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Often frowned upon outside fan communities, audiences sometimes engage
in mourning rituals at the deaths of fictional characters. This
presentation will address fan mourning in response to the demise of
characters in both manga and western comics.
In “Tangible Reality of Absence: Fan Communities and the Mourning of
Fictional Characters,” which addresses book and television narratives,
I argued that through mourning fans “stake claim to otherwise
inaccessible desired bodies while also creating a dialogue that
eroticizes the deceased” and that these acts are a “partial
defictionalization, moving the desired bodies of personal and
narrative fantasy into a tangible reality of absence.”
In the case of comics and manga, however, these mourned bodies are
representations of flesh as opposed to flesh themselves, so mourning
fans not only defictionalize what was lost, but also engage in acts of
self-fictionalization that allow union with the source material.
By looking at fan responses to Asao Takamori and Tetsuya Chiba's
“Tomorrow's Joe,” Wendy and Richard Pini's “Elf Quest” and Ellen Kushner's
illustrated chapbook “The Man With the Knives” I will compare fan
mourning for characters in illustrated stories to those in other media
while also examining narrative features that provoke these acts of
eroticization.
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Date: 2010-06-16 02:42 pm (UTC)I don't even know whose families they're looking at. All of the people I know have lived with their folks at some point in their twenties, sometimes with wife and kids in tow. (My folks lived with my grandparents for a couple of months when I was 2 whilst our houses were being built. My husband and I lived with his parents for about 10 weeks after he left grad school. My best friend and her husband lived with his folks for a few months whilst their townhouse was being finished. And the list goes on.)
My thought was that you lived with your folks until you either got married or found a job that could support you. If you never found a job that could support you, then you ended up at home, with your folks, a bit of a laughing stock, but not homeless.
Besides with college getting more expensive and businesses not hiring people who are unemployed and no universal health care what are young people supposed to do? Move out and be homeless?