Understanding Star Wars Fandom

Star Wars the Complete Saga Wallpaper

Tomorrow is May the Fourth, a fan holiday to recognize Star Wars. In honor of the day, I’ve been thinking about something that I’d like to share with you on its eve.

You see, there’s a picture in my head that won’t let me go. It’s a very strange image and I’m going to do my best to describe it to you. So, let’s start small.

Imagine a room filled with ten hundred people. There are boundaries around each one of them on the floor; the older they are, the bigger the circle is. Now, add rings in that circle (like a tree). Each one dates that person’s very first experience with Star Wars, then their second, their third, and so on. The area between the circles are color-coded with the emotion that viewer/reader felt during that moment. For the sake of simplicity, use warmer colors for the happier moments and cooler colors for the others. Thin lines mark when they see a particular film again. Thick lines are for new experiences whether they be movies, books, comics, etc.

That’s the two-dimensional part. The last bit, is to assess a tonal value within each ring. Take that very first experience. Was it happy? Make that ring’s shade glow a bright yellow. Now do the same for that singular fan until you reach present day. As time passes, each ring gets either brighter and brighter — or dimmer depending upon the viewer’s tastes and subsequent experiences. That first memory is crucial because it establishes the foundation for what we think of Star Wars, but also what we feel about it.

Multiply this image by a million. Congratulations, you have just now entered my head! Pretty, isn’t it?

What I see, are groups of colors associated with age groups and the different trilogies as the larger, or most well-known body of works from the Star Wars franchise. But? There are lots of other elements to the property. Comic books, novels, graphic novels, video games — the list goes on and on and on. Each iteration of Star Wars triggers a different emotional reaction. We have now reached the point where Star Wars is so saturated in our social consciousness because of the creative works produced that it can parody itself.

Mind you, there are other variables to take into consideration, because what’s really interesting is when those experiences overlap with one another. Then you get mixtures of colors or brightened tones because the shared awe or disgust is that much more powerful. It’s gorgeous!

This, moreso than any critique, is why I feel Star Wars fandom is something for us to not only recognize, but study and understand. This isn’t just fandom, this is a phenomenon — regardless of how we feel about the quality or the particular moments. Of course we’re going to have opinions, and I feel that our memory and our emotion combined affects those thoughts. We don’t remember moments with precision and the more content that’s added to any property, the greater the chance that’ll influence our original opinion. Worse, we get defensive, too, about those original feelings. Angry. Hurt. Betrayed?

But for others that moment of happiness, like the picture in my head is trying to express, came not from the first time we experienced Star Wars — but from theirs.

Somewhere, in the middle of that beautiful picture, lies the beating heart of fandom. And that, to me, is more amazing than any comment a fan can make. No, I am not saying that we shouldn’t critique the films or the books. I’m not telling you that your thoughts don’t matter. They do, because they’re yours. This is just the ten thousand foot overview of something quite remarkable — a complex set of emotions and thoughts based on an shared visual, interactive, and literary experience crossing many ages, cultures, and backgrounds. If that doesn’t blow your mind, then I don’t know what will.

May the Fourth be With You.

    Mood: The dawn of summer and all its warmth and annoyances.
    Caffeinated Beverages Consumed: I HAVE WINGS!
    Work-Out Minutes Logged Yesterday: Housework. Feh.
    In My Ears: Country? WTF?
    Game Last Played: Star Wars Battlefront
    Movie Last Viewed: Young Guns
    Latest Artistic Project: Cross-stitch
    Latest Release: “Don’t Ignore Your Dead” included in Don’t Read This Book for the Don’t Rest Your Head RPG

Watch the Lovecraft eZine for a New Story from Me!

Ia! Ia!

Greetings fellow cultists! It gives me great pleasure to announce that I will have a very dark short story titled “The Dig” in an upcoming issue of the Lovecraft eZine.

The Lovecraft eZine is a monthly magazine for aficionados of fiction and other content with a Lovecraftian flair. Think Cthulhu! Dagon! The Necronomicon! Star vampires! But also. . .themes that were inspired by H.P. Lovecraft’s stories.

I have a soft spot for “The Dig” because its evolution is dark and dire, indeed. In many ways, I had to dig through revisions, continually adding more text and revising it’s tragic end once, twice, and three times to finally get it into a state I was happy about. It was rejected in a previous state, but luckily I had a fantastic editor who was so, so kind enough to provide comments. He was right. Hence, the incarnation submitted here.

