On Fanfiction

prettyarbitrary:

roachpatrol:

valnon:

shadesofmauve:

I was cruising through the net, following the cold trail of one of the periodic “Is or is not Fanfic the Ultimate Literary Evil?” arguments that crop up regularly, and I’m now bursting to make a point that I never see made by fic defenders.

We’re all familiar with the normal defenses of fic: it’s done out of love, it’s training, it’s for fun. Those are all good and valid defenses!

But they miss something. They damn with faint praise. Because the thing is, when you commit this particular Ultimate Literary Evil you’ve now told a story. And stories are powerful. The fact that it wasn’t in an original world or with original characters doesn’t necessarily make it less powerful to any given reader.

I would never have made this argument a few years ago. A few years ago I hadn’t received messages from people who were deeply touched by something I wrote in fanfic. So what if it’s only two or three or four people, and I used someone else’s world and characters? For those two or three or four people, I wrote something fucking important. You cannot tell me that isn’t a valid use of my time and expect me to feel chastened. I don’t buy it. I won’t feel ashamed. I will laugh when you call something that touches other people ‘literary masturbation.’ Apparently you’re not too up on your sex terminology.

Someone could argue that if I’d managed the same thing with original characters in an original world, it could’ve touched more people. They might be right! On the other hand, it might never have been accepted for publication, or found a market if self published, and more importantly I would never have written it because I didn’t realize I could write. The story wouldn’t have happened. Instead, thanks to fanfic being a thing, it did. And for two or three or four people it mattered. When we talk about defending fanfic, can we occasionally talk about that?

I once had an active serviceman who told me that my FF7 and FF8 fic helped get him through the war. That’ll humble you. People have told me my fanfic helped get them through long nights, through grief, through hard times. It was a solace to people who needed solace. And because it was fanfic, it was easier to reach the people who needed it. They knew those people already. That world was dear to them already. They were being comforted by friends, not strangers.

Stories are like swords. Even if you’ve borrowed the sword, even if you didn’t forge it yourself from ore and fire, it’s still your body and your skill that makes use of it. It can still draw blood, it can strike down things that attack you, it can still defend something you hold dear. Don’t get me wrong, a sword you’ve made yourself is powerful. You know it down to its very molecules, are intimate with its heft and its reach. It is part of your own arm. But that can make you hesitate to use it sometimes, if you’re afraid that swinging it too recklessly will notch the blade. Is it strong enough, you think. Will it stand this? I worked so hard to make it. A blade you snatched up because you needed a weapon in your hand is not prey to such fears. You will use it to beat against your foes until it either saves you or it shatters.

But whether you made that sword yourself or picked it up from someone who fell on the field, the fight you fight with it is always yours.

Literary critics who sneer at fanfic are so infuriatingly shortsighted, because they all totally ignore how their precious literature, as in individual stories that are created, disseminated, and protected as commercial products, are a totally modern industrial capitalist thing and honestly not how humans have ever done it before like a couple centuries ago. Plus like, who benefits most from literature? Same dudes who benefit most from capitalism: the people in power, the people with privilege. There’s a reason literary canon is composed of fucking white straight dudes who write about white straight dudes fucking. 

Fanfiction is a modern expression of the oral tradition—for the rest of us, by the rest of us, about the rest of us—and I think that’s fucking wonderful and speaks to a need that absolutely isn’t being met by the publishing industry. The need to come together as a close community, I think, and take the characters of our mythology and tell them getting drunk and married and tricked and left behind and sent to war and comforted and found again and learning the lessons that every generation learns over and over. It’s wonderful. I love it. I’m always going to love it. 

Some badass arguments for the next time somebody pooh-poohs on fanworks in your vicinity.

Moffat wank under the cut:

selections from ranting about moffat last night:

 i want moffat gone yesterday
: time of the doctor was a fucking shitstorm of an episode, matt deserved better than that and i cant’ fucking stand clara because they forgot to give her a personality. Also not incluing barrowman in 50th was a goddamn shame and a waste of an actor who loves the show
: …i get a little ranty about moffat

i mean, time of the doctor, just, fucking ball of shit where moffat tries to be clever and tie everything together and it doesn’t work at all

 he doesn’t pen every episode
: but a showrunner HAS to have a coherent vision
 there has to be an arc or a character doesn’t change and grow
: i mean, look at 10
 season 2 in love with rose, happy, exploring his new life, trying to put the time war behind him
season 3 – lost, ignorant of martha, mopey, finding the master and jack again and then losing everyone just when he thought maybe he could find a family again. Both Martha and Jack rejected him in the end for their own sanity and that was GOOD. For both of them
 Season 4 Donna, seeing the universe through her eyes, trying to not do to donna what he did to martha, trying so hard to be a better man…only to lose Donna too

 then the specials and the Time Lord Triumphant and going seriously master level crazy before in the end sacraficing his life to save one man who believed in him

eleven doesn’t have an arc. okay we have cracks, and silence, the lake..but those are exernal factors, not internal ones

sure with ten we had torchwood and saxon and things going missing, but it fit into ten’s growth as a character, not arcs for the sake of arcs, you know?

and thats ANOTHER THING
*adds another soapbox*
 WITHOUT TRUE DEATH CHARACTER DEATH IS CHEAP AND MEANINGLESS

i fuckign hate that they brought gallifrey back
 thats fucking bullshit that damages the entire new run
to me here’s the thing
 nine saw his world burn. And was responsible. The last one left. He was bitter and angry and yet found a erason to keep going in rose.
 ten kept that guilt, but tried to move past it, then the shit with the master. he died knowing he was it
 eleven of course is mess, but he still caries that same guilt. HE knew he was the one to push the button, so to speak
 and now magic? gallifrey isn’t dead?
bullfuckinshit

and i’m sorry, speaking not just as a barrowman fangirl, couldn’t you just as easliy had jack in the 50th?
 Jack HATES unit. he would NEVER just hand over his manipulator
to anyone
 he gave it to martha to escape the master, thats it

as i said last night. Doctor Who isn’t my Doctor Who anymore. I’m a lifetime whovian i know things change, but good goddamn i’m pisssed about things right nos

oodlyenough:

October 13 – Favourite Doctor Who-related YouTube video

Uh there’s a number of strong candidates for this one ranging from The Ballad of Russell and Julie to the Tenth Doctor musical  or My Life Would Suck Without You but I decided I’d post one other people haven’t seen, one which I love because it always manages to give me many emotions about my very favourite era of the show and pays attention to Rose, Martha, Donna and Ten in near-equal measure. I love everyone in this TARDIS.

image

I’d only seen the Ballad of Russell and Julie. These are awesome!