Cultural consumers as "new cultural intermediaries": manga scanlators

Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to understand participatory consumers who are involved in translating and distributing overseas cultural commodities, without the permission of copyright holders. It intends to conceptualize them as a new breed of cultural intermediaries and discuss implication...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Arts and the market 2012-10, Vol.2 (2), p.131-143
Main Author: Lee, Hye-Kyung
Format: Article
Language:eng
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Summary:Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to understand participatory consumers who are involved in translating and distributing overseas cultural commodities, without the permission of copyright holders. It intends to conceptualize them as a new breed of cultural intermediaries and discuss implications of their activities for the cultural industries.Design methodology approach - The paper conducts a case study of "manga scanlators" who voluntarily translate manga (Japanese comics) to English and share translated manga online with other fans, without authorization from copyright holders. In addition to literature review and analysis of the text of selected scanlation web sites, the author interviewed ten manga scanlators and eight manga industry practitioners and experts in the UK, the USA and Japan.Findings - It is found that participatory consumers, as new cultural intermediaries, challenge the cultural industries by transferring a substantial part of the industries' intermediary work to the realm of cultural fandom and by developing their own logics of organizing the intermediation process and distributing fan-translated products.Originality value - Considering the lack of research on fan-translation and dissemination of cultural products, this paper's findings will be a valuable addition to the existing account of participatory cultural consumption. The copyright infringement aspect in manga scanlation is seen as part of the bigger picture of the gradual decoupling of intermediation activities, which are required to bring cultural products to overseas markets, from the market economy of translated manga production and distribution.
ISSN:2044-2084
2056-4945
2056-4953