Posts tagged fanfiction.

me trying to read fanfiction

blood-and-confetti:

conversationparade:

‘she tripped, but a pair of strong arms grabbed hold of her from behind before she hit the floor’

‘…she tilted her head back to look into his eyes, enjoying the feel of his warm arms wrapped around her torso’

‘…her hands intertwined behind his neck as their lips met’

‘…she wrapped her legs around his waist as

WEIRD POSITIONING IS ALWAYS HAPPENING IN FICS AND ROLEPLAYS.

IT’S FRIGHTENING.

(via merewetherdreams)

I think that all writing is useful for honing writing skills. I think you get better as a writer by writing, and whether that means that you’re writing a singularly deep and moving novel about the pain or pleasure of modern existence or you’re writing Smeagol-Gollum slash you’re still putting one damn word after another and learning as a writer.

(I just made that up. I imagine it would go something like: “Oh, the preciouss, we takes it our handssses and we rubs it and touchess it, gollum….no, Smeagol musst not touch the preciousss, the master said only he can touch the precioussss…. bad masster, he doess not know the precious like we does, no, gollum, and we wants it, we wants it hard in our handses, yesss…” etc etc)

Neil Gaiman on fanfiction (via wibblywobblyotp)

BECAUSE THIS.

(via mycroftsmindtardis)

Neil Gaiman. Just wrote Smeagol/Gollum slash. Your argument is invalid.

(via roane72)

(via fandomslut)

I found a copy of the Twilight AU that became 50 Shades of Grey. ›

  • It’s called Master of the Universe.
  • It was originally published on Fanfiction.net (aka where fanfiction goes to die).
  • E.L. James’ pen name was Snowqueens Icedragon because of course it was.
  • Snowqueens Icedragon does not use quotation marks. 
  • She does, however, make up expressions like “my very small inner goddess sways in a gentle victorious samba” and “I can almost hear his sphinx-like smile through the phone.”
  • They spend more time filling out sex-related paperwork than they do actually having sex.
  • This is my reaction to all of the sex scenes:
  • Because the human body doesn’t work like that
  • This is my reaction to everything else:
  • Because the english language doesn’t work like that.

1 month ago on 04/26/12 at 05:15pm

Kevin Federline's Aunt Writes Britney Spears/K-Fed Fanfic Erotic Novel | MTV ›

1 month ago on 04/23/12 at 07:56pm

I adore the way fan fiction writers engage with and critique source texts, but manipulating them and breaking their rules. Some of it is straight-up homage, but a lot of [fan fiction] is really aggressive towards the source text. One tends to think of it as written by total fanboys and fangirls as a kind of worshipful act, but a lot of times you’ll read these stories and it’ll be like ‘What if Star Trek had an openly gay character on the bridge?’ And of course the point is that they don’t, and they wouldn’t, because they don’t have the balls, or they are beholden to their advertisers, or whatever. There’s a powerful critique, almost punk-like anger, being expressed there—which I find fascinating and interesting and cool.

Lev Grossman (via theadventuresofcargline)

(via nom-chompsky)

I don’t think you understand how much I think about gay sex

i’m pretty sure i think about gay sex more than you rick

get out rick you will not win this battle

you cannot even begin to comprehend how much I think about gay sex

#i’m mostly just laughing that rick santorum apparently just admitted to thinking about gay sex all the time #do you read slash fanfic and fap angrily at the boner you hate yourself for getting rick #it’s okay rick #your slash ships are valid #don’t hate yourself for finding them sexy

Next time Rick Santorum does one of those Q&A thingies, someone needs to stand up and explain slash fanfiction to him. I think it might make his head explode. 

(via homoerotics)

Fan Fiction and Why it Matters

findingsherlock:

FS says: Fan fiction is one of those guilty pleasures of fandom that people pretend not to know about, or read, much less write. But its been done for ages from Hellenistic Greek Tragedy to the first of the Sherlock Holmes pastiches (did you know that Mark Twain wrote one?) to the latest BBC Sherlock crack-fic. 

