Beyond a costume : parasocial interaction & identification in cosplaying.

This study investigates parasocial interaction and identification with media characters in cosplaying, an activity where fans dress up to look like media characters. The study also briefly examines the cosplay subculture in Singapore. The study is based on in-depth interviews with 25 cosplayers in S...

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Main Author: Tee, Yock Sian.
Other Authors: Chen Hsueh-hua
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/49496
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-494962019-12-10T14:31:43Z Beyond a costume : parasocial interaction & identification in cosplaying. Tee, Yock Sian. Chen Hsueh-hua Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information DRNTU::Social sciences::Communication This study investigates parasocial interaction and identification with media characters in cosplaying, an activity where fans dress up to look like media characters. The study also briefly examines the cosplay subculture in Singapore. The study is based on in-depth interviews with 25 cosplayers in Singapore as well as field observations of cosplay conventions in Singapore. It was found that parasocial interaction does not occur in isolation in cosplaying and occurs through an interplay of identities- that of the cosplayer’s identity outside of the cosplay (the real identity) and the identity of the media character being cosplayed (the virtual identity), producing a third identity (the projective identity). The projective identity serves as the platform upon which the real and virtual identities interact and hence, is a platform of parasocial interaction. This is put together in a figure (figure 4.1 on page 71) in the thesis. It was also found that factors such as fans’ expectations of how media characters are supposed to act and the presence of other media characters from the same media franchise as represented by other cosplayers had an effect on parasocial interaction in cosplaying. It was also found that cosplayers were differentiated within the community based on their accumulation of subcultural knowledge and capital. Cosplaying served as a vehicle for cosplayers to project an idealised identity (that of the admired media character). Cosplayers were motivated to cosplay primarily out of their fondness for a particular media character and desire to fulfil a wishful identification with that character. ​Master of Mass Communication 2012-05-21T03:29:12Z 2012-05-21T03:29:12Z 2012 2012 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10356/49496 en Nanyang Technological University 101 p. application/msword
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Communication
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Communication
Tee, Yock Sian.
Beyond a costume : parasocial interaction & identification in cosplaying.
description This study investigates parasocial interaction and identification with media characters in cosplaying, an activity where fans dress up to look like media characters. The study also briefly examines the cosplay subculture in Singapore. The study is based on in-depth interviews with 25 cosplayers in Singapore as well as field observations of cosplay conventions in Singapore. It was found that parasocial interaction does not occur in isolation in cosplaying and occurs through an interplay of identities- that of the cosplayer’s identity outside of the cosplay (the real identity) and the identity of the media character being cosplayed (the virtual identity), producing a third identity (the projective identity). The projective identity serves as the platform upon which the real and virtual identities interact and hence, is a platform of parasocial interaction. This is put together in a figure (figure 4.1 on page 71) in the thesis. It was also found that factors such as fans’ expectations of how media characters are supposed to act and the presence of other media characters from the same media franchise as represented by other cosplayers had an effect on parasocial interaction in cosplaying. It was also found that cosplayers were differentiated within the community based on their accumulation of subcultural knowledge and capital. Cosplaying served as a vehicle for cosplayers to project an idealised identity (that of the admired media character). Cosplayers were motivated to cosplay primarily out of their fondness for a particular media character and desire to fulfil a wishful identification with that character.
author2 Chen Hsueh-hua
author_facet Chen Hsueh-hua
Tee, Yock Sian.
format Theses and Dissertations
author Tee, Yock Sian.
author_sort Tee, Yock Sian.
title Beyond a costume : parasocial interaction & identification in cosplaying.
title_short Beyond a costume : parasocial interaction & identification in cosplaying.
title_full Beyond a costume : parasocial interaction & identification in cosplaying.
title_fullStr Beyond a costume : parasocial interaction & identification in cosplaying.
title_full_unstemmed Beyond a costume : parasocial interaction & identification in cosplaying.
title_sort beyond a costume : parasocial interaction & identification in cosplaying.
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/49496
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