{"title":"The Design of Printed Fanfiction: A Case Study of Down to Agincourt Fanbinding","authors":"Naomi S. S. Jacobs, Jsa Lowe","doi":"10.35492/docam/9/1/5","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In this paper, we examine the design process of fanbinding, through which physical, printed copies of fanfiction works are created and shared. These are often bespoke, samizdat, singular objects that cannot usually be mass-produced, and include unique hand-bound objects for the designer’s own affective, aesthetic pleasure. Fanbinding suggests durability and preservation, and printed objects can be transformative works in themselves: designed, typeset, and perhaps featuring artwork, maps or other specifically created front/back matter and illustrations. Readers of these born-digital works may produce these in reaction to the fact that texts are published purely in digital, intangible forms, finding themselves craving the tangible, haptic properties of books. There are many design decisions involved in curating fanworks in a beautiful physical form, and we are interested in how fans go about making affective, aesthetic, practical and iterative design choices. For our case study, we chose the work-in-progress fanfiction series Down to Agincourt, currently four novels long, which takes as its critical starting point a single episode of the long-running television series Supernatural (2005-2020). Down to Agincourt occupies an unusual context by being highly literary in structure; its deliberate layers of complexity are designed to invite rereading and discussion. Its fans may be trying to possess an innately ephemeral thing: to encompass and annotate the text, to seek a more intimate relationship with it, or perhaps to memorialise the intimacy of the relationship they already have, a book being a beloved signifier of something less stable, more slippery. We report on a survey and interviews of Down to Agincourt fans investigating fanbinding conventions and preferences, in order to learn how fans discursively practise this highly affective art form.","PeriodicalId":36214,"journal":{"name":"Proceedings from the Document Academy","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-08-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Proceedings from the Document Academy","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.35492/docam/9/1/5","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"Arts and Humanities","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
In this paper, we examine the design process of fanbinding, through which physical, printed copies of fanfiction works are created and shared. These are often bespoke, samizdat, singular objects that cannot usually be mass-produced, and include unique hand-bound objects for the designer’s own affective, aesthetic pleasure. Fanbinding suggests durability and preservation, and printed objects can be transformative works in themselves: designed, typeset, and perhaps featuring artwork, maps or other specifically created front/back matter and illustrations. Readers of these born-digital works may produce these in reaction to the fact that texts are published purely in digital, intangible forms, finding themselves craving the tangible, haptic properties of books. There are many design decisions involved in curating fanworks in a beautiful physical form, and we are interested in how fans go about making affective, aesthetic, practical and iterative design choices. For our case study, we chose the work-in-progress fanfiction series Down to Agincourt, currently four novels long, which takes as its critical starting point a single episode of the long-running television series Supernatural (2005-2020). Down to Agincourt occupies an unusual context by being highly literary in structure; its deliberate layers of complexity are designed to invite rereading and discussion. Its fans may be trying to possess an innately ephemeral thing: to encompass and annotate the text, to seek a more intimate relationship with it, or perhaps to memorialise the intimacy of the relationship they already have, a book being a beloved signifier of something less stable, more slippery. We report on a survey and interviews of Down to Agincourt fans investigating fanbinding conventions and preferences, in order to learn how fans discursively practise this highly affective art form.
在本文中,我们研究了同人装订的设计过程,通过这个过程,同人小说作品的实体、印刷副本被创建和共享。这些通常是定制的、地下出版的、单一的物品,通常不能批量生产,包括设计师自己情感和审美愉悦的独特手工装订物品。同人装订意味着耐用性和保存性,印刷对象本身可以是变革性的作品:设计,排版,也许是艺术作品,地图或其他专门制作的正面/背面材料和插图。这些天生的数字作品的读者可能会对纯粹以数字、无形形式出版的文本做出反应,发现自己渴望书本的有形、触觉属性。有许多设计决策涉及到以美丽的物理形式策划同人作品,我们对粉丝如何做出情感,美学,实用和迭代的设计选择感兴趣。在我们的案例研究中,我们选择了正在制作的同人小说系列《Down to Agincourt》,它目前有四篇小说,它的关键起点是长篇电视剧《邪恶力量》(Supernatural, 2005-2020)中的一集。《阿金库尔传》在结构上具有高度的文学性,因此占据了一个不同寻常的语境;其精心设计的复杂层次旨在引起重读和讨论。它的粉丝可能试图拥有一种天生短暂的东西:包含和注释文本,寻求与文本更亲密的关系,或者也许是为了纪念他们已经拥有的亲密关系,一本书是一种不那么稳定、更滑的东西的心爱的象征。我们报告了一份对《Down to Agincourt》粉丝的调查和采访,调查了粉丝绑定的惯例和偏好,以了解粉丝如何通过话语实践这种高度情感的艺术形式。