The Construction of Race in Les Misérables Fanworks
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The Construction of Race in Les Misérables Fanworks
By analysing contemporary Les Misérables online fandom, how can we conceptualise fandom racism, especially when it complicates the typical and sometimes reductive narratives that assign racism to only the "bad" and the conservative "other"?
Victor Hugo’s Les Misérables is a well-adapted novel with films, television shows, anime, and stage productions constantly bringing new fans into the fold. Fans of these adaptations use the political text as a breeding ground for contemporary political conversations about socio-economic inequality, republicanism, and gendered violence. Yet in these conversations, race is an awkward, silenced topic.
This primer presents findings from the author's study of a decade of Les Misérables fanart, in which they catalogue the formulation of racial identity in the fandom. Citing interviews with fans of color, they discuss the mechanics of how fandoms leverage concepts of “diversity” to downplay and ultimately silence criticisms in the name of fandom hegemony.
They argue that despite using Hugo’s barricade boys to process their white guilt, fan artists often see race as skin-deep and non-specific, rarely as active cultural or ethnic identities. This study of fan racism is held around moments of racial characterisation that have convinced fans of color that "nothing changes, nothing ever will."
In looking at a fandom whose key principles are liberty, justice, and social equality, this research provides a base for future researchers and fans to have frank conversations about the subtle and thus more pernicious forms of racism that exist within fan spaces.
Series: Bloomsbury Fandom Primers
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INFORMATION
ISBN: 9798765107638
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Format: Paperback / softback
Date Published: 28 November 2024
Country: United States
Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic
Illustration: 5 bw illus
Audience: Tertiary education
DIMENSIONS
Spine width: 14.0mm
Width: 126.0mm
Height: 196.0mm
Weight: 200g
Pages: 176
About the Author
Nemo Madeleine Sugimoto Martin is a Postdoctoral Fellow at Kanazawa University, Japan, researching queer masculinity in Japanese live-action dramas. They are also a writer and researcher and hold a PhD in Comparative Literature and Culture from Royal Holloway, UK.
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