SO MUCH THIS IN MEDIEVAL STUDIES (especially around race & gender) #medievaltwitterhttps://twitter.com/nataliereed84/status/998355506153467905 …
-
-
Replying to @JonathanHsy
I'm glad to see more people are exploring how fandom and academia, as far as they function socially, are much more alike than they are different
2 replies 5 retweets 27 likes -
Replying to @medievalpoc
Yep. Glad there are increasingly more "academic" medievalists who are making the point clear across many domains e.g.
@heyouonline@KVMFinn@ProfCWhit@dorothyk98@ricutz & many more2 replies 1 retweet 13 likes -
Replying to @JonathanHsy @medievalpoc and
Seriously, though, we ARE fans in a real sense, and pretending otherwise--i.e. that we have some sort of pseudo-scientific impartiality that somehow makes us superior--doesn't make our research any better, and in fact distances us further from the texts and culture we study.
1 reply 3 retweets 16 likes -
Replying to @KVMFinn @JonathanHsy and
And, as
@ricutz and others have pointed out already, it entrenches systems of privilege and assumptions within scholarship that roundly deserve to be questioned.1 reply 1 retweet 3 likes -
Replying to @KVMFinn @JonathanHsy and
Yes, there is a sense of us being fans but I also think we need to question what our engagements to this past is like. I don't know if I would say I'm a fan in the sense that is discussed in fan culture. I would say I have an intellectual investment.
2 replies 1 retweet 3 likes -
Replying to @dorothyk98 @KVMFinn and
But I think the idea that we are fans is really complicated especially in the ways that
@medievalpoc may be discussing. It's the "fans" who went after the BIPOC in fantasy b/c it upset their "fan" vision of the medieval past.1 reply 2 retweets 4 likes -
Replying to @dorothyk98 @KVMFinn and
How many weird and convoluted online convos have I had with medievalists whose affective engagement to some imagined medieval past means a complete white fragility/defensive when one points out it's a white supremacist symbol etc.
1 reply 1 retweet 6 likes -
Replying to @dorothyk98 @KVMFinn and
We all have different reasons for being in medieval studies, but I think we need to be careful that the default assumption is an interest/fan devotion to certain medievalism/medieval keystones. I never finished Tolkien (his fiction, his articles I have finished all of them).
1 reply 1 retweet 5 likes -
Replying to @dorothyk98 @KVMFinn and
He bored me. Why do we imagine that medievalist=medieval studies fan of very white cultural objects. I think I am more of a fan of things like what Nick and Joy discussed at Kzoo, Sylvia and Marsha's medievalism. Teresa Cha's medievalism. Anzaldua's medievalism.
2 replies 0 retweets 3 likes
Fan culture, especially the kind that @medievalpoc I believe is referencing both in video games and fantasy, has a dark side. And that's pretty parallel both in #RaceFail and what is still happening in medieval studies. The affective investment is high and often toxic.
-
-
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
-
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.