Metafandom

Sat, Apr. 8th, 2006, 10:50 pm

[personal profile] inalasahl: Saturday, April 8, 2006

General
[livejournal.com profile] fairestcat - Bulletproof Narrative Kinks - I've been thinking a lot recently about the themes that interest me the most in fanfic, the subjects and plots and character traits that suck me in again and again and again. I call these my bulletproof narrative kinks.

[livejournal.com profile] fairestcat - In which I prove that I am a kinky bitch and I seem to have misplaced my shame - Thinking about my narrative kinks of course got me thinking about my other kinks. The smutty kind. The scenarios or concepts or acts that are virtually guaranteed to turn me on in fic. And I thought, what the hell, lets see if anyone wants to talk about those too.

[livejournal.com profile] ithiliana - Fandom is *not* like high school! - Have now read the 458,239,349,235th LJ post claiming that fandom is just like high school. Enough is enough.

[livejournal.com profile] thirdblindmouse - Where did you put the slash goggles, dear? - So how do you explain when you can see some sort of tension going on that elsewhere you would attribute to budding feelings, but you just can't in this instance?

[livejournal.com profile] anidada - Is it Jiles or Genny? I can't decide. - Correct me if I'm wrong, but it appears that the creation of shorthands in BtVS/AtS fandom began with Spike-based ships -- Spuffy, Spander, Spangel, Spillow, etc. -- which is not surprising since Spike gets so much fic action. However, some pairing shorthands work. Others... maybe not so much.

[livejournal.com profile] hth_the_first - on emo porn - Mary and I have started using this term in conversation a lot, and because I'm really off the beaten path of metafandom stuff lately, I'm not sure how widespread the phrase is. Anyway, I really like it, because it has a lot of relevance to slash and fanfic, but also to gen and canon, and to me it seems to describe...at least part of what people always talk about as "the slash aesthetic."

[livejournal.com profile] ceteramisto - Food and Fandom, a Metaphor - At work when I've been feeling bored, I've been pondering my likes and dislikes and why I feel guilty about having pref. I know I shouldn't feel guilty about having preferences, so why should I feel guilty. It wasn't until I compared my feelings about fandom to my feelings about food in an extremely convoluted metaphor that I figured it out.

[livejournal.com profile] necromantic_fic in [livejournal.com profile] fanficrants - Underage Sexuality - When people rant here about how characters, say in Naruto, should not be having sex because they are thirteen and the people who write that must be sick pedophillic freaks it just kind of hurts. I suppose it makes you a morally righteous person to say that, but when you do it's a personal attack on that almost 20 percent of 12–14 year olds in America.

[livejournal.com profile] harukami - Untitled - "BNFs" aren't so much a feature of tiny fandoms in the same way they are in big ones -- but they still exist. I speak of the people who write the majority of the fic in a tiny fandom, or who do the best art, or who try to organize comms, or who translate things, or who are generous and sharing (note, sadly, that this last isn't actually a prerequesite of the first, but being a generous, helpful fan CAN get the recognition anyway). It doesn't have all the connotation of "BNF", but they're people who stand out more because of their actions within the fandom, even while people look around and recognize each other's names.

[livejournal.com profile] alchemia - Untitled - I find this depressing. I find it depressing because on one level, its homophobic, and hate for others does not make the world a better place, no matter how much attempt is made to sugar-coat it with that crap about still loving the person. On another level, that one where all you meta folk talk about slash isn't gay, it's really being about women's sexuality, on thata level, I think it's misogynist.

Fandom-Specific
[livejournal.com profile] nakeisha - The two sides of canon - Interpretative canon has a basis, a grounding in factual canon, as it is what we see and hear. But it isn't fact, because it's all down to each individual. And often how we view the characters and their relationship has an affect on how we interpret the scenes. [NCIS]

[livejournal.com profile] saganamidreams - Love Me Tender, Love Me True...or, you know, don't. - Being neither a shipper nor an anti-shipper, I keep getting stuck on this point: when did love become not-gen? When did it become always and only shippy? As I said once before somewhere else, almost everything I write is - at its core - about love. But most of it's not shippy. [Doctor Who]

[livejournal.com profile] ataniell93 - Response to [livejournal.com profile] midnitemaraud_r : why we love to hate the girls in HBP. - I don't think fans who criticise the behaviour of Hermione, Tonks, Merope Gaunt, or Ginny in HBP are being especially hard on women. I think, actually, that the anger people feel about the way Hermione, especially, was portrayed is a sign that people actually are starting to expect the same standards of behaviour from women and girls that they do from men and boys.

[livejournal.com profile] ataniell93 - More discussion with [livejournal.com profile] midnitemaraud_r - I will admit to having expectations, though I'm confused by the people who say that like it's a bad thing, because I really don't understand how you could read more than two books of a series and not have expectations. Yes, I had expectations when I picked up Book Six. I have expectations whenever I pick up a CJ Cherryh book in the Foreigner series or the Chanur series. I have expectations when I pick up a Horatio Hornblower or Miles Vorkosigan book. Or a Dark Tower book. Wouldn't it be really weird if I didn't? [Harry Potter]

On Creating and Criticism
[livejournal.com profile] tkp - Let's talk about word choice. - Every once in a while I'll be reading a fic and I'll stumble onto a word--a word that isn't necessarily uncommon, but a word that makes me say, " Oh. I just know Author had her thesaurus out for this one," and not in a "what a way to flex your vocab" way, but in a "that was completely unnecessary; she should've used a simpler word" way. That is, the word, which wouldn't've caused me to bat an eyelash in a more sophisticated piece, draws attention like a sore thumb because the rest of the piece (conceptually, structurally, grammatically, whatever) doesn't quite...live up to the occasional bursts of elevated vocabulary.

Polls, Questions, Other
[livejournal.com profile] aspacer - BDSM/Kink Readership, Writership, Experience Poll - These are questions that intrigue me.

[livejournal.com profile] silentauror - Untitled - I've thought a lot about the term "fluff" in the past year or so, and I've been meaning to post a poll about this for some time now.

Sun, Apr. 9th, 2006, 11:33 am
[identity profile] telesilla.livejournal.com

HP meta -- http://telesilla.livejournal.com/414874.html