K-Pop Fandom insists that K-pop fan practices and activities constitute a central productive force, shaping not only K-pop's explosive global popularity, but also K-pop's cultural impacts, politics, and horizons of possibility. Over the past three decades, the K-pop fandom and its activities have expanded, intensified, and diversified along myriad dimensions, assuming novel social, technological, and economic forms, some of which are unique to K-pop, and some of which reflect broader cultural and industrial logics of globalized mass entertainment culture. Areum Jeong argues that K-pop fans, in performing deokhu-a Korean term connoting an "avid fan"-perform a materialization of affective labor that also seeks to produce good relationships between asymmetrically positioned actors in the K-pop ecosystem.
Through an autoethnography of becoming a K-pop deokhu, Jeong connects their experiences to generations of K-pop fans, showing simultaneously how fandom practices have shifted over time and the intricacies of fan labor participation. This personal connection paved the way for participant-observation and co-performer witnessing methodologies in the study, which crucially allowed for collaborating with fans whose communal pursuits have been stigmatized by dominant discourses that denigrate their activities as solely addictive, uncritical, and wasteful. Jeong's genre-spanning corpus of fan activities and analyzing its contexts and contents represents an important contribution to the making of a fan archive that is also an archive of affective labor.
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Verlagsort
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Höhe: 229 mm
Breite: 152 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-472-07789-2 (9780472077892)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Areum Jeong is Assistant Professor of Korean Studies at Arizona State University.
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1: The Digital Deokhu: Online Labor, Parasocial Relations, and the Bonds between Fans
Chapter 2: The Video Deokhu: Mediating Selfhood and Relations of Power through Fan Videos
Chapter 3: The Archiving Deokhu: Curatorial and Narrative Practices in Fan Photography and Writings
Chapter 4: The Exiting Deokhu: Acts of Disengagement, Resistance, and Collective Mobilization
Epilogue
Bibliography