“I’ll see you again in twenty five years”: Life Course Fandom, Nostalgia and Cult Television Revivals

Since they first aired in the 1990s, Twin Peaks and The X-Files have been enduring hallmarks of cult television. This reputation only increased with the news that the shows were to be revived and, perhaps unsurprisingly, media discourse surrounding the revivals harkened back to the shows’ peaks. Yet...

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Main Author: Jones Bethan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2023-03-01
Series:Open Cultural Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/culture-2022-0169
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author Jones Bethan
author_facet Jones Bethan
author_sort Jones Bethan
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description Since they first aired in the 1990s, Twin Peaks and The X-Files have been enduring hallmarks of cult television. This reputation only increased with the news that the shows were to be revived and, perhaps unsurprisingly, media discourse surrounding the revivals harkened back to the shows’ peaks. Yet this discourse also drew heavily on concepts of generational fandom and nostalgia. This article is interested in how and why fans of The X-Files and Twin Peaks use nostalgia to discuss their relationship with the shows and their own fandom. Drawing on qualitative research conducted with fans, this article identifies three forms of nostalgia specifically related to reboots, remakes or revivals: spatiotemporal nostalgia, textual nostalgia and communal nostalgia.
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spelling doaj.art-9da722914b6e4126951fb4cdd42bc3012023-04-11T17:07:15ZengDe GruyterOpen Cultural Studies2451-34742023-03-0171pp. 32834410.1515/culture-2022-0169“I’ll see you again in twenty five years”: Life Course Fandom, Nostalgia and Cult Television RevivalsJones Bethan0School of Arts and Creative Technologies, University of York, York, North Yorkshire, United KingdomSince they first aired in the 1990s, Twin Peaks and The X-Files have been enduring hallmarks of cult television. This reputation only increased with the news that the shows were to be revived and, perhaps unsurprisingly, media discourse surrounding the revivals harkened back to the shows’ peaks. Yet this discourse also drew heavily on concepts of generational fandom and nostalgia. This article is interested in how and why fans of The X-Files and Twin Peaks use nostalgia to discuss their relationship with the shows and their own fandom. Drawing on qualitative research conducted with fans, this article identifies three forms of nostalgia specifically related to reboots, remakes or revivals: spatiotemporal nostalgia, textual nostalgia and communal nostalgia.https://doi.org/10.1515/culture-2022-0169fandomidentitynostalgiathe x-filestwin peaks
spellingShingle Jones Bethan
“I’ll see you again in twenty five years”: Life Course Fandom, Nostalgia and Cult Television Revivals
Open Cultural Studies
fandom
identity
nostalgia
the x-files
twin peaks
title “I’ll see you again in twenty five years”: Life Course Fandom, Nostalgia and Cult Television Revivals
title_full “I’ll see you again in twenty five years”: Life Course Fandom, Nostalgia and Cult Television Revivals
title_fullStr “I’ll see you again in twenty five years”: Life Course Fandom, Nostalgia and Cult Television Revivals
title_full_unstemmed “I’ll see you again in twenty five years”: Life Course Fandom, Nostalgia and Cult Television Revivals
title_short “I’ll see you again in twenty five years”: Life Course Fandom, Nostalgia and Cult Television Revivals
title_sort i ll see you again in twenty five years life course fandom nostalgia and cult television revivals
topic fandom
identity
nostalgia
the x-files
twin peaks
url https://doi.org/10.1515/culture-2022-0169
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