Entrepreneurial Cosplay takes a comprehensive and insightful look at the business of cosplay, exploring the ways that artists and fans engage in entrepreneurial and intrapreneurial practices to gain personal and professional success.
Centered around the concept of entrepreneurship and the newly emerging concept of intrapreneurship – using entrepreneurial principles to enhance or further an existing concept, organization or product – the book showcases the ways in which cosplayers create new ideas, new ways of working and new ways of doing things, exploiting their knowledge to create new opportunities. By analyzing the numerous motivations driving cosplay behavior (self-expression, external recognition and financial gain), this volume provides a unique view of current cosplay practice and its relationship to economic activity.
Offering important insight into this emerging area, this book will be of interest to scholars seeking to learn how entrepreneurial and economic models may be used to understand the emerging field of cosplay studies, as well as students and scholars working in the fields of Entrepreneurship, Business, Fan Studies, Visual Art Studies and Gender Studies.
Edited by:
Elizabeth Gackstetter Nichols (Drury University USA),
Amy C. Lewis (Texas A&M University-San Antonio,
USA),
Dave Tomczyk (Quinnipiac University in Hamden,
Connecticut,
USA)
Imprint: Routledge
Country of Publication: United Kingdom
Dimensions:
Height: 234mm,
Width: 156mm,
ISBN: 9781032220888
ISBN 10: 1032220880
Series: Routledge Studies in Media and Cultural Industries
Pages: 216
Publication Date: 28 November 2024
Audience:
College/higher education
,
Professional and scholarly
,
Primary
,
Undergraduate
Format: Paperback
Publisher's Status: Forthcoming
Introduction Elizabeth Gackstetter Nichols, Dave Tomczyk and Amy C. Lewis Part 1: Ideas, Innovation, and Failure Chapter 1- Entrepreneurial Cosplay: Success Maximization, Business Ownership, and the Entrepreneurial Mentality Dave Tomczyk Chapter 2- Third Party Content Creators in eSport Christopher McCutcheon, Michael Hitchens, Mitchell McEwan Chapter 3- Entrepreneurial Cosplay: Women and Crossplay in Mexico Mitzi Ariana Pérez Trejo Part 2: Intrapraneurship Chapter 4- Reign in Your Baloney Pony: Managing Sexual Taboo for Success Elizabeth Gackstetter Nichols Chapter 5- Nerds and Copyright Matthew Mangum Chapter 6- Threat of Familiar Faces: Cosplay Outside of Conventions Luxx Mishou Chapter 7- Violence against Women in The Witcher and Game of Thrones Madison Sears & Mary Ingram-Waters Chapter 8- Cosplay through a Lens of Family Business D'Lisa N. McKee Part 3: (Self)-Branding Chapter 9- Marketing, Personal Branding, and Positioning: Cosplay: Personal Branding … on Steroids! Ruby Daniels Chapter 10- Child Cosplayers: Embodying Potentialities Sara Austin Chapter 11- Heroic Returns on Investment: Economic Considerations of Cosplay in the United States Erin Kenny Chapter 12-Managing Cosplay Identities: For love or money? Amy C. Lewis
Elizabeth Gackstetter Nichols is a professor of Spanish and gender studies at Drury University. Her research covers international beauty work, cosplay and popular culture. She is a long-time cosplayer and blogs at www.cosplaymom.com. Amy C. Lewis is a professor of management and associate dean of business at Texas A&M University-San Antonio. Her research interests involve social identity, motivated cognition and stigma. She also enjoys cosplaying, primarily focusing on the Star Trek fandom. Dave Tomcyzk is an associate professor of entrepreneurship and game design at Quinnipiac University. His research covers unusual businesses, creativity and how to teach entrepreneurship. His first board game, Catharsis, was published by his company Cyber Wizard Games in 2022.