Popular Culture Review Vol. 21, No. 2, Summer 2010 | Page 64

60 Popular Culture Review Finally, and I would argue, most importantly, there is the influence of the heavily gendered nature of the canon itself. The W40K universe is, to quote one interviewee, “ 100% mansauce”; a universe of testosterone-fuelled conflict with little or no room for the emotional complexities or morally grey areas that characterise everyday life. As ‘Dean’ put it; Generally the readers of Warhammer 40k fiction are male, and looking for scenes of gory action or fast-paced espionage and intricately-detailed combat. They want hard, scarred veteran sergeants instead of mushy-feely characters who want ‘relationships’ . . . The universe that Games Workshop and the Black Library brings us is a dark one, and the fans of it want to keep it that way. In contrast, then, to female fans engaging with ‘masculine’ popular cultural texts, male W40K fans do not have to ‘transform’ the canon in order to make it address their concerns and fit their interests. As Henry Jenkins (1992), Camille Bacon-Smith (1992) and Sheenagh Pugh (2005) among others have argued, when female fans approach media texts, such as science fiction TV shows, they are invariably faced with ‘masculine’ texts; texts that are largely written by and intended for males. In order to fully enjoy them, to quote Jenkins (2006:44), women (as well as other minority groups) thus have to either “perform a kind of intellectual transvestism—identifying with male characters in opposition to their ow