Research                                                                                                                          home

Manga & anime - I have been working on cross-cultural audience study of the readers of Japanese and North American (Canada & USA) comic books. I conducted individual interviews with readers of translated manga in the spring of 2009 and I have produced conference papers and published papers based on this data. I did won a URF grant which was used to travel to San Francisco to conduct individual interviews with Japanese readers of manga while I was a Visiting Scholar at UCSF in summer 2011. I worked with a Japanese collegue on a funded 2-year research project to conduct a survey of viewers of anime and readers of manga. I traveled to Japan in May 2013 to continue this work on the reception of manga/anime. I have presented on the topic of manga readers and anime viewers at a number of international conferences and have published work in this area. In the summer of 2015 I conducted more interviews withe anime and manga fans who were drawn from a large online survey.  Click on the link to see more details in this part of my research program

 

World Science Fiction Convention - Worldcon - I also have conducted other research on  international fandom and Worldcon. In 2007 I attended The World Science Fiction Convention (Worldcon) in Yokohma Jappan. That experience precipitated research into the history of Worldcon and how the on-going fan convention (since 1939) has used communication technologies over a span of more than six decades of organizing an international convention of science fiction fans. I conducted an online survey of attendees at the 2009 Worldcon and presented a paper based on this data at the Academic conference associated with the 2010 Worldcon in Melbourne, Australia. I conducted a follow up survey in Melbourne and a third survey of participants at the Woldcon 2011 in Reno, Nevada. This set of surveys represents data that can shed some light on the increasingly significant variable of location. Location is key because the convention moves around based on the campaigning of organized fans who are willing to host and run the event. In addition to these surveys I have been carrying out ongoing participant observation research with active organizers of this fan community at the conventions and over the internet.I have presented analysis of this research data at the academic track at Worldcons in 2010, 2011 and on panels at Loncon in 2014.  Click on the link to see more information about this aspect of my research program.