Fanvids, or vids, are short videos created in media fandom. Made from television and film sources, they are neither television episodes nor films; they resemble music videos but are non-commercial fanworks that construct creative and critical analyses of existing media. The creators of fanvids-called vidders-are predominantly women, whose vids prompt questions about media historiography and pleasures taken from screen media. Vids remake narratives for an attentive fan audience, who watch with a deep knowledge of the source text(s), or an interest in the vid form itself. Fanvids: Television, Women, and Home Media Re-Use draws on four decades of vids, produced on videotape and digitally, to argue that the vid form's creation and reception rev...
El propósito es conocer si las mujeres son más activas que los hombres subiendo a YouTube vídeos rel...
Abstract This article examines the various types of fan videos inspired by the nineteenth-century cl...
This paper argues that the practices and aesthetics of vidding were structured by the relationship o...
Fanvids, or vids, are short videos created in media fandom. Made from television and film sources, t...
E. Charlotte Stevens, Fanvids. Television, Women, and Home Media Re-Use, Amsterdam University Press,...
For decades, scholars in the social sciences and literary, media and communication studies have demo...
The focus of this research is “fanvids” which are the creative work of fans that combine clips or im...
“Vidding” is the practice of synchronizing a song with excerpts of one or more visual texts (usually...
\u201cVidding\u201d is the practice of synchronizing a song with excerpts of one or more visual text...
At the 2016 fan convention VidUKon, I curated and screened a vidshow themed around vampires. A vidsh...
This essay tackles ‘fan vidding’, a grassroots practice of remix, a form of video production where f...
This essay explores the relationship between contemporary remix culture and inherited traditions of ...
Through the in-depth analysis of a single fanwork, Luminosity’s concept-vid Scooby Road (2005), made...
This article explores the concept of the binge as viewing protocol associated with fan practices, in...
Vidding is a well-established remix practice where fans edit an existing film, music video, TV show,...
El propósito es conocer si las mujeres son más activas que los hombres subiendo a YouTube vídeos rel...
Abstract This article examines the various types of fan videos inspired by the nineteenth-century cl...
This paper argues that the practices and aesthetics of vidding were structured by the relationship o...
Fanvids, or vids, are short videos created in media fandom. Made from television and film sources, t...
E. Charlotte Stevens, Fanvids. Television, Women, and Home Media Re-Use, Amsterdam University Press,...
For decades, scholars in the social sciences and literary, media and communication studies have demo...
The focus of this research is “fanvids” which are the creative work of fans that combine clips or im...
“Vidding” is the practice of synchronizing a song with excerpts of one or more visual texts (usually...
\u201cVidding\u201d is the practice of synchronizing a song with excerpts of one or more visual text...
At the 2016 fan convention VidUKon, I curated and screened a vidshow themed around vampires. A vidsh...
This essay tackles ‘fan vidding’, a grassroots practice of remix, a form of video production where f...
This essay explores the relationship between contemporary remix culture and inherited traditions of ...
Through the in-depth analysis of a single fanwork, Luminosity’s concept-vid Scooby Road (2005), made...
This article explores the concept of the binge as viewing protocol associated with fan practices, in...
Vidding is a well-established remix practice where fans edit an existing film, music video, TV show,...
El propósito es conocer si las mujeres son más activas que los hombres subiendo a YouTube vídeos rel...
Abstract This article examines the various types of fan videos inspired by the nineteenth-century cl...
This paper argues that the practices and aesthetics of vidding were structured by the relationship o...