TWC 48: Disability and Fandom
Guest edited by Olivia Johnston Riley and Lauren Rouse
Editorial
Building disability fan studies, by Olivia Johnston Riley and Lauren Rouse
Article
Doing fandom, doing disability: Decolonial perspectives to Marvel superhero fan fiction, by Divya Garg
Tagging care: "Disability" in Good Omens and Stranger Things "hurt/comfort" fan fiction, by Marialaura Grandolfo and Nicola Simonetti
Contemplating the neuroaffirmative potential of fandom studies, by Georgia Thomas-Parr
Neuroqueering fan studies: An autie-ethnography of fan fiction, by Kitty Geoghan
Constructed representation: Finding autism in Star Trek, by D. L. Brand
Embracing the robotic: Products of neuroqueer reclamation on AO3, by Teddy Hogerhuis
Digital disability aesthetics: Queer-disabled practices in oral notfic, by Olivia Johnston Riley
Symposium
Ableism in the service of transphobia: J. K. Rowling as a case study, by Dean Leetal
Excuse yourself, let hope in": Examining the process of recovery in Hazbin Hotel and fan communities, by Vincent Paquin
Fan fiction, disability, and affect: Fan fiction as uniquely accessible, by Rowan Crewe
Fan disability identities: 2022 Archive of Our Own demographics survey results, by Lauren Rouse
ChronicallyIll!Shen Yuan, fanon, and disability, by Chelsea Fay Baumgartner
“all of them r autism honestly”: Neurodivergence in compilation videos of What We Do in the Shadows, by Bo Blanksma
Book review
"Disability and fandom," by Katherine Anderson Howell, reviewed by Vee Kennedy

