And you’ll get to read it. For free. Sometime this year. But I can’t tell you when. . .yet. Muwahahahahaha.

Please, do not be afraid. Go check out the other stories and illustrations in the Lovecraft eZine today!

Extreme Zombies Anthology Announced!

Extreme Zombies Anthology from Prime Books

I am thrilled to announce a new zombie anthology! The other authors in this collection are fantastic and I am humbled to be included with such fine wordsmiths. This collection is edited by the esteemed Paula Guran.

From the publisher’s website:

It’s too late! The living dead have already taken over the world. Your brains have been devoured. Nothing is left but spasms of ravenous need—an obscene hunger for even more zombie fiction. Forget the metaphors and the mildly scary. You want shock, you want grue, you want disturbing, gut-wrenching, skull-crunching zombie stories that take you over the edge and go splat. You want the bloody best of the ultimate undead. You have no choice. . . you. . . must. . . have. . . Extreme Zombies!

Extreme Zombies Table of Contents

“Charlie’s Hole” by Jesse Bullington
“At First Only Darkness” by Nancy A. Collins
“The Blood Kiss” by Dennis Etchison
“We Will Rebuild” by Cody Goodfellow
“Dead Giveaway” by Brian Hodge
“Zombies for Jesus” by Nina Kiriki Hoffman
“An Unfortunate Incident at the Slaughterhouse” by Harper Hull
“Captive Heart” by Brian Keene
“Going Down” by Nancy Kilpatrick
“On the Far Side of the Cadillac Desert With Dead Folks” by Joe R. Lansdale
“Susan” by Robin D. Laws
“Makak” by Edward Lee
“The Traumatized Generation” by Murray Leeder
“Meathouse Man” by George R.R. Martin
“Abed” by Elizabeth Massie
“For the Good of All” by Yvonne Navarro
“Home” by David Moody
“Jerry’s Kids Meet Wormboy” by David J. Schow
“Aftertaste” by John Shirley
“Viva Las Vegas” by Thomas Roche
“In Beauty, Like the Night” by Norman Partridge
“Romero’s Children” by David A. Riley
“Tomorrow’s Precious Lambs” by Monica Valentinelli
“Provider” by Tim Waggoner
“Chuy and the Fish” by David Wellington

Extreme Zombies is scheduled to debut in August 2012 and will be published by Prime Books. Be sure to check out other books in the Prime Books catalog, there’s a lot of great titles in there.

“Tomorrow’s Precious Lambs” first appeared in The Zombie Feed, Volume One which was published by Apex Book Company and edited by Jason Sizemore.

The Dragon Screams for the Sun

A Blue Painted Cat

Phil Reed’s passion, as seen through www.battlegrip.com/, is infectious. It fills me with absolute glee that someone can get so excited about “X” whatever “X” happens to be — and sometimes? Well, I have to dive into the fun to see what that perfect moment of happiness is all about. So, for the second time in recent memory, I invested in something I wouldn’t normally get for myself.

Enter “Screaming for Sunrise.” I can’t really call this a toy. It’s more like a vinyl sculpture and it was modeled after the original painting by the same name, Screaming for Sunrise. Produced by Munky King, when I opened the box I was in total shock. My dragon is gorgeous! Yay! You know I’m impressed when I sit here trying to figure out how the artist Yoskay Yamamoto designed, produced and painted this. 🙂

This particular dragon is pictured without the wire-frame ribbon because I wanted to highlight the mold. It’s on him now, though!

(P.S. Huge apologies for the shots. Been having trouble with my camera and I’m strongly leaning toward hunting down a commercial photography class and better equipment. You can see Screaming for Sunrise on the toy manufacturer’s website.)

    Mood: The future’s so bright, I gotta wear shades.
    Caffeinated Beverages Consumed: No tea or tomato juice.
    Work-Out Minutes Logged Yesterday: Walk this way.
    In My Ears: Mirror, Mirror on the Wall…
    Game Last Played: Battle Nations
    Movie Last Viewed: Young Guns
    Latest Artistic Project: Cross-stitch
    Latest Release: Redwing’s Gambit for Bulldogs! the RPG
Previous Posts




Looking for Monica’s books and games that are still in print? Visit Monica Valentinelli on Amazon’s Author Central or a bookstore near you.

Archives

Back to Top