
AF UPRAKTISKE GRUNDE: Om samlinger blandt danske musikfans
Author(s) -
Nana Katrine Vaaben
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
antropologi
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2596-5425
pISSN - 0906-3021
DOI - 10.7146/ta.v0i43-44.107410
Subject(s) - exemplification , active listening , magic (telescope) , argument (complex analysis) , relation (database) , sociology , epistemology , aesthetics , philosophy , communication , computer science , biochemistry , physics , chemistry , quantum mechanics , database
The article is a study of music fans and
primarily concerns the objects collected by
these people. Two main arguments run through
the analysis. First of all, the collections are
considered as results of a human eagerness to
categorize and systematize, and, as such, one
can see this accountn as an exemplification
of Claude Lévi-Strauss’ thought in a modern
Western setting: Things are not known
because they are relevant – they become
relevant because they are known; as soon
as a possible acquisition is discovered by
a fan, comes the urge to obtain it. Such
conclusions, more-over, are much in line
with Baudrillard’s writings on collections,
in which system-atisation and striving for
completing a known series are the basic
motives for collecting. There are things,
however, which are difficult to explain by
reference to the urge for completeness, for
example, those things which have previously
been used, or merely touched, by a particular
singer. The second and prominent part of the
article’s argument explores, therefore, other
theo-retical possiblities for understanding the
music fans’ collections. Classical theories of
magic and theories of play and frames are
combined to show how fans seek to gain
allegorical control – not of themselves, as
is suggested by Baudrillard – but of a social
relation that has been bodily felt through
listening to music. The fans and collectors
define their use of symbols in ways that
resemble the classical anthropologies of
magical practice within a frame of play.
Furthemore, an analysis of autographs will
show that, while allegorical micro universes
and the rules and systems within them are
much valued by fans, many also seek to
obtain proof that the felt relation to a given
singer actually exists outside the frame of
play. The autograph can thereby be considered
a gift, and the cultural rules guiding
the interpretation of this gift are not confined
to a universe of play. The autographs are
interpreted according to well-established
cultural ideas of gifts as expressions of
emotions. One regards the autograph as a gift
and, especially, as a veritable sign that the fan
exists in the conscious world of the singer. It
is argued that, for the music fan, collecting
is not merely an attempt to gain control of
the self through striving for completeness,
but an attempt to gain control of a particular
social relation which is difficult to handle,
making it necessary to jump back and forth
between play and “reality” and between the
corresponding ways of using symbols within
these different contexts.