Victorian penny press plagiarisms as transmedia storytelling

The Victorian period saw the proliferation of penny press plagiarisms—that is, transformations of middle-class narratives, typically for a lower-class audience. Authors of these often anonymous transformations performed labor by expanding existing narratives in ways that resonate with today's u...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Erica Haugtvedt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Organization for Transformative Works 2021-09-01
Series:Transformative Works and Cultures
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.transformativeworks.org/index.php/twc/article/view/2049/2861
id doaj-7204ba068a2f4023a6871d37d0eaa87b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7204ba068a2f4023a6871d37d0eaa87b2021-09-15T15:58:56ZengOrganization for Transformative WorksTransformative Works and Cultures1941-22582021-09-0136https://doi.org/10.3983/twc.2021.2049Victorian penny press plagiarisms as transmedia storytellingErica Haugtvedt0South Dakota School of Mines & TechnologyThe Victorian period saw the proliferation of penny press plagiarisms—that is, transformations of middle-class narratives, typically for a lower-class audience. Authors of these often anonymous transformations performed labor by expanding existing narratives in ways that resonate with today's understanding of fan fiction and transmedia storyworlds. Penny press plagiarisms illustrate the methodological challenges of studying the historical reception of literary and popular culture events that might be characterized as fannish, as the constitutive elements that describe a fan must be traced backward in the absence of living communities and with ephemeral evidence of engagement with popular culture texts. Application of insights from media and periodical studies shows that the penny press contributes to the long history of fandom. The Victorian period's literary markets, social class politics, and copyright paradigms defamiliarize these concepts in the field of studies of fans and fandoms, revealing how a history of Victorian fandom is also a history of for-profit transmedia storytelling.https://journal.transformativeworks.org/index.php/twc/article/view/2049/2861book historyfan fictionfandomhistory of readingperiodical studiestheatretransfictionality
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Erica Haugtvedt
spellingShingle Erica Haugtvedt
Victorian penny press plagiarisms as transmedia storytelling
Transformative Works and Cultures
book history
fan fiction
fandom
history of reading
periodical studies
theatre
transfictionality
author_facet Erica Haugtvedt
author_sort Erica Haugtvedt
title Victorian penny press plagiarisms as transmedia storytelling
title_short Victorian penny press plagiarisms as transmedia storytelling
title_full Victorian penny press plagiarisms as transmedia storytelling
title_fullStr Victorian penny press plagiarisms as transmedia storytelling
title_full_unstemmed Victorian penny press plagiarisms as transmedia storytelling
title_sort victorian penny press plagiarisms as transmedia storytelling
publisher Organization for Transformative Works
series Transformative Works and Cultures
issn 1941-2258
publishDate 2021-09-01
description The Victorian period saw the proliferation of penny press plagiarisms—that is, transformations of middle-class narratives, typically for a lower-class audience. Authors of these often anonymous transformations performed labor by expanding existing narratives in ways that resonate with today's understanding of fan fiction and transmedia storyworlds. Penny press plagiarisms illustrate the methodological challenges of studying the historical reception of literary and popular culture events that might be characterized as fannish, as the constitutive elements that describe a fan must be traced backward in the absence of living communities and with ephemeral evidence of engagement with popular culture texts. Application of insights from media and periodical studies shows that the penny press contributes to the long history of fandom. The Victorian period's literary markets, social class politics, and copyright paradigms defamiliarize these concepts in the field of studies of fans and fandoms, revealing how a history of Victorian fandom is also a history of for-profit transmedia storytelling.
topic book history
fan fiction
fandom
history of reading
periodical studies
theatre
transfictionality
url https://journal.transformativeworks.org/index.php/twc/article/view/2049/2861
work_keys_str_mv AT ericahaugtvedt victorianpennypressplagiarismsastransmediastorytelling
_version_ 1717378656812138496