Stop means no. And no means no. So . . . stop.

Xander ,'Conversations with Dead People'


Fan Fiction: Writers, Readers, and Enablers  

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


Fay - Oct 13, 2002 10:13:50 am PDT #417 of 10000
"Fuck Western ideologically-motivated gender identification!" Sulu gasped, and came.

Had Tolkien had a computer, I feel sure he'd have had "A Elbereth Gilthoniel!" or a like Elvish verse as his start-up sound.

*g* Yep, most likely. Probably not so much the snippets of dialogue that led to porny thoughts of pervy hobbit fancying, though. (Although Sam'll kill him if he tries anything. And he's still not king...)

Sigh. The internet doesn't need any Moloch to make it a corrupter. It does a smashing job all on its own.


Theodosia - Oct 13, 2002 10:22:02 am PDT #418 of 10000
'we all walk this earth feeling we are frauds. The trick is to be grateful and hope the caper doesn't end any time soon"

It's interesting to think how some pre-computer era writers would have related to the Internet -- Tolkien did enjoy free-wheeling literary discussions. H.P. Lovecraft would have taken to newsgroup discussion like a fish to water. The Bronte sisters (and brother) did RPF as their juvenalia, including the Duke of Wellington....


Fay - Oct 13, 2002 10:24:56 am PDT #419 of 10000
"Fuck Western ideologically-motivated gender identification!" Sulu gasped, and came.

wrod.

The Bronte sisters (and brother) did RPF as their juvenalia, including the Duke of Wellington
Heck, all their shared world fantasy stuff was Internetalicious. They were totally fictastic.

And this afternoon I wept my way through most of Shadowlands, and was very struck by "we read to know we are not alone". I think Lewis might have liked the Internet too. Possibly. Or not. But certainly that whole touching-somebody-else's-thoughts thing that you have with this style of discourse (without the same layers that tend to interfere with face to face interaction) is a lot closer to the intimacy of the printed page.

t /pretentious.


Rebecca Lizard - Oct 13, 2002 12:28:30 pm PDT #420 of 10000
You sip / say it's your crazy / straw say it's you're crazy / as you bicycle your soul / with beauty in your basket

Wrod sandwich on that, Fay.

The only thing I'd like to graft from Windows to my Mac is the startup sound bit.

Ooh, I'd love to have this RPF discussion again, but I'm bone tired. Let me just say:

However, I still stand in the corner of "subversive is more interesting" and "media images include fantasies about the performer sold as publicity."

And I see this point; but I still think that there must be an invisible line drawn between Alyson Hannigan the marketed image (object) and Alyson Hannigan the person; and I would be comfortable reading fiction about Alyson Hannigan the object, except for the part where they have the same exact name. That's really the problem, for me. And they wear the same clothes, most of the time; and they wear the same makeup. Alyson Hannigan the object and Alyson Hannigan the person are so closely related that sometimes it is impossible to say when it's AHtO and AHtP-- when the text you're travestying is a marketed image belonging to AH, her publicist, and her stylist; or the text is a mind just like your own.

I mean, when I dress up and go to a reading, I'm a professionalized object. I'm aware of that, and I know it's necessary for my profession (any profession!), and I like it. I like the feeling that I'm being looked at and measured up and listened to, just like every other writer in the room. I even use a professional name (my baptised name, but not how I think of myself, internally; Hec knows an embarassing amount about my name/identity ideas....) to mark my professional-object self and her work.

But I don't want people writing fic about Lauren Rile Smith. She's my creation, just the way Catharine (a character from a story I wrote) is. And just as Catharine did and does, she grew out of parts of my mind, and she lives in me. But she lives in me much more closely than Catharine does. We have the same face. To the majority of people that I know, she's all they know of me-- they don't know me at all; they know her and she speaks for me to them. How would they even distinguish between writing fic about *me* me, inner me, and Lauren Rile Smith me?

Do you see what I mean? I say that there is a distinction between the person and the marketed persona, just as (as I read him) Hec does; but I draw the line before it. It's okay to write fic about Joss Whedon's creations. It's not okay to write fic about Joss Whedon's inner self; and it's not okay to write fic about Joss Whedon's public self.


Burrell - Oct 13, 2002 12:41:44 pm PDT #421 of 10000
Why did Darth Vader cross the road? To get to the Dark Side!

I use a simple rule: how would I feel if it were me? I wouldn't care if someone wrote fiction about a character I play, or even a character I wrote. Or rather it might be more accurate to say that I wouldn't feel as proprietary about a character. But it would bother me a great deal if someone wrote a work of fiction in which I became a character she created. So that is where my boundary is set.


Nutty - Oct 13, 2002 12:45:23 pm PDT #422 of 10000
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

... or, more briefly, who hasn't happened to know a famous person, and thereby become sort of protective of that person? I'm pretty parsimonious -- or, where parsimony is concerned, I err on the side of carefulness -- in my application of ethical rules; since I feel that way about a couple of people I went to school with, I feel that way about all famous people.

Of course, that wont' stop me from telling true stories about the famous people I went to school with. Heh heh heh.


§ ita § - Oct 13, 2002 1:16:14 pm PDT #423 of 10000
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I'm with Nutty. I can't bear the idea of someone writing stories about me, but more viscerally, I'm appalled by the idea of someone ficcing Leslie Hope. And, by extension, Benjamin Bratt gets the same protection.


Michele T. - Oct 13, 2002 2:56:07 pm PDT #424 of 10000
with a gleam in my eye, and an almost airtight alibi

I'm with Nutty too. And it's not only or always that I feel protective of these people -- it's that it's deeply squicky and even upsetting for me to hear someone talking about someone I've known like they were, well, an object. Something or someone not-real.

Rather than draw from my own annoyingly large repertoire of stories, I'll tell one that isn't mine. A friend of mine was friendly with John Kennedy Jr. and his wife. Not in any significant way -- they had one good friend in common, and they went to the same sports club, so they were "hi, how are you"-ers to one another. When Kennedy's plane went down, my friend was devastated -- for their mutual good friend, for the loss of two people who were part of her everyday scenery, and most of all by the psychic assault that the wall-to-wall coverage of their deaths constituted for people to whom Kennedy and the Bessettes were real people rather than media figures.

There's just way too much collateral damage for me ever to feel that real people fiction is OK. Historical fiction, where everyone involved with a personal stake in the people being fictionalized is dead? I'm OK with that. I'm even OK with contemporary stories that use real people as set dressing without pretending to show us their inner lives (some of David Foster Wallace's work, or Yahtzee's "Hoop Screams"). But there's a point at which I draw the line. Your fantasy about appearing on Jeopardy is one thing. Your fantasy of what Alex Trebek is really like is another.


Rebecca Lizard - Oct 13, 2002 3:01:56 pm PDT #425 of 10000
You sip / say it's your crazy / straw say it's you're crazy / as you bicycle your soul / with beauty in your basket

Historical fiction, where everyone involved with a personal stake in the people being fictionalized is dead? I'm OK with that.

Wrod, I'd say, because all that's left is the (an) object-self, the image that history recorded of them.


Susan W. - Oct 13, 2002 3:19:38 pm PDT #426 of 10000
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

What Burrell and Nutty said.

It's funny--I often daydream about what it would be like to meet various celebrities, but they're never sexual fantasies. It's all Michelle Kwan and Alexei Yagudin give me skating tips, or I get to talk writing with Joss while waiting for a plane. Stuff like that.