Who among us can ignore the allure of really funny math puns?

Willow ,'Empty Places'


Fan Fiction: Writers, Readers, and Enablers  

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


§ ita § - Oct 14, 2002 1:05:25 pm PDT #495 of 10000
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I don't think the line is drawn before the writer, but in front of the reader.

Which falls pretty much in line with most opinions here, right? With the understanding that the writers here are free to place their line wherever they want ...

I'd be surprised if you thought anything was okay "for art". I certainly don't. I just can't (and won't) do much about it.


Nutty - Oct 14, 2002 1:07:01 pm PDT #496 of 10000
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

I would say, legal action not yet forthcoming, and the average Joe's reaction to RPF-as-representative-of-fanfic as yet unmeasureable, the line is drawn before the writer only inasmuch as the writer knows in advance that many people disapprove.

So, you know, the RPF writer takes what she wants, and pays for it. In this case, the price of the RPF hobby is other people potentially bitching about your hobby, and possibly calling it immoral, in public.


Burrell - Oct 14, 2002 1:09:40 pm PDT #497 of 10000
Why did Darth Vader cross the road? To get to the Dark Side!

I didn't argue that Joyce wrote RPF.

Okay, so it’s not RPF. Agreed.

then what of the instance of Ulysses (sorry Burrell)?

If it’s not RPF, then it’s not relevant to an argument on the ethical merits of RPF, is it?

That doesn't make the point moot, it tends to support my argument that the value of the literature culturally is far greater than the infringement on the individual at the time.

So your entire argument rests on the cultural value placed on the work of art? If so, then I think you need to consider the cultural value of the genre in question, not the cultural value of high modernist literature (which, if anything, is overvalued by certain sectors of the public). It seems only fair.

but I don't think the line is drawn before the writer, but in front of the reader.

meaning what? The reader is to be judged for his choice of reading matter, but the writer should never be judged for his choice of subject? I don’t see why we are free to judge the one but not the other. But I might be misunderstanding you. Do you just mean writers can write whatever they want, and the choice of whether or not to read is up to the reader? In that case, there is NO ethical line involved at all, neither for the reader or the writer, just a free choice.


Betsy HP - Oct 14, 2002 1:10:12 pm PDT #498 of 10000
If I only had a brain...

Now nobody cares about that issue. That doesn't make the point moot, it tends to support my argument that the value of the literature culturally is far greater than the infringement on the individual at the time.

Not really. It means that the hopes and feelings of people 100 years dead are generally not of much interest to those 100 years later. Look, Frost was a lousy father, and we don't much mind because, hey, good poetry, and we're not the kids in question. That doesn't mean that being a lousy father is okay. It means the poetry is alive and the victims are dead.

I disapprove of putting real, living people into fiction, no matter how many great writers do it. And when I read the great writers who do it, it is because they are great writers, not because I therefore approve.

Jane Austen uses "ain't." Which happened to be correct usage in her day. Somebody who uses "ain't" in a novel today, in a non-dialect context, will be laughed at, no matter how many times s/he says "But Jane Austen did it!" "But Joyce did it!" is no defense to "Writing about real people is cruel and creepy."

And I'll be damned if Joyce wrote fiction in which Sarah Bernhardt was fellating Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree, which is actually what we're talking about. It isn't just that real people are involved, it's that real people's sex lives are involved.


erikaj - Oct 14, 2002 1:41:29 pm PDT #499 of 10000
Always Anti-fascist!

yes. ick.(Not that is very intelligent coming after quotes and citations,) But still, I think it crosses a moral line to disseminate things like that. If you must, keep it for yourself.) YMMv, of course.


Fay - Oct 14, 2002 1:42:34 pm PDT #500 of 10000
"Fuck Western ideologically-motivated gender identification!" Sulu gasped, and came.

500?

...first ever number sluttage.

runs away again


DavidS - Oct 14, 2002 2:36:59 pm PDT #501 of 10000
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

If it’s not RPF, then it’s not relevant to an argument on the ethical merits of RPF, is it?

It is if we're arguing that using real people in fiction is something Writers Shouldn't Do.

So your entire argument rests on the cultural value placed on the work of art?

No, I'm using works of established literary merit to show why you can't simply say that using real people in fiction is wrong.

And I'll be damned if Joyce wrote fiction in which Sarah Bernhardt was fellating Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree.

That's not the point, I don't think. Any real person could object to a whole slew of things short of blowjobs. The real person ita objects to any writer representing her in their work even if she's saving baby kittens from Republican cat-skinners.


Betsy HP - Oct 14, 2002 2:39:12 pm PDT #502 of 10000
If I only had a brain...

But the precise thing I object to about Real Person Fic is that it's often Real Person Sex Fic. I should have cut to this issue several posts ago.

If people were writing "David Bowie takes me out to dinner and chit-chats" stories, I would be indifferent. It's the "Everybody in N!Sync gets off with each other and a raccoon" fiction that I find deeply offensive.

I find an enormous difference between "Sarah Michelle Gellar gets stuck in Buffyland and does okay as the Slayer" (which I read once, and was pleasant enough) and "Sarah Michelle Gellar Has A Three-Way".


Dana - Oct 14, 2002 2:39:40 pm PDT #503 of 10000
"I'm useless alone." // "We're all useless alone. It's a good thing you're not alone."

That's not the point, I don't think.

I understand how it's not the point of your point, but the point is that it is a point of a lot of RPF. I mean, I think it a very different thing to mention Sarah Michelle Gellar in a story (hey! it's that actress!) than it is to write a story in which she and James Marsters are fucking on top of the craft service table.

edit: Phenomenal cross-post.


Sophia Brooks - Oct 14, 2002 2:41:16 pm PDT #504 of 10000
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

I find an enormous difference between "Sarah Michelle Gellar gets stuck in Buffyland and does okay as the Slayer" (which I read once, and was pleasant enough) and "Sarah Michelle Gellar Has A Three-Way".

Because the second, to me, is painfully close to the "Sarah Michelle Gellar bobbing for COCK" spam that I am SURE that I think is wrong and offensive.