While fandom is a dominant girlhood trope, few accounts examine faith in the context of girls' fandom. Addressing this gap, using a feminist poststructural analysis, I draw on interviews and participant observation to locate fan communities as a space in which Muslim girls can enact citizenship. Combining youth cultural studies, girlhood studies, and fan studies, I explore how Muslim fangirls of the Norwegian teen web-drama Skam (2015-2017) draw on their desire for recognition and their creativity as cultural producers to engage in participatory storytelling that challenges popular representations of Muslim girls. This process enables the production of communities rooted in shared interests, experiences, and identities. I suggest that fando...
This article argues that language is a key element in the creation of the entire SKAM universe, both...
This article analyses the increasing participation of Muslim women in mosques in Norway in light of ...
This paper reviews the current literature regarding Muslim young people's online social networking a...
This study aims to examine how Swedish fans of the TV-series Skam use the Facebook group Kosegruppa ...
This paper examines the role of embodied and discursive religiosity in the self-formation of Somali ...
With regards to Girlhood Studies and the importance of incorporating intersectionality theory, this ...
In the analogue era, fan studies explored localized resistance within fan communities’ cultural prac...
Music within Islam has been a subject of dispute for centuries. Some believe that music is haram, or...
While fans have been widely studied within a number of disciplines, fan girls remain largely overloo...
The purpose of this study is to find out how Swedish Muslim girls use Facebook and its functions in ...
In the analogue era, fan studies explored localized resistance within fan communities’ cul - tural p...
This article examines how young Muslims and Christians with ethnic minority backgrounds in Oslo refl...
ABSTRACT This article analyses the increasing participation of Muslim women in mosques in Norway in ...
In this study, we explore how ethnic minority Muslim girls in Norway manage social control as an eve...
SKAM (”Shame”) is a Norwegian WebTV-series which portrays several youths during their time in high s...
This article argues that language is a key element in the creation of the entire SKAM universe, both...
This article analyses the increasing participation of Muslim women in mosques in Norway in light of ...
This paper reviews the current literature regarding Muslim young people's online social networking a...
This study aims to examine how Swedish fans of the TV-series Skam use the Facebook group Kosegruppa ...
This paper examines the role of embodied and discursive religiosity in the self-formation of Somali ...
With regards to Girlhood Studies and the importance of incorporating intersectionality theory, this ...
In the analogue era, fan studies explored localized resistance within fan communities’ cultural prac...
Music within Islam has been a subject of dispute for centuries. Some believe that music is haram, or...
While fans have been widely studied within a number of disciplines, fan girls remain largely overloo...
The purpose of this study is to find out how Swedish Muslim girls use Facebook and its functions in ...
In the analogue era, fan studies explored localized resistance within fan communities’ cul - tural p...
This article examines how young Muslims and Christians with ethnic minority backgrounds in Oslo refl...
ABSTRACT This article analyses the increasing participation of Muslim women in mosques in Norway in ...
In this study, we explore how ethnic minority Muslim girls in Norway manage social control as an eve...
SKAM (”Shame”) is a Norwegian WebTV-series which portrays several youths during their time in high s...
This article argues that language is a key element in the creation of the entire SKAM universe, both...
This article analyses the increasing participation of Muslim women in mosques in Norway in light of ...
This paper reviews the current literature regarding Muslim young people's online social networking a...