Enthusiasm can be a productive force for good, but our culture has rapidly become a fan-based landscape that the rest of us are merely living in

Of that hardly-a-hundred schoolkids, office boys and junior librarians, the great majority were actively involved in their pursuit, publishing or contributing to a variety of – for the most part – poorly duplicated fanzines, or else going on to work professionally in the field, such as Kevin O’Neill, Steve Moore, Steve Parkhouse or Jim Baikie, all of whom were downstairs at the Waverley hotel that weekend, keen to elevate the medium that they loved, rather than passively complain about whichever title or creator had particularly let them down that month. Of course, this was the 1960s and the same amateur energy seemed to be everywhere, spawning an underground press, Arts Lab publications and a messy, marvellous array of poetry or music fanzines that were the material fabric of that era’s counterculture; flimsy pamphlets as important and innovative today as they were then, although considerably more expensive, trust me.

Soon thereafter, caught up in the rush of adolescent life, I drifted out of touch with comic books and their attendant fandom, only returning eight years later when I was commencing work as a professional in that fondly remembered field, to find it greatly altered. Bigger, more commercial, and although there were still interesting fanzines and some fine, committed people, I detected the beginnings of a tendency to fetishise a work’s creator rather than simply appreciate the work itself, as if artists and writers were themselves part of the costumed entertainment. Never having sought a pop celebrity relationship with readers, I withdrew by stages from the social side of comics, acquiring my standing as a furious, unfathomable hermit in the process. And when I looked back, after an internet and some few decades, fandom was a very different animal.

An older animal for one thing, with a median age in its late 40s, fed, presumably, by a nostalgia that its energetic predecessor was too young to suffer from. And while the vulgar comic story was originally proffered solely to the working classes, soaring retail prices had precluded any audience save the more affluent; had gentrified a previously bustling and lively cultural slum neighbourhood. This boost in fandom’s age and status possibly explains its current sense of privilege, its tendency to carp and cavil rather than contribute or create. I speak only of comics fandom here, but have gained the impression that this reflexive belligerence – most usually from middle-aged white male conservatives – is now a part of many fan communities. My 14-year-old grandson tells me older Pokémon aficionados can display the same febrile disgruntlement. Is this a case of those unwilling to outgrow childhood enthusiasms, possibly because these anchor them to happier and less complex times, who now feel they should be sole arbiters of their pursuit?

Never imagined fandom being described as being gentrified but here we are.

There are, of course, entirely benign fandoms, networks of cooperative individuals who quite like the same thing, can chat with others sharing the same pastime and, importantly, provide support for one another in difficult times. These healthy subcultures, however, are less likely to impact on society in the same way that the more strident and presumptuous fandoms have managed. Unnervingly rapidly, our culture has become a fan-based landscape that the rest of us are merely living in. Our entertainments may be cancelled prematurely through an adverse fan reaction, and we may endure largely misogynist crusades such as Gamergate or Comicsgate from those who think “gate” means “conspiracy”, and that Nixon’s disgrace was predicated on a plot involving water, but this is hardly the full extent to which fan attitudes have toxified the world surrounding us, most obviously in our politics.

  • S_H_K@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    10 days ago

    I’d venture deeper on one side with easy access to all voices is easy to us to get to any confirmation bias so we can get a sense of belonging for approval and security even if the very thing we look for is as fake as the earth being flat, wich in it’s new twist became a gigant hollow ice ball. We make a dangerous echo chamber were we twist our core beliefs in a downward spiral of biases based on the few fragments we cherry pick. I may hate the BS they say sometimes but I keep unblocked the opiñons from the other side, I even talk in person with the.most antiwoke guy I know.
    (Gotta get down the bus I’ll edit more later)
    Edit now in the second bus
    On another side we live in a predatory capitalism. One of my daughters came with a Pokemon shirt some time ago and they love that franchise, I tried explaing them the crazy success story it was back when I was little, they were not amused by it. Cause we have loads of franchises to go around. And any shareholder dream is to hit the next big one, cause is a money printing machine. No matter how bad the next product is, it will sell. All those greedy corpos come frothing at the very idea of taking whatever you like, make it into a franchise and make you pay for it. But as soon as it dries up they drop it like it where a turd, clean their hands and flush the toilet. How do you not expect with that thefandom you.built do not become toxic? Maybe the next statement sounds stupid but people like to like something, and share it with others. But when it gets vilipended used and reused to just sell the people yo took the effort to fall in love with the product obviously is gonna complain.