May 2nd, 2010
Constructing the ‘Fjortis’ – Abstract for AoIR 11
This is my accepted abstract for next year’s Association of Internet Researcher’s conference in Gothenburg!
Constructing the ‘Fjortis’: How youth are (re)appropriating a gendered discourse.
In Sweden, the term ‘Fjortis’ is slang for the Swedish word fourteen (fjorton) and originally described someone who was acting immaturely or childishly (SAOL, 2006).While the term is applied more commonly to girls than boys, it did not originally have strong gendered connotations. On YouTube, however, the term has taken on a gendered meaning and the appropriation and re-appropriation between Swedish fashion vloggers (modevlogger) and Swedish boys on YouTube is assigning new and specific meanings to the term.
The concept of ‘Fjortis’ became popular on YouTube through a photomontage video of adolescent girls from Umeå, a town in northern Sweden, in various states of dress and drunkenness. The photos were backgrounded by a popular rap song called ‘Fjortis’ and which describes a boy rapper ‘wannabe’ (Fronda – Fjortis). The fjortis meme spread throughout the Swedish YouTube youth communities and at the time of writing, all major cities in Sweden have a fjortis video posted on YouTube, and many of the cities have yearly updates to the fjortis meme. In response to these videos, a group of Swedish adolescent girls began self-defining as a fjortis and performing additional, positive meanings to the term in their own vlogs. Many of these vloggers discuss fashion and appearance, and through declaring themselves as a fjortis, they are re-appropriating the term as something positive. This term, however, remains gendered as they often associate the term with a particular style of dress, speech, and vlogging style.
This paper will analyze the discourse between two groups of Swedish youth vloggers – the fashion vloggers who self-identify as a fjortis, and the creators of the city fjortis videos in order to map how the concept of fjortis has become strongly gendered in online contexts. Additionally, the less obvious semiotics of the videos, such as the music, background, and dress will be analyzed in order to determine how the two groups are performing this discourse through various semiotic means (Butler, 1990, van Leeuwen, 2005). In order to establish a baseline of how gendered the term fjortis was before the city fjortis videos, an analysis based on a corpus of how the term has been used in mass media will be applied, as well as an analysis of mass medias present usage of the term in order to determine how the use of this term has changed in popular or mainstream discourse.
Constructing the ‘Fjortis’: how youth are (re)appropriating a gendered discourse is one of four reports in the ethnographic work of a three-part project called YouTube as a performative arena (http://www.yapa.se) which will examine the video-sharing site, YouTube as an arena for creative and artistic expression among Swedish youth. This project brings together cross-disciplinary research in order to gain a better understanding of how youth use these arenas, as well as how the YouTube phenomenon is understood and defined by the traditional, adult-managed media landscape.
This project is conducted as part of the Swedish Knowledge Foundation’s funded project, YouTube as a performative arena (http://www.yapa.se).
References:
Butler, J., 1990. Gender trouble: Feminism and the subversion of identity. New York: Routledge.
SAOL 13th edition. New words in the 13th edition of brian e fjortis :D SAOL
van Leeuwen, T., 2005. Introducing Social Semiotics. London: Routledge.
Websites Referenced:
LetsSingIt, Fjortis lyrics, http://artists.letssingit.com/fronda-lyrics-fjortis-pzzgv3m [Accessed February 28, 2010].
YouTube, http://www.youtube.com

This site is one researcher's wanderings through participatory media. Focusing on youth created media, I will use this blog to document my study of YouTube and related video hosting sites.