? |
12. Student Presentation Schedule |
13. Student Evaluation Instructions... |