Full Description
Examining celebrity and fan studies together, Professor Superstar argues that academia shares key traits with fandom, including collective emotional investment, shared interpretation of texts, and identity formation. Universities are often seen as isolated from everyday life, creating an atmosphere of both fascination and resentment. Some academics even go on to become field-specific microcelebrities. Some celebrate their influence while others resent their prominence, leading to both fandom and anti-fandom and reflecting broader social struggles as universities become battlegrounds for economic and political debates. The audiences engaging with academia extend beyond the students and faculty directly involved, creating multiple and conflicting interpretations of what academia represents. Public perceptions of academia are shaped less by its reality than by competing narratives about its role in society. By taking these dynamics seriously, we can better understand the cultural forces shaping both admiration and hostility toward higher education.
Contents
List of Tables
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1: Fans of Aca-Fans: Fan Studies Scholars as Celebrities
Chapter 2: From Lecture Notes to Likes: Academics as Social Media Microcelebrities
Chapter 3:Haters Gonna Tweet: Academia as an Object of (Anti-)Fandom on Social Media
Chapter 4: Make the Ivory Tower Exclusive Again: Frustrated Fandom of Academia at the University of Austin
Chapter 5: Red, White, and Anti-School: The University as Conservative Anti-fan Object
Conclusion
Appendix
Works Cited