-
53 votes
-
‘Fandom has toxified the world’: Watchmen author Alan Moore on superheroes, Comicsgate and Donald Trump
46 votes -
‘It’s like, wow. I was really deranged’: stars and repentant stans on the terror of toxic fandom
13 votes -
Star Rekt - Logical (2024)
2 votes -
Why Lego is so expensive | So Expensive
28 votes -
Despite its founding promise to be ad-free, the Baldur's Gate 3 fan wiki is going to put up ads, because its creator thinks he can make a lot of money
47 votes -
Taskmaster VR is a faithful recreation of the TV show that series fans should really enjoy
17 votes -
Postmodernism, conservatism, reactionarism: A brief attempt at deconstructing the purist fans
The recent reaction to the Rings of Power trailer and a thought-provoking video about ragebait from the Youtuber Arbitor Ian made me think about this topic. Fan as Identity and Fandom as Tribe We...
The recent reaction to the Rings of Power trailer and a thought-provoking video about ragebait from the Youtuber Arbitor Ian made me think about this topic.
Fan as Identity and Fandom as Tribe
We all know that guy who is an extreme purist about a beloved franchise. As they love to talk about it, they love the source material, or they love the originals. Any adaptation of or addition to these is seen as deviating from these "sacred texts". Especially if the more recent material produced significantly differs from these sacred texts, it has to be bad. So, you should watch or create hours-long videos nitpicking them.
This type of person accepts as a given that the original material they are talking about is sacred. Therefore, any change to it is bad. They are often known as a purist, however, I think the better term for it is conservative.
There is research that posits that fandom is basically a postmodern tribe and fan a postmodern identity (1, 2). The idea is not entirely new. Sports fandoms and fans have been noted for these qualities before (3, 4).
I think this makes intuitive sense to people who read both humanities and participate in a fandom. Fans take their fictional worlds to heart, and they strongly identify with the characters, the universe, the stories, the games, etc. Combined with the weakening of more traditional identities, and the rise of internet that has created the conditions to connect with people worldwide, it's not surprising that such postmodern identities and tribes would be born.
The Conservative Fan
I talk about conservatism here in the broad sense, meaning being biased toward conserving what traditionally exists, a standpoint that values tradition. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry about this is well-researched.
"Conservatism in a broad sense, as a social attitude, has always existed. It expresses the instinctive human fear of sudden change, and tendency to habitual action."
I think the "purist fan" fits this definition perfectly. Combining this with the idea that a fan is a type postmodern identity, we can assert that this type of fan is a type of postmodern conservative. Therefore, fandom purism is a type of postmodern conservatism.
The Reactionary Fan and Outrage Culture
There are a lot of descriptions of what a reactionary is, and there is no agreed upon definition. I'm going to use a definition that makes sense to me as a broader definition.
For me, a reactionary, in its broadest sense, is someone who doesn't analyze things much and instead opts to act on impulsive emotion, which is very often anger, resentment, hatred. They approach topics from a very bad faith position. They make short, quippy, and wrong statements.
Reactionaries often, but not necessarily, defend conservative or conservative-adjacent views, because conservatism is biased toward reacting to changes and seeing them as negative. This aligns with the reactionary mindset that is built upon heavily reacting to things. Since change is inevitable and will always create reactions, conservatism -which is about resisting change- is a perfect fit for reactionarism.
A relevant extension of this reactionarism is the outrage culture. A production can't be just bad or mediocre, it has to be awful. You can't just dislike it and move on, you have to feel outrage. You have to belittle it at every chance you get. It's because your identity as a true nerd, and a fan of [insert fictional world], is threatened. You have to act now! They are trying to take it away!
Ragebait being amplified by social media algorithms also strengthens this. However, pointing to it as the sole reason would be a mistake.
The Synthesis and Some More Considerations
The purist fan is a postmodern conservative. They attach their identity very strongly to some sacred texts (book, comics, movie, etc.), and they don't want them to change. Therefore, there is a heavy bias involved in discussing developments around these texts.
The conservative fan can also be a reactionary fan, but doesn't have to be. They don't have to go out there and yell at people, or condescendingly talk to their social circle, like a reactionary fan does. However, they often do.
It shouldn't be hard to see why conservatism and reactionarism, in the context of fandom, would be related to their corresponding ideologies in the classical sense of the words. While decompartmentalization exists, and people don't necessarily act the same way in different areas of their lives, it makes sense that a general attitude about change would affect one's approach to both fandom and regular politics.
I think this is a major reason why we see so many loud "purists" about fandom topics follow reactionary politics in regular politics. It also explains why the regular reactionaries can so easily convince fandom reactionaries to adapt their arguments. They come from the same attitude toward change and same attachment to conservative identity politics.
So, this is my analysis of this topic. Before closing, I want to raise a question that's been on my mind. The quote I shared at the start of the post, the fear of change, I suspect this might be one of the key underlying characteristics of these people, both in regular and fandom politics. People who get attached to certain periods of time in the past so strongly that they dislike any change, or even react violently—they are at the heart of this.
