MacLennan, Anne2017-07-272017-07-272017-01-262017-07-27http://hdl.handle.net/10315/33523Studies on fan fiction have traditionally employed ethnographic or literary methods to study the activities of fans. Since the 1980s scholars have focused particularly on slash fiction as unique and subversive, but this has been at the cost of devaluing other genres of fan fiction as less critical of the status-quo. By studying a sample of fan fiction which encompasses a variety of genres, and analyzing the sample using mixed methods of content analysis and textual analysis, similarities between genres emerge, as well as a breadth of both critical and uncritical treatments of the construction of masculinity.enAuthor owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests.CommunicationBrotherly Love: Remaking Homosociality and Masculinity in Fan FictionElectronic Thesis or Dissertation2017-07-27Fan fictionMasculinityWomen writersFan cultureInternet fandomSlashHurt/comfortFix-itBrothersFictional charactersSupernaturalThe HobbitThe Almighty JohnsonsThe Lord of the RingsGame of Thrones