In:Social Media and Society: Integrating the digital with the social in digital discourse
Edited by Majid KhosraviNik
[Discourse Approaches to Politics, Society and Culture 100] 2023
► pp. 187–208
A journal of impossible things
Tweeted discourses of gendered digital fandom on the thirteenth doctor and #NotMyDoctor hashtag
Published online: 14 April 2023
https://doi.org/10.1075/dapsac.100.10pru
https://doi.org/10.1075/dapsac.100.10pru
Abstract
In 2017, the cult programme Doctor Who announced its Thirteenth Doctor – classically trained Jodie Whittaker. This new regeneration (i.e., recasting) of an iconic, and consummately upper crust, British character follows twelve white male Doctors into the bigger-on-the-inside blue police box to traverse space and time saving the Whoniverse. Fans have always viewed new Doctors with scepticism, but this new female Doctor seemed impossible for fans. Was this impossibility a rupture with Whovian lore or a reflection of heteropatriarchal social norms? This chapter takes a feminist media and fan studies perspective and employs social media critical discourse analysis to examine the #NotMyDoctor hashtag that trended on Twitter following the announcement. It finds three themes: trolling the haters, the anti-PC police, and a Whovian cult of true womanhood.
Article outline
- Introduction
- The Whoniverse
- Digital fandom, cult TV & gender
- The case: on Twitter
- Trolling the broflakes
- Social justice warriors, Feminazis & the (Anti)-PC police
- A penis-operated TARDIS
- Discussion & conclusion
- Epilogue
Notes References
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