Inara: So, explain to me again why Zoe wasn't in the dress? Mal: Tactics, woman. Needed her in the back. 'Sides, those soft cotton dresses feel kinda nice. It's the whole... air-flow.

'Our Mrs. Reynolds'


Fan Fiction II: Great story! Where's the sequel?

This thread is for fanfic recs, links, and discussion, but not for actual posting of fanfic.


Consuela - Jan 17, 2008 7:45:07 pm PST #5057 of 10436
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

I suspect Nutty is right. And also? Such het is still around, I guess, because I keep seeing people say, with straight faces fonts, "I stay away from het with OFCs because of the Mary Sue issue." And I go, buh?

I've seen damn little SPN het, fr'instance, that actually uses a character you could call a Mary Sue.

Of course today I saw a couple of anti-slash gen writers (absolutely anti-slash, not just gen-preferring) boggling at the concept that there could be some latent misogyny in slash circles. Not just boggling, mocking the very idea.

I did not, in fact, come down on them like the wrath of Andrea Dworkin. Tempted though I was.

So... yeah. Old-school ideas, still quite rampant.


P.M. Marc - Jan 17, 2008 8:04:37 pm PST #5058 of 10436
So come, my friends, be not afraid/We are so lightly here/It is in love that we are made; In love we disappear

I suspect Nutty is right. And also? Such het is still around, I guess, because I keep seeing people say, with straight faces fonts, "I stay away from het with OFCs because of the Mary Sue issue." And I go, buh?

So frustrating!

Of course today I saw a couple of anti-slash gen writers (absolutely anti-slash, not just gen-preferring) boggling at the concept that there could be some latent misogyny in slash circles. Not just boggling, mocking the very idea.

What are you gonna do? There are strands of misogyny in some slash circles (internalized, and often unconscious), hints of homophobia in some gen and het circles (again, often unconscious), and so on and so forth. It's that damned made of people problem.

Somehow, today was the day for me to click on links, blink, and go, "okay, so could you tell me what assumptions you haven't yet checked at the door again?"


Nutty - Jan 18, 2008 4:39:24 am PST #5059 of 10436
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

I've seen damn little SPN het, fr'instance, that actually uses a character you could call a Mary Sue.

Most of the Supernatural het I've seen could just as easily have taken place with a headless female body. The characterization of the female partner, if she be not canonical, is often the very last priority.

Of course today I saw a couple of anti-slash gen writers (absolutely anti-slash, not just gen-preferring) boggling at the concept that there could be some latent misogyny in slash circles. Not just boggling, mocking the very idea.

OMG I saw that too, and I rolled my eyes so hard. I couldn't even formulate a response that would have opened their eyes, so I just filed the participants onto the Stupid List, and closed the window.

I think they're more from the 80s/90s era, and such slashterpieces as A Fish Called Krycek.

Actually, now that you point that out, I can theorize a little. If they molded their slash goggles in that era, then it's entirely possible that heavy exposure to the het OTP KGB made them so violently allergic that they've been overreacting to het ever since. I certainly know that at that time, in that fandom, slash could occasionally be the antidote for the flavor of extreme domestic normativity that infected segments of het. (Unlike most fandoms since, XF's huge audience included huge numbers of people who never had, and never would again, be in fandom -- and those people, in a mass, could be really overwhelming and stiflingly heteronormative, gender-normative, etc.)

But, like, been there, read that (wrote that), ate the t-shirt, still like girl parts.

Your therapy process, let me show you it.


Dana - Jan 18, 2008 4:40:09 am PST #5060 of 10436
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

(Unlike most fandoms since, XF's huge audience included huge numbers of people who never had, and never would again, be in fandom -- and those people, in a mass, could be really overwhelming and stiflingly heteronormative, gender-normative, etc.)

t cough Nikita fandom.


Nutty - Jan 18, 2008 4:42:06 am PST #5061 of 10436
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

I think XF qualifies as the Microsoft of fandoms. Except in speed terms; by the time I was getting into active writing (season 5), the majority of the slashers were already on their way out the door and into that awful Sentinel show.

(Why??)


shrift - Jan 18, 2008 4:49:25 am PST #5062 of 10436
"You can't put a price on the joy of not giving a shit." -Zenkitty

Because Sentinel was really, really ridiculously gay?


Dana - Jan 18, 2008 4:50:10 am PST #5063 of 10436
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

Because people have hair and muscles fetishes?


Nutty - Jan 18, 2008 4:59:22 am PST #5064 of 10436
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

Because, apparently, any two warm bodies would do, and those were the only two warm bodies. (Except one woman I knew who was doing Jack/Daniel, back when SG1 was still on Showtime, and I was like, "Wait, you can slash anybody ? Even if they aren't eyefucking alla time in the text?" It was a landmark discovery for me.)

Yay for eleventy zillion more cable channels. Improving the chances of slashed texts that don't suck by a million percent!


Dana - Jan 18, 2008 5:08:01 am PST #5065 of 10436
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

Because, apparently, any two warm bodies would do, and those were the only two warm bodies.

Well, no. It's a buddy show, it's got your classic pairing of action man/brainy man, and the two characters were ridiculously close, and got more so as the show went on. Once your spirit animals merge, where else is there to go?


Nutty - Jan 18, 2008 5:25:13 am PST #5066 of 10436
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

The script room, clearly!