The quote below suggests that, fanfic is just a legal category, not a creative one, which I buy as a reminder of the actual artistic value of fanfic, but I would argue isn’t that helpful to us communication and media theorists who really study fan culture.

Because in essence, fanfic functions theoretically differently than “regular” fiction, and here is why:

1. First the challenge is greater in some ways because the writer must stay in character since their audience consists of experts of those characters. 

2. The distribution of fanfic is different. The internet has increased the access of fanfic writers, many who have never been officially published, to an audience directly.

3. There is also an increase in actual interaction with readers, both through positive and negative commentary, and through fan creations like art and additional fanfic inspired by the stories

4. Because there is no actual profit involved, the writer can directly address issues that would not be faced by market driven publishers. More LGBTQ stories, explicit sex, BDSM, trans* issues, consent, disability, and more, are addressed in fascinating ways that allow scholars to really use this fiction to analyze a broader range of actual cultural make-up than officially published material.

5. The tropes of fanfic are different, by far, than those used by officially sanctioned media, which marks it as a unique category of text.

I could go on, and I will (in other posts today) because this is what I find so fascinating about the history of the Sherlock fandom. And (this is the main thrust of my comments) this is why fanfic is of extreme value to the cultural historian or communication theorist. To ignore fanfic as “amateur” or as “silly” and deem it not worth studying is to critically miss both the natural thrust of the reader/writer relationship, but also to loose something that is a valuable resource.

Never let someone tell you that fanfic is silly or stupid or dorky or wrong. Fanfic is something that is an inherent part of who we are as natural storytellers, and something that reveals far more about our daily lives/thoughts/understanding/issues than “published” works do. 

I’ll be going on about this later today, but this, my dear fandom is why what we do everyday on here is vital.

saathi1013:

Storytelling is basic to our species. It’s one of the ways we parse our experience of the universe. Whatever moves us or matters to us will show up in the stories we tell, whether or not we have a socially approved outlet for those stories. It might surprise you to find out how many writers have works of personal erotica tucked away in their unpublished-or-unpublishable manuscript trunks. There’s no good way to get those published, but they write them anyway, because they’re writers, and eroticism is an important part of our lives.

“Good fiction gets under our skin. It can change the way we see the world. But whatever its effect, it’s a significant experience. It would be a bizarre thing—unnatural, even—for writers to not engage with that experience. They always have. I could show you stuff centuries old—heck, some of it’s millennia old—that’s fanfic by any modern definition.

“Of course, it would have to be a modern definition. In a purely literary sense, fanfic doesn’t exist. There is only fiction. Fanfic is a legal category created by the modern system of trademarks and copyrights. Putting that label on a work of fiction says nothing about its quality, its creativity, or the intent of the writer who created it.

“The Pulitzer Prize for Fiction this year went to March, a novel by Geraldine Brooks, published by Viking. It’s a re-imagining of the life of the father of the four March girls in Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women. Can you see a particle of difference between that and a work of declared fanfiction? I can’t. I can only see two differences: first, Louisa May Alcott is out of copyright; and second, Louisa May Alcott, Geraldine Brooks, and Viking are dreadfully respectable.

“I’m just a tad cynical about authors who rage against fanfic. Their own work may be original to them, but even if their writing is so outre that it’s barely readable, they’ll still be using tropes and techniques and conventions they picked up from other writers. We have a system that counts some borrowings as legitimate, others as illegitimate. They stick with the legit sort, but they’re still writing out of and into the shared web of literature. They’re not so different as all that.

“Fanfic means someone cares about what you wrote.

“Personally, I’m convinced that the legends of the Holy Grail are fanfic about the Eucharist.

“This really is a basic impulse.”

— “Fanfic”: force of nature

by Patrick at Making Light

(Full Article at Making Light)

(via homoerotics)

All things must pass, and my stone was no exception. It left fairly painlessly, we headed back home to Los Angeles, and for a few years my kidneys dutifully sorted waste products from my blood without incident.

Then, in 2006…

Denny Crane was bent over Candice Bergen’s desk, in a swirling maelstrom of physical agony.

