AAU Student Projects - visit Aalborg University's student projects portal
A master's thesis from Aalborg University
Book cover


An Autoethnographic Affect Experience. Podcast Listening, My Favorite Murder, and the Art of Getting Personal

Author

Term

4. term

Education

Publication year

2020

Submitted on

Pages

65

Abstract

This thesis explores how the podcast medium can generate and modulate affective experiences, focusing on the true crime–comedy podcast My Favorite Murder and a close reading of episode “190 – Lick the Clock.” The study combines autoethnographic vignettes and a multimodal framework inspired by Carey Jewitt and Gunther Kress with affect theory grounded in psychoanalysis (Silvan S. Tomkins) and cultural studies (Sara Ahmed, Melissa Gregg and Gregory J. Seigworth, Denise Riley, Elspeth Probyn, among others). Drawing on Michael Humphreys and Nina Lykke’s ethno-drama style, personal reflections serve as analytical insights to examine how the presenters, the show’s format, and the listener’s role operate as representational and ethnographic modes that can elicit, intensify, or balance affects—including negative ones such as shame and jealousy. Situated in a postmodern understanding that acknowledges subjectivity and rejects objectivity as an ideal, the study does not aim for generalizable claims. Based on the autoethnographic affect analysis, it concludes that podcast listening is, for the author, a particularly opportune medium to achieve affect balance, and that My Favorite Murder has functioned as affect balancing in recent years, as evidenced by the vignettes, multimodal discussion, and the close reading of episode 190.

Dette speciale undersøger, hvordan podcastmediet kan skabe og modulere affektive oplevelser med fokus på true crime-komediepodcasten My Favorite Murder og en nærlæsning af episoden “190 – Lick the Clock”. Undersøgelsen kombinerer autoetnografiske vignetter og en multimodal analyse inspireret af Carey Jewitt og Gunther Kress med affektteori fra psykoanalysen (Silvan S. Tomkins) og kulturstudier (Sara Ahmed, Melissa Gregg og Gregory J. Seigworth, Denise Riley, Elspeth Probyn m.fl.). Den autoetnografiske stil, med afsæt i Michael Humphreys og Nina Lykkes ethno-drama, behandler personlige refleksioner som analytiske indsigter og undersøger, hvordan værternes tilstedeværelse, podcastens format og lytterens rolle fungerer som repræsentations- og etnografiske “modes”, der kan udløse, forstærke eller balancere affekter—including negative som skam og jalousi. Specialet er forankret i en postmodernistisk forståelse, der anerkender subjektivitet og afviser objektivitet som ideal, og sigter ikke mod generaliserbare konklusioner. På baggrund af den autoetnografiske affektanalyse konkluderes det, at podcastlytning er et særligt egnet medium for forfatteren til at opnå affektbalance, og at My Favorite Murder i de seneste år har fungeret affektbalancerende, hvilket fremgår af vignetterne, den multimodale diskussion og den næranalytiske læsning af episode 190.

[This apstract has been generated with the help of AI directly from the project full text]