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Cult Media

Cult Media. Survey of Popular Culture. Cult Media The Rocky Horror Picture Show (Jim Sharman, 1975). Cult Media. Survey of Popular Culture. Cult Media Eraserhead (David Lynch, 1977). Cult Media. Survey of Popular Culture. Cult Media Liquid Sky ( Slava Tsukerman , 1982). Cult Media.

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Cult Media

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  1. Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  2. Cult Media The Rocky Horror Picture Show (Jim Sharman, 1975) Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  3. Cult Media Eraserhead(David Lynch, 1977) Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  4. Cult Media Liquid Sky (SlavaTsukerman, 1982) Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  5. Cult Media Donnie Darko(Richard Kelly, 2001) Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  6. Cult Media Cult Media LIVING TEXTUALITY. The authentic cult work, Eco observes, must seem like "living textuality," as if it had no authors, as postmodernist proof that "as literature comes from literature, cinema comes from cinema" (199). Eco, Umberto. "Casablanca: Cult Movies and Intertextual Collage." Travels in Hyper Reality. Trans. William Weaver. New York: Harcourt, Brace Jovanovich, 1986: 197-211. Survey of Popular Culture

  7. Cult Media Cult Media A COMPLETELY FURNISHED WORLD. Another closely related prerequisite of Cult Media, Eco observes, is its capacity to "provide a completely furnished world so that its fans can quote characters and episodes as if they were aspects of the fan's private sectarian world, a world about which one can make up quizzes and play trivia games so that the adepts of the secret recognize through each other a shared experience" (198). Eco, Umberto. "Casablanca: Cult Movies and Intertextual Collage." Travels in Hyper Reality. Trans. William Weaver. New York: Harcourt, Brace Jovanovich, 1986: 197-211. Survey of Popular Culture

  8. Cult Media A COMPLETELY FURNISHED WORLD. Cult Media Eco, Umberto. "Casablanca: Cult Movies and Intertextual Collage." Travels in Hyper Reality. Trans. William Weaver. New York: Harcourt, Brace Jovanovich, 1986: 197-211. Survey of Popular Culture

  9. Cult Media A COMPLETELY FURNISHED WORLD. Cult Media Eco, Umberto. "Casablanca: Cult Movies and Intertextual Collage." Travels in Hyper Reality. Trans. William Weaver. New York: Harcourt, Brace Jovanovich, 1986: 197-211. Survey of Popular Culture

  10. Cult Media A COMPLETELY FURNISHED WORLD. Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  11. Cult Media DETACHABILITY. Cult Media work, according to Eco, must also be susceptible to breaking, dislocation, unhinging, "so that one can remember only parts of it, irrespective of their original relationship with the whole." Cult Media viewer watching these moments--indeed watching for such moments—may let out an audible "I love this." Cult Media Eco, Umberto. "Casablanca: Cult Movies and Intertextual Collage." Travels in Hyper Reality. Trans. William Weaver. New York: Harcourt, Brace Jovanovich, 1986: 197-211. Survey of Popular Culture