There is a related, very famous meta-analysis studying 22,818 cases (88 samples) across 12 countries. Political conservatism as motivated social cognition. According to the study, conservatism is negatively correlated with openness to experience (-.32) and positively correlated with dogmatism-intolerance of ambiguity (.34).
Returning to fandom context, what I'm trying to get at is that maybe holding so dearly to experiences we've had as kids or teenagers is maybe not that good. Sure, there is nothing wrong with nostalgia, and there is nothing wrong with enjoying things we did as kids or teens. But I suspect this overemphasis on being forever teens is turning people into dogmatic, reactionary people. Maybe it's time to grow up and accept change, even find ways to cherish it.
Very Important Note
This is not an endorsement of any change to stories and franchises. Obviously, some can be bad. In fact, many adaptations of source material lose some things, partially because of differences in medium and partially because of financial interests involved in movie and show production. RoP is a good example of mediocritization due to financial concerns.
As you can guess, I did not even like Rings of Power. But even though I've been a Legendarium fan since I was a kid, it wasn't because they changed the source material. It's because I think RoP was, to use a more modern term, mid. However, this did not cause me to go on a rant about how they are ruining the Legendarium. This is a key difference, in my opinion, between simply disliking and being a reactionary.
16 votes -
Sony backed down from the PSN requirement to play Helldivers 2. How will this change how the community reacts to game changes?
59 votes -
‘Escape From Tarkov’ fans are outraged at new $250 pay-to-win edition
49 votes -
The film fans who refuse to surrender to streaming
24 votes -
The fans aren’t always right
19 votes -
For some Helldivers 2 players, the fascist role-play has gone too far
30 votes -
Anime is going digital. Fans are wary.
21 votes -
‘Five Nights At Freddy’s’ heads to rare day and date box office $111M+ milestone this weekend: How Universal got fans in a frenzy
5 votes -
Palia’s fan base is split, and it makes the cozy farming sim complicated
15 votes -
‘Instant credibility’: The evolution of sneakers from functional kicks to high-value commodities
11 votes -
How video games like ‘Starfield’ are creating a new generation of classical music fans
18 votes -
Where have all the DC fans gone?
9 votes -
Game companies are allergic to making fashionable merch — so fans stepped in
13 votes -
Superhero fatigue is real. The cure? Make better movies than ‘The Flash’
67 votes -
The surprisingly popular world of online trainspotting
16 votes -
Taylor Swift is an unlikely public transit icon
9 votes -
The case of the Lego Bandit
8 votes -
Marvel fans showing franchise fatigue, while DC fans more likely to prefer single superhero over universe, says new Fandom study
10 votes -
Taylor Swift fans are in the trenches against Ticketmaster
4 votes -
Nick Cave lost two sons. His fans then saved his life.
3 votes -
Critics and fans have never disagreed more about movies
4 votes -
Fake accounts fueled the ‘Snyder Cut’ online army
12 votes -
Can ABBA really recreate the feel of a live concert using holograms forty-one years after their last set?
5 votes -
Twenty years ago, Harry Potter and Lord of the Rings changed the future of Hollywood
5 votes -
Pop star Zara Larsson says she's made a seven-figure sum by selling merchandise on the video game platform Roblox
9 votes -
Kevin Smith made Netflix’s ‘Masters of the Universe: Revelation’ specifically to please ‘He-Man’ fans. Some got mad anyway
7 votes -
How Star Wars' biggest fan wiki found itself in a fight over trans identity
14 votes -
Microsoft killed the Zune, but Zune-Heads are still here
9 votes -
Smash Bros, Splatoon and other fan communities clash with Nintendo
8 votes -
Apathy is not the answer: The anime fan community needs to defend its most vulnerable members
9 votes -
QAF: A Chinese fan-forum that's grown into a hub for volunteers subtitling foreign LGBTIQ media and a support community
8 votes -
My Little Pony fans are ready to admit they have a Nazi problem
16 votes -
Early meme site YTMND has been resurrected with the help of fans
18 votes -
YouTube: bad? - Shannon Strucci's musing on YouTube, fan toxicity, issues with takedowns, and the ups and downs of a YouTube career
5 votes -
Lego accused of muscling in on fans after BrickLink takeover – sale has alarmed secondhand brick collectors but Danish toymaker claims it is about reconnecting with customers
4 votes -
How to live like Jane Austen
4 votes -
The gut-wrenching predictions of Satoshi Kon’s masterpiece Perfect Blue came true
6 votes -
The sad and lonely life of an Eminem fan in 2018
9 votes -
What it’s like to write a finale your fans hate. (Interview with Battlestar Galactica showrunner Ronald D. Moore in the context of the controversial Game of Thrones ending.)
18 votes -
The fifteen-year hunt for Resident Evil 1.5 - How a community went to hell and back searching for the most coveted horror game ever cancelled
9 votes -
Four days trapped at sea with crypto’s nouveau riche
16 votes -
Confessions of an unredeemed fan - Remembering Amy Winehouse
2 votes -
Inside the minds of Elon Musk's fans
12 votes