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    A life spent chasing the band? Female fans' autobiographies

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    Authors
    Duffett, Mark
    Editors
    Lloyd, Christian
    Fairclough, Kirsty
    Attah, Tom
    Affiliation
    University of Chester
    Publication Date
    2025
    
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    This chapter considers female fans’ book-length autobiographies, life stories written that recount years spent following stars, particularly from the worlds of 1960s, 1970s and 1980s rock and pop. Mass culture criticism, parasocial interaction, totemism, and participatory culture are widely understood as distinct paradigms through which academics can analyze media fandom. In parallel, I suggest they can also be seen as discursive resources that pop fans exploit in the development of autobiographic accounts. To explain this idea, I compare four case study books: My Ticket to Ride by Janice Mitchell (2021), Ah-Ha Moments by Larissa Bendell (2016), Bye, Bye Baby by Caroline Sullivan (2000), My Men, Mick and Me by Andee Baker (2020). My argument is that in such autobiographic accounts some female fans, particularly, play upon aspects of these familiar frames of thinking, not only to talk about their experiences of fandom, but also to frame their encounters inspirationally, and think about gender relations in ways that are potentially empowering.
    Citation
    Duffett, M. (2025). A life spent chasing the band? Female fans' autobiographies. In T. Attah, K. Fairclough, & C. Lloyd (Eds.), Rereading Musicians and their Audiences: Popular Music Autobiographies. Bloomsbury Academic.
    Publisher
    Bloomsbury Academic
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10034/629050
    Additional Links
    https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/rereading-musicians-and-their-audiences-9798765108420/
    Type
    Book chapter
    Description
    This book chapter is not available on ChesterRep
    Sponsors
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