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‘When it comes to the true crime community, Taylor is a legend’: Social and symbolic capital among murderabilia fans

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‘When it comes to the true crime community, Taylor is a legend’: Social and symbolic capital among murderabilia fans. / Fathallah, Judith.
In: International Journal of Cultural Studies, Vol. 27, No. 2, 31.03.2024, p. 251-267.

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Fathallah J. ‘When it comes to the true crime community, Taylor is a legend’: Social and symbolic capital among murderabilia fans. International Journal of Cultural Studies. 2024 Mar 31;27(2):251-267. Epub 2023 Aug 7. doi: 10.1177/13678779231191810

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@article{84dfa9f357da4543bc55b7c2edf42c10,
title = "{\textquoteleft}When it comes to the true crime community, Taylor is a legend{\textquoteright}: Social and symbolic capital among murderabilia fans",
abstract = "This article explores and clarifies the usage of social and symbolic capital as applied to fan studies. It illustrates the author's definitions with a case study from the neglected arena of dark fandom. I argue that {\textquoteleft}social capital{\textquoteright} should be used to refer to the network of friends and associates agents possess within a subculture, whether dyadic, triadic or multidirectional, but that to qualify as social capital, there must be mutual recognition of the tie. I illustrate this argument through a case study of the online presence and persona of Taylor James, the owner and proprietor of leading murderabilia auction site CultCollectibles.org. {\textquoteleft}Murderabilia{\textquoteright} refers to items formerly possessed by or associated with celebrity criminals, particularly serial killers. I further establish that contra Thornton, we do not observe mainstream condemnation generating subcultural capital within this sphere, but rather, mainstream media attention can be negotiated by appeals to traditional forms of expertise.",
author = "Judith Fathallah",
year = "2024",
month = mar,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1177/13678779231191810",
language = "English",
volume = "27",
pages = "251--267",
journal = "International Journal of Cultural Studies",
issn = "1367-8779",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - ‘When it comes to the true crime community, Taylor is a legend’

T2 - Social and symbolic capital among murderabilia fans

AU - Fathallah, Judith

PY - 2024/3/31

Y1 - 2024/3/31

N2 - This article explores and clarifies the usage of social and symbolic capital as applied to fan studies. It illustrates the author's definitions with a case study from the neglected arena of dark fandom. I argue that ‘social capital’ should be used to refer to the network of friends and associates agents possess within a subculture, whether dyadic, triadic or multidirectional, but that to qualify as social capital, there must be mutual recognition of the tie. I illustrate this argument through a case study of the online presence and persona of Taylor James, the owner and proprietor of leading murderabilia auction site CultCollectibles.org. ‘Murderabilia’ refers to items formerly possessed by or associated with celebrity criminals, particularly serial killers. I further establish that contra Thornton, we do not observe mainstream condemnation generating subcultural capital within this sphere, but rather, mainstream media attention can be negotiated by appeals to traditional forms of expertise.

AB - This article explores and clarifies the usage of social and symbolic capital as applied to fan studies. It illustrates the author's definitions with a case study from the neglected arena of dark fandom. I argue that ‘social capital’ should be used to refer to the network of friends and associates agents possess within a subculture, whether dyadic, triadic or multidirectional, but that to qualify as social capital, there must be mutual recognition of the tie. I illustrate this argument through a case study of the online presence and persona of Taylor James, the owner and proprietor of leading murderabilia auction site CultCollectibles.org. ‘Murderabilia’ refers to items formerly possessed by or associated with celebrity criminals, particularly serial killers. I further establish that contra Thornton, we do not observe mainstream condemnation generating subcultural capital within this sphere, but rather, mainstream media attention can be negotiated by appeals to traditional forms of expertise.

U2 - 10.1177/13678779231191810

DO - 10.1177/13678779231191810

M3 - Journal article

VL - 27

SP - 251

EP - 267

JO - International Journal of Cultural Studies

JF - International Journal of Cultural Studies

SN - 1367-8779

IS - 2

ER -