Quem não é autor?: Reflexões sobre os “invasores de texto” na Era da Cultura da Convergência

Silva, Bruna D. O. and Mendonça, Janaina C. G. and Sabbag, Deise M. A. Quem não é autor?: Reflexões sobre os “invasores de texto” na Era da Cultura da Convergência., 2019 . In EDICIC 2019, Espanha. (Submitted) [Conference poster]

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English abstract

A necessary and provocative reflection in the age of the culture of convergence is the one waged around the authorship. Convergence culture, or connection culture, is one where content streams are generated by various media platforms. In this context, the authorship that is so important and reiterated by the epistemology of making librarians in catalogs, indexing, classification and authoritative headings finds itself in wide deconstruction in this world of media convergences, and its discussion is necessary, since a worldwide tendency occurs that the concept of "author" be revised and reinvented. The authorship that for so long has been ignored, in the capitalist context is the central theme of the debate about the use and production of texts, the cognitive capacity becomes intellectual capital. In the context of the social web, where access and sharing are prioritized, the debate about authorship is resumed, especially by the appropriation and creation of content by fans of media products. Harry Potter stands out in this context for being a literary phenomenon responsible for encouraging thousands of young people in the activity of reading as leisure. The Harry Potter canon is one of the greatest representatives of popular culture today, its marketing in various media formats aims to meet the needs of its legion of fans. Most fans need to extrapolate the boundaries of the original content, so they decide to produce content on their own. In this way, authorship becomes a fluid concept in the age of participation, both amateur and professional. Access to diverse technological means of creation and communication left the notions of author a little more subjective. In this perspective, the information professional must be aware of these new forms of production and organization of knowledge and consequently the attribution of authority, not only for the work of classification, but to achieve dialogue with those communities that are extremely involved with literary activity .

Item type: Conference poster
Keywords: Authorship. Culture of Convergence. Harry Potter. Function-Author.
Subjects: E. Publishing and legal issues. > EA. Mass media.
E. Publishing and legal issues. > ED. Intellectual property: author's rights, ownership, copyright, copyleft, open access.
E. Publishing and legal issues. > EE. Intellectual freedom.
Depositing user: Bruna D. O. Silva
Date deposited: 20 Jun 2019 21:27
Last modified: 20 Jun 2019 21:27
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10760/38640

References

Busse, K., & Gray, J. (2011). Fan cultures and fan communities. The handbook of media audiences, 425-443.

Foucault, M (2011). O que é um autor?. Ditos e escritos III: Estética: literatura e pintura, música e cinema. Forense.

Jenkins, H. (2015). Cultura da convergência. Aleph.


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