Social Science Popular Culture
Getting a Life
The Social Worlds of Geek Culture
- Publisher
- McGill-Queen's University Press
- Initial publish date
- Feb 2018
- Category
- Popular Culture
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eBook
- ISBN
- 9780773552968
- Publish Date
- Mar 2018
- List Price
- $28.95
-
Hardback
- ISBN
- 9780773552845
- Publish Date
- Feb 2018
- List Price
- $37.95
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
Comic book superheroes, fantasy kingdoms, and futuristic starships have become inescapable features of today's pop-culture landscape, and the people we used to deride as "nerds" or "geeks" have ridden their popularity and visibility to mainstream recognition. It seems it's finally hip to be square. Yet these conventionalized representations of geek culture typically ignore the real people who have invested time and resources to make it what it is.
Getting a Life recentres our understanding of geek culture on the everyday lives of its participants, drawing on fieldwork in comic book shops, game stores, and conventions, including in-depth interviews with ordinary members of the overlapping communities of fans and enthusiasts. Benjamin Woo shows how geek culture is a set of interconnected social practices that are associated with popular media. He argues that typical depictions of mass-mediated entertainment as something that isolates and pacifies its audiences are flawed because they do not account for the conversations, relationships, communities, and identities that are created by engaging with the products of mass culture.
Getting a Life combines engaging interview material with lucid interpretation and a clear, interdisciplinary framework. The volume is both an accessible introduction to this contemporary subculture and an exploration of the ethical possibilities of a life lived with media.
About the author
Benjamin Woo is associate professor of communication and media studies at Carleton University. He is author of Getting a Life: The Social Worlds of Geek Culture.
Editorial Reviews
"Getting a Life has an important place in the canon of fan studies scholars, sociologists, board game studies, comic book studies, cultural studies, or those studying subcultures and publics. Woo has presented a fresh perspective on an amorphous and difficult to define group that has often been relegated to the outskirts of society. Here we can begin to see how the practices that define such a group and the ways in which they see themselves can come to impact the larger society. Woo's Getting a Life is an engaging, informative, and important piece of critical analysis that is also enjoyable to read." TOPIA: Canadian Journal of Cultural Studies
"Woo presents a witty, multilayered account of geek culture that could be characterized as a game changer in terms of how so-called geeks and nerds are perceived in modern Western societies. Woo's meticulous treatment of geek and nerd cultures is essential in the current hyper-mediated environment in which online communities such as Reddit, Twitch, and Nerd Out have become part of the mainstream. Getting a Life is a must read for scholars and students in fandom studies, media studies, popular culture and media, cultural studies, communication, and sociology. Essential." Choice
"An entertaining and informative romp through contemporary social philosophy and media theory that, for all its academic rigour, never lifts its gaze from its central focus: the geek. Woo's smart prose and the notion of the geek as a subcultural type make for a book that is both lighthearted and readable, yet valuable as a piece of media theory in its own right." Quill and Quire
"Long overlooked by those who study fandoms, subcultures and gendered identities, the Geek now gets the attention it deserves. Benjamin Woo’s Getting a Life: The Social Worlds of Geek Culture is a witty, smart book marked most of all by its methodological agility. Woo moves in to examine geek culture up close, then pulls back to illuminate its relationship to taste cultures, the boundary-work of social in-groups and the shifting relationship of capitalist media producers to their fans. Wit and humour run through this engaging book, but so, too, does a commitment to taking Geek culture seriously and fashioning the analytical tools with which to understand it." Will Straw, McGill University, and co-editor, with Alexandra Boutros, of Circulation and the City: Essays on Urban Culture