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Resisting to Game of Thrones: a fannish agonism

Author

Listed:
  • Thiago Ianatoni Camargo
  • André Luiz Maranhão de Souza-Leão
  • Bruno Melo Moura

Abstract

Purpose - Fans have been characterized as specialized consumers who often express disagreements with the entertainment industry's decisions, especially when it comes to the original content of the works that serve as the basis for the development of media products, evidencing a kind of consumer resistance. Under a Foucauldian perspective aligned with the consumer culture theory (CCT), power relations are established in a dynamic of power exercise and resistance to power. Based on this, the authors pose the following research question: how do fans of media products resist the changes made by the entertainment industry in relation to their canons? Design/methodology/approach - The authors adopted the Foucault's genealogy of power as a method, analyzing the comments posted on the Westeros.Org website, the main discussion forum of fans of A Song of Ice and Fire (ASoIaF) book series and Game of Thrones (GoT) TV series. Findings - The findings reveal ways of resistance in relation to the adaptation of the media text permeated by an entertainment dispositif, which considers the adaptation legitimate, and a fannish dispositif, which criticizes the way this adaptation was made. However, their empirical categories reveal that they are forged not only from singularities but also from overlaps. The authors conclude, therefore, that this process occurs in an agonist way, in which conflicts are fought as a reciprocal incitement revealing a productive and ethical relationship. Originality/value - The agonism shows how consumers can simultaneously be led to incorporate and resist to discourses and market practices. This demonstrates how resistance is not necessarily a force opposed to another, but a dynamic of reciprocal negotiation.

Suggested Citation

  • Thiago Ianatoni Camargo & André Luiz Maranhão de Souza-Leão & Bruno Melo Moura, 2021. "Resisting to Game of Thrones: a fannish agonism," Revista de Gestão, Emerald Group Publishing Limited, vol. 29(1), pages 55-75, July.
  • Handle: RePEc:eme:regepp:rege-12-2020-0124
    DOI: 10.1108/REGE-12-2020-0124
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