  12. Cult Media: Some Preliminary Notes & Queries • What is the connection between “cult” and quality? Is a “bad” film or TV series more likely to become a cult work? Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  13. Cult Media: Some Preliminary Notes & Queries • Can a cult work be consciously created or must it be discovered? Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  14. Cult Media: Some Preliminary Notes & Queries • Do certain actors/actresses inspire “cultishness”? Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  15. Cult Media: Some Preliminary Notes & Queries • What is the relationship of camp and cult-ivation? Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  16. Cult Media: Some Preliminary Notes & Queries • What are the specific relations between genre hybridity/genre bending and cult status? Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  17. Cult Media: Some Preliminary Notes & Queries • Does box office failure enhance culthood? Can a blockbuster/ratings hit acquire cult status? Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  18. Cult Media: Some Preliminary Notes & Queries • Why is the fantastic, “left of real” (J. J. Abrams’ term), such a fertile ground for cult status? Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  19. Cult Media: Some Preliminary Notes & Queries • Is it possible for a movie or television show to gain cult status largely through nostalgia? Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  20. Cult Media: Some Preliminary Notes & Queries • Are “B.Y.O subtext” works (Joss Whedon’s phrase) ipso facto cultish? Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  21. Cult Media: Some Preliminary Notes & Queries • What role do intertextuality, metaxtextuality play in the growth of cult work? Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  22. Cult Media: Some Preliminary Notes & Queries • Are cult works always counter-cultural? Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  23. Cult Media: Some Preliminary Notes & Queries • Are cult works always counter-cultural? Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  24. Cult Media: Some Preliminary Notes & Queries • Why do “Cult [media]’s imaginary universes support an inexhaustible range of narrative possibilities, inviting, supporting and rewarding close textual analysis, interpretation, and inventive reformulations”? (Jones and Pearson) Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  25. Cult Media: Some Preliminary Notes & Queries • How is it that cult media have evolved into “a meta-genre that caters to intense, interpretive audience practices,” affording “fans enormous scope for further interpretation, speculation and invention” (Jones and Pearson). Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  26. Cult Media: Some Preliminary Notes & Queries • Why have cult media come to be distinguished by their “hyperdiegesis”: ”the creation of a vast and detailed narrative space, only a fraction of which is ever directly seen or encountered within the text . . .” (Matt Hills, Fan Cultures 137) Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  27. Cult Media: Some Preliminary Notes & Queries • Should we follow Matt Hills’ advice that, instead of “celebrating cult texts for their supposed uniqueness,” we should focus on “analyzing and defining cult TV as a part of broader patterns within changing TV industries” (“Defining Cult TV” 522). Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  28. Cult Media: Some Preliminary Notes & Queries •  What obligation do the makers of cult series and films have to answer the clamor of fans for more involvement? Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  29. Cult Media: Some Preliminary Notes & Queries • Does the presence of a star with cult street cred or a cult of personality guarantee cult status? Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  30. Cult Media: Some Preliminary Notes & Queries • Do cult media exhibit a unique approach to character investment? Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  31. Cult Media: Some Preliminary Notes & Queries • Is it still true that your standard issue television cult work, in keeping with the tradition, “represents a disruptive rather than a conservative force” (Kawin)? Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  32. Cult Media: Some Preliminary Notes & Queries • How does cult television differ—in subject matter, audience, marketing, narrative—from cult film? Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  33. Cult Media: Some Preliminary Notes & Queries • How will the emergence of multiple platforms change the nature of cult media? Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  34. Cult Media: Some Preliminary Notes & Queries • Are there narrative forms unique to cult media, and if they exist, how have they influenced all of film and television? Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  35. Cult Media: Some Preliminary Notes & Queries • What is the place of the “conspiracy theory” in fostering/sustaining cult TV? Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  36. Cult Media: Some Preliminary Notes & Queries • Are the traditional youth demographics of cult media changing? Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  37. Cult Media: Some Preliminary Notes & Queries • To what degree has cult media created “transnational” languages and viewing practices and furthered globalization? Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  38. Cult Media: A Basic Glossary activated text: A television program which generates buzz. ancillary text: Both secondary (criticism, publicity) and tertiary (discussion and commentary occurring at the fan level) texts. convergence culture: "The . . . ways the business landscape is changing in response to the growing integration of content and brands across media platforms and the increasingly prominent roles that consumers are playing in shaping the flow of media" (Convergence Culture Consortium). cult tv: Television which attracts and sustains a usually small but rabid audience, the members of which begin to use the show in cultish fashion. According to Reeves: "By the 1990s, there were generally two types of cult television shows. The first type, in the tradition of Star Trek, is comprised of prime-time network programs that failed to generate large ratings numbers, but succeeded in attracting substantial numbers of avid fans. Twin Peaks is the most outstanding recent example of this category. Shows of the second type first appear on cable or in fringe timeslots and are narrowly targeted at a niche audience. Comedy Central's Mystery Science Theater 3000 (MST3K) and MTV's Beavis and Butthead (B&B) exemplify this category of cult programming that was never intended to appeal to mass audience." Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  39. Cult Media: A Basic Glossary fan fiction: Stories written by viewers (and often posted on the web) which make use of a television’s show’s characters in new, sometimes improbable situations. See also slash fan fiction. fan-scholar. Matt Hills' term (Fan Cultures) for a fan whose interest/enthusiasm for the work he/she obsessively follow exhibits the kind of academic rigor ordinarily expected of an academic scholar. See also scholar-fan. homage.  A spoof, "send-up" of another work of art, usually done in admiration of the original rather than for purposes of ridicule. interpretive community: The idea, pioneered by Stanley Fish, that "[s]imilar readings are produced . . . because similarly located readers learn a similar set of reading strategies and interpretive codes which they bring to bear upon the texts they encounter" [Radway]. intertextual: The tendency--typical of postmodernism--of texts not merely to allude to other texts but to depend upon the similarities, differences, and contrasts between texts in order to establish their own signification. "Intertextuality should not be, but frequently is, used to refer to the intentional allusion (overt or covert) to, citation or quotation of previous texts in literary texts" [The Literary Encyclopedia]. Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  40. Cult Media: A Basic Glossary jumping the shark: The "defining moment" when a television program "has reached its peak" and begins to go downhill. Named after a moment in Happy Days when its most memorable character (The Fonz) takes part in a shark jumping contest. See the Jump the Shark website: http://www.jumptheshark.com. Mary Sue: in fan fiction, a character who represents the identity of the author inserted into the story line of a series. "Superstar," a Season Four episode of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, is a perfect example. multi-platform (or cross-platform): Originally a designation for software capable of running on different operating systems, now refers as well to media forms appearing on multiple media. Lost, for example, is incarnated not just on television but in books, videogames, board games, websites, internet-based "alternative reality games," cell phones, music CDs, and DVDs. narrative special effect: Jason Mittell's term for an original form of storytelling--Lost's surprise introduction of flash forwards, for example, or its final season "flash sideways"--intended to provoke buzz and generate fan involvement. Netflix adultery: Watching ahead of a partner (thus being unfaithful) an item--typically an episode of a television series--in a Netflix streaming cue. Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  41. Cult Media: A Basic Glossary pastiche: Describes a work of art made up almost entirely of assembled bits and pieces from other works. According to Frederic Jamieson, the characteristic form of expression in postmodernism. postmodernism: A cultural style or sensibility, a response to and evolution from modernism, which exhibits--indeed embraces--disunity, superficiality, self-referential, intertextuality, parody, pastiche, recombination, irony, indifference, discontinuity, disrespect, alienation, meaninglessness. recombinant programming: Todd Gitlin's term (Inside Primetime) for the production of a television program by genre-splicing together other, existing forms. scholar-fan. Matt Hills' term (Fan Cultures) for an academic whose interest/enthusiam for the shows he/she investigates exhibit certain fannish behaviors. See also fan-scholar. self-referentiality: The tendency of a work of art to become self-conscious, to call attention to itself--its conventions, structure, signification--as part of its own discourse. slash fan fiction: Fan fictionwhich links together, usually in sexual situations, pairs of characters who are not so involved in the diegesis. In slash fan fiction, Mulder and Skinner might become lovers, or Spock and Kirk. Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  42. Cult Media: A Basic Glossary spoiler virgin: A fan who assiduously avoids all spoilers. spoiler whore: A fan who actively seeks out and/or propagates spoilers. spreadable: Media dispersed widely on a variety of formal and informal platforms. sticky: Old-model media aggregating in centralized locations (like networks). webisode: "[A]n episode of a television show that airs initially as an Internet download or stream as opposed to first airing on broadcast or cable television" (Wikipedia). A new factor in multi-platformstorytelling. Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

  43. El Topo(@2:37) • Night of the Living Dead (@13:10) • Pink Flamingos (@27) • The Harder They Come (@42:06) • Rocky Horror Picture Show (@51:35) • Eraserhead(@1:07) • Introduction: @ 00.00; 12:30; 1:19:50 Watch Midnight Movies Cult Media Survey of Popular Culture

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