The world is watching: An analysis of the professional wrestling fandom in Bangladesh
Abstract
This thesis explored the professional wrestling fandom in Bangladesh to locate class divisions
within the fandom that give birth to different subsets of fans known as smarks and marks. These
fans and their experiences are shaped by their class and cultural capital, and they view wrestling
in fundamentally different ways. Furthermore, in the current mediascape, characterized by
convergence culture, the Bangladeshi middle-class fans gain access to wrestling fan spaces
online, as well as access to specific wrestling discourses which further shapes how they engage
with the wrestling industry. While access to these spaces has caused even greater fan divisions
based on class, it has also allowed middle-class fans to become co-producers of official
wrestling texts through constant engagement, negotiations, rejections, and alterations of
official texts.