fan practices and language learning
TRANSCRIPT
FAN PRACTICES AND LANGUAGE LEARNING
Shannon SauroMalmö University
@shansauro | ssauro.info| [email protected]
1. Do you know how your pupils use languages other than Swedish for fun (outside of school)?
2. What are your pupils fans of? What are you a fan of?
3. Have you ever read or written fanfiction?
“…’fan’ is actually a much wider social category, referring to a mode of participation with a long history in a variety of cultural activities, including literature, sports, theater, film, and television.”
(Cavicchi, 1998 p. 3)
“A fan is a person with a relatively deep positive emotional conviction about someone or something famous...”
(Duffet, 2013, p. 18)
Online Fandom “the local and international networks of fans that develop around a particular program, text or other media product” (Sauro, 2014, p. 239)
Extramural English
“…English-related activities that learners come in contact with or are engaged in outside the walls of the English classroom, generally on a voluntary basis.” (Sundqvist & Sylvén, 2014, p. 4)
CALL (computer assisted language learning) in the Digital Wilds
“informal language learning that takes places in digital spaces, communities, and networks that are independent of formal instructional contexts”(Sauro & Zourou, 2017, p. 186)
A Few Fan Practices
• Anime and manga consumption
• Fan site web design
• Debating and modding
• Amateur translation
• Fanfiction
Anime and Manga Consumption
Anime consumption inspired and enhanced Japanese learning which inspired further enagement with Japanese anime (Fukunaga, 2006).
Website Design
One learner developed a new textual identity through regular correspondence in English around the design of a fan website. (Lam, 2000).
Debating and Moderating
Advanced leadership and literacy skill development by a 13-year-old engaged in debate and moderating discussions in an online discussion boards and fan sites.
(Curwood, 2013).
Fansubbing & Scanlation
The development and use of intercultural and language skills of 26-year-old Spanish manga fan who engaged in amateur translations (scanlation) of Japanese manga into Spanish (Valero-Porras & Cassany, 2015).
Fanfiction"writing that continues, interrupts, reimagines, or just riffs on stories and characters other people have already written about."
(Jamison, 2013 p. 17)
Fanfiction and Language Learning
• Case studies of teen learners’ use of fanfiction in anime fandoms to transition from novice writer in English to successful writer (Black, 2006)
• Bilingual fanfiction writing practices of young Finnish fans of American television shows to index multilingualism and global citizenship (Lepännen, et al, 2009)
1. Can you imagine adapting any of the fan practices mentioned here or in the readings for your own pupils?
2. If so, which ones?
3. What challenges might you face trying to domesticate these activities for your classroom?
The Blogging Hobbit
A Study in Sherlock
The Blogging HobbitBlog-Based Collaborative Role-play
Inspiration for task and technology and model from the Harry Potter role play fanfic community, Darkness Rising, on LiveJournal.• Communal Blog• Individual players/writers
participated using blogs made for their character
• Stories begin with a prompt or background in a post.
• The story evolves in nested comments
(Sauro, 2014)
A collaborative story of a missing moment from Tolkien’s The Hobbit:
Task 1: Story outline and mapTask 2: Collaborative roleplay fanfiction - each group member to write from the perspective of one character from The HobbitTask 3: Reflective paper
Detailed instructions available as a PDF here.
“this writing activity has influenced my language skills…. During this project I have been able to expand my repertoar [sic] of English words which are not so commonly used in everyday English anymore.”
(Student 14, Cohort 2013)
“[a]fter a short while, the writing became very fluent and I did not have to think too hard before writing”
(Student 40, Cohort 2013)
It is lying still, yet it spins aroundIt tries to move but its body is boundAll because of the precious it stoleFool us again and they eats it whole.
(from The Mirkwood Mysteries)
“…I would choose another book. I felt it unfair to work with The Hobbit on such a project since a big part was to connect with a character from the book and write from that perspective. To choose a book with absolutely no women at all made me not wanting to take neither Tolkien nor this assignment to heart.”
(Nonfan, Cohort 2014)
“…fanfics that get really popular, they kind of answer to some kind of fantasy that people have about the characters. Or something they really want to explore or they create an alternate universe … We didn’t have anything like that, really. I mean, I think ours was very, kind of, very much like the book it a way, so maybe it wasn’t as exciting as some other fanfiction because it wasn’t innovating in that way…”
B, Dream Team Interview(Sauro & Sundmark, 2016)
A Study in SherlockCollaborative Casefic
CaseficCollaborative mystery writing1. Retell a Sherlock Holmes
mystery or tell an original mystery but in an alternate universe.
