Post #4
In Lincoln Geraghty’s “Masculine Pursuits?: Gender, Generation, and the Fan Collector”, the author discusses how collecting is gendered in some ways but that fan collecting ultimately unites all fans as it is based in nostalgia, whatever that may mean for the individual. Through both affirmational and transformative modes of fan engagement, I think we can use this commonality of nostalgia based fan expression to gain insight as we see similarities between fan expression, such as how and what fans collect.
Geraghty discussed of how the Barbie doll is not only gendered towards females, but is also more and more frowned upon by feminists. The Barbie dolls are targeted towards young girls and over time many people have started to point out how the Barbie dolls line projects an attainable female ideal. From the way Barbie dresses to her physical fitness, people have grown to associate the dolls with being on the wrong side of the feminism movement for our current climate. Geraghty dives into how despite being gendered and ill thought of, all kinds of people are collectors of these dolls for the sake of nostalgia, but their deeper motivations all differ. Geraghty writes that “while the image of Barbie is seen as problematic by many we should look more closely at what collectors are doing with the dolls as new meanings and readings are inscribed once the toy becomes a collectible, an object of distinction and value” (Geraghty 69).
We can use nostalgia motivated fan collecting to unite both genders, as well as show how nostalgia can bring about the expression of both affirmational and transformative fan works. The boundary between affirmational and transformative modes of fan engagement is always seen as hazy, but for fan collecting I would argue that it gets hazier. The notion that all fan collecting is rooted in nostalgia suggests that affirmation fan practices are already at play. Collecting certain dolls or action figures from the past shows these fans’ interest in the details and order of what they are looking for. After the the items are purchased by the individual, that is when how the piece fits into their collection or what the piece means to them starts to be able to be seen an transformational. Geraghty writes “I think that it is more instructive to look at the importance of nostalgia in collecting and the identities all collectors construct through the preservation of objects from the past” (Geraghty 53). These constructed identities reprint how they transform canonical pieces into pieces with new meanings once they are added to their collections. The incorporation of these modes of fan expression, as well as the incorporation of all kinds of fans illustrates have nostalgia based collection is changed by each individual collector.
Geraghty, Lincoln. Cult Collectors: Nostalgia, Fandom, and Collecting Popular Culture. New York: Routledge Books, 2014. 60, 61.











