Fiction Matters*
May. 8th, 2010 12:55 pmFull disclosure: I am a reader of fan-fiction, an occasional writer and have aspirations to be a critical aca-fen.
Now, go forth and read what I have to say about All Of This.
(Screenshot of all three posts and the PS). h/t
ciaan
The reason I went online all those years ago, more than a decade for sure, was because I was looking for people like me.
What do I mean, people like me?
Fans of the teevee show Buffy the Vampire Slayer. What I found was a sapling of what would be a giant red-wood tree of creativity, community and fun.
I wrote Buffy fanfic before I knew what fanfic was. Blatant self-inserts that I and my BFF at the time, who is also a Buffy fan, put in so that we could talk directly to the characters.
Her character was a manifestation of Energy who became human in search for love (i.e. Dawn).
My character was a vampire woman who was seriously into S/M (something else I had no idea existed at the time, I was sure I was inventing something) and enjoyed tormenting the male vampires and seducing young high school girls (i.e. Vamp Willow, also Faith sans the Vampire part, of course).
When both these characters did in fact actually manifest on the screen all those years later, when we were already in our late teens and little bit more aware of the world and all it's multitudes, we *squeed*. ( Lengthy )
Bottom line. You can dislike Fan-Fiction as much as you want. You can call it lazy, unoriginal, illegal (which is not the same as unethical!) or any other pejorative you can think of. That is your right, it is so easy not to read it.
Through fan-fic I discovered so much and so many comic books and more original fiction that I would probably have a much smaller book collection than I do. Three book shelves, stacked baby.
Don't tell me that fan-fiction is less meaningful that original-fiction.
Because it's wrong.
*Get the pun? Get it? :P
Now, go forth and read what I have to say about All Of This.
(Screenshot of all three posts and the PS). h/t
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
The reason I went online all those years ago, more than a decade for sure, was because I was looking for people like me.
What do I mean, people like me?
Fans of the teevee show Buffy the Vampire Slayer. What I found was a sapling of what would be a giant red-wood tree of creativity, community and fun.
I wrote Buffy fanfic before I knew what fanfic was. Blatant self-inserts that I and my BFF at the time, who is also a Buffy fan, put in so that we could talk directly to the characters.
Her character was a manifestation of Energy who became human in search for love (i.e. Dawn).
My character was a vampire woman who was seriously into S/M (something else I had no idea existed at the time, I was sure I was inventing something) and enjoyed tormenting the male vampires and seducing young high school girls (i.e. Vamp Willow, also Faith sans the Vampire part, of course).
When both these characters did in fact actually manifest on the screen all those years later, when we were already in our late teens and little bit more aware of the world and all it's multitudes, we *squeed*. ( Lengthy )
Bottom line. You can dislike Fan-Fiction as much as you want. You can call it lazy, unoriginal, illegal (which is not the same as unethical!) or any other pejorative you can think of. That is your right, it is so easy not to read it.
Through fan-fic I discovered so much and so many comic books and more original fiction that I would probably have a much smaller book collection than I do. Three book shelves, stacked baby.
Don't tell me that fan-fiction is less meaningful that original-fiction.
Because it's wrong.
*Get the pun? Get it? :P