2. Tell an original Sherlock Holmes mystery in the original context (Victorian London) OR an alternate universe.
Instructions available in PDF here
Swapping & Bending
Fusion & Alternate Universe
Example Fanfic ReadingsThe Beleaguered Red-Head by moonblossom - Retelling of The Red-Headed League in the BBC Sherlock Universe
The Adventure of the Bridegroom’s Photograph by spacemutineer Original casefic based on a real life mystery – ACD Holmes
The Vast Profundity Obscure by mistyzeo - Original casefic - ACD Holmes/His Dark Materials fusion
In Class Fanfiction Workshops
The villain A slice of moldy pizza
In an elevator shaft“They said it would come
off.”
“…my interest in Doyle and the Sherlock Holmes world is still at an intermediate level…. On the other hand, my knowledge of the Scooby Doo universe is far greater and I could enter that verse much easier than the universe of Sherlock Holmes. As a child I loved the characters of the Mystery Gang and therefore I really enjoyed this task.”
(Student 18, Cohort 2015)
“Good afternoon, sir. This is Bragevägen 21B, the home of Sherlock Holmes? Is he available?” asked one of the officers who introduced himself as chief officer Gregsson.
The von Sydow Murders
“…instead of saying “he said”, we and Doyle instead used “said he”. Second, we and Doyle often, from Watson’s perspective, referred to Sherlock Holmes as “my colleague”, and from Sherlock’s perspective referring to Watson as “my friend”. Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes often said “pray” instead of “please”, and “I fancy” instead of “I believe”, which we also used in our fanfiction. “
(Student 16, Cohort 2015)
“First off, I am highly Americanized in my English use, and I blame Hollywood. It has been a welcomed challenge to write in British. My biggest inspiration has once again been the BBC show.…I truly enjoyed using the word ‘foggiest’ in a text, and it is now a part of my vocabulary. My American is being invaded, ‘the British are coming!’”
(Student 54)
CASEFIC 2016CURIOUS? THIS YEAR’S STORIES AVAILABLE HERE.
ReferencesBlack, R.W. (2006). Language, culture, and identity in online fanfiction. E-learning, 3, 180–184.
Cavicchi, D. (1998). Tramps like us: Music and meaning among Springsteen fans. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Curwood, J.S. (2013). Fan fiction, remix culture, and The Potter Games. In V.E. Frankel (Ed.), Teaching with Harry Potter (pp. 81-92). Jefferson, NC: McFarland.
Duffett, M. (2013). Understanding fandom: An introduction to the study of media fan culture. New York/London: Bloomsbury.
Fukunaga, N. (2006). “Those anime students”: Foreign language literacy development through Japanese popular culture. Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 50(3), 206-222.
Jamison, A. (2013). ‘Why Fic?’ in A. Jamison (ed.). Fic: Why fanfiction is taking over the world. Dallas, TX: Smart Pop Books.
Lam, W. S. E. (2000). Literacy and the design of the self: A case study of a teenager writing on the Internet. TESOL Quarterly, 34, 457-484.
Lepännen, S., Pitkänen-Huhta, A., Piirainen-Marsch, A., Nikula, T., & Peuronen, S. (2009). Young people’s translocal new media uses: A multiperspective analysis of language choice and hetero-glossia. Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, 14, 1080–1107.
Sauro, S. (2014). Lessons from the fandom: Task models for technology-enhanced language learning. In M. González-Lloret & L. Ortega (Eds). Technology-mediated TBLT: Researching technology and tasks, (pp. 239-262). Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
Sauro, S., & Sundmark, B. (2016,) Report from Middle Earth: Fanfiction tasks in the EFL classroom. ELT Journal, 70(4), 414-423 . doi: 10.1093/elt/ccv075
Sauro, S., & Zourou, K. (2017). CALL for papers for CALL in the Digital Wilds special issue. Language Learning & Technology, 21(1), 186.
Sundqvist, P., & Sylvén, L.K., (2014). Language-related computer use: Focus on young L2 English learners in Sweden. ReCALL, 26(1), 3-20.