Sex, Race and Romanticism : The Meta-Vampire in Emo Fandom

Fathallah, Judith (2021) Sex, Race and Romanticism : The Meta-Vampire in Emo Fandom. The Journal of Fandom Studies, 9 (3). pp. 253-273. ISSN 2046-6692

[thumbnail of 3639_Sex_Race_Romanticism_MetaVampire_draft2 (1)]
Text (3639_Sex_Race_Romanticism_MetaVampire_draft2 (1))
3639_Sex_Race_Romanticism_MetaVampire_draft2_1_.pdf - Accepted Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial.

Download (345kB)

Abstract

The genealogy stretching from Romanticism to the tortured poets of the emotional hardcore music scene is by now well-established. Emotional hardcore, or emo, is invested in the construction of the usually-White male artist, a sensitive and creative being subject to a great deal of suffering - both as a result of his artistic nature, and of the external forces aligned against him. The European Romantics invented the concept of artist as cultural icon - Lord Byron is often considered Britain’s first celebrity. He was also, not coincidentally, Britain’s first literary vampire. This article utilizes a discursive analysis based in open coding to consider emo fandom’s obsession with the figure of the vampire, especially what emo fans - who are mostly girls - have done with it in fanfic. Considering the gendered genealogy of the vampire, and the problematic gender politics of the emo scene, I explore how the constraints and opportunities of these discursive structures influence the ways emo fans imagine vampires, who appear so often in their writing. Picking out key themes of sex, race, and the ethics of the vampire inherited from both emo fandom and vampire literature generally, I argue that the selected sample demonstrates a transformative impulse towards race and sex which is ultimately still contained by the overarching discursive structures within which artists operate.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
The Journal of Fandom Studies
Additional Information:
© Fathallah, 2021. The definitive, peer reviewed and edited version of this article is published in The Journal of Fandom Studies, 9, (3), 253-273, 2021, 10.1386/jfs_00044_1
Subjects:
?? fanfictionemoracegenderromanticismnew literaciesdigital literaciesfan studiesvampires ??
ID Code:
156602
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
25 Jun 2021 10:45
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
13 Nov 2023 00:26