(NOTE: This is not a passage from some sort of depraved Boston Legal fan fiction one would find on the Internet. Characters I’ve played, for some reason or another, always wind up in the most licentious fantasies of fan fiction authors. For years now, Kirk and Spock have heated up the pages of the fan fiction subgenre as slash fiction, which deals primarily in gay relationships. Neither of us is homosexual, but if I were to dabble, I would surely avoid any encounter with a creature famed for its Vulcan death grip.)

(ADDITIONAL NOTE: I have also been informed that there is more than one webpage out there dedicated to Denny Crane/Alan Shore slash fiction. It must have been all the cigar smoking we did. Either way, the fair-haired dazzlement that is James Spader is a bit more appealing than Spock. Sorry, Leonard.)

(FINAL NOTE: And it has come to my attention that some enterprising web scribes have also published T.J. Hooker slash fiction. I guess I had a way with a nightstick.)

(ADDENDUM TO FINAL NOTE: Please, slash fiction writers, don’t ever write any Twilight Zone “Nightmare at 20,000 Feet” stores. (I’d hate to picture myself making love to a gremlin.)

[…] What’s amazing is, it doesn’t matter how many times you say they’re not going to kiss, they’re not together, they love each other but that’s the point, it’s the single most imperishable friendship in the whole of English literature that’s the way it works, it’s totally unspoken that they love each other in a way that men can do but they’re not gay for each other. But it doesn’t matter how many times you say that, an entire forest of dirty fiction has arisen as a result. And long may it continue, I don’t know what it’s about… [laugh]
[…] I’m very aware of it [slash fiction]. God I’m aware of it because people come and talk about it everytime we do any kind of event but I supposed the history of it is going way back, I think it started with Kirk and Spock. Anything like that has a kind of slash element and it’s an interesting thing because you’re brought up on the idea that heterosexual men get off on the notion of lesbians but the flip side of it is just as powerful, particularly I think for girls of a certain age. The idea of two sexy men getting it on is a really powerful aphrodisiac.

Mark Gatiss in Gay Times.

Well, ok then.

(via marielikestodraw)

(via superwho-trekception)

After all, most fanfiction writers are not your average fans. Some are, but these are also the people who pick up on details that everyone else might miss. These are the people who clamor for just one more chapter of their favorite book, a sequel to that near perfect film, or clarification on that one scene the audience didn’t get to see on their favorite television show. These are the people who want more, and are willing to delve deeper. And they aren’t content to wait for someone else to do it for them.

6 months ago on 11/23/11 at 04:06pm

Happy Days fanfiction exists. Here are some of the plots:

  • “When Fonzi and the gang notices there are no toilets in the bathroom at Arnold’s, it’s only the first sign that all is not as it seems in their ‘Happy’ little world.” <— The genre for this is mystery/sci-fi, and not, as I had expected, humor. 
  • “Howard & Marion are having new neighbors in the neighborhood and they turn out to be a different race color.” <— The All In The Family crossover we’ve all been waiting for.
  • “After being called stupid by a college professor, Potsie finally goes off the deep end. Hostage situation and death involved.” <— I don’t remember who Potsie is as a character, but based on the various summaries I’ve read he’s been a country singer, a private investigator, and some sort of athlete.
  • “Roger’s looking long in the face, Dee’s feeling foxy, and Danny’s really in the doghouse! In this zany tale of magical mayhem, the Happy Days gang has been turned into animals!” <— Ahhhhhh! D:
  • “Richie and Fonzie discover their feelings for each other. Potsie is depressed.” <— Hahahahaha, poor Potsie, whoever you are. 
  • “A new greaser has just arrived in Milwaukee and already is having problems with The Fonz, yet he gets along just fine with everyone else. He is much different than Fonzie and he doesn’t fear him. Fonzie is starting to feel threatened by him.” <— I’d give you three guesses as to the title of this one, but if you didn’t guess ‘Rocco is Loco’ immediately, what the hell is wrong with you?

(What am I doing with my life that this is how I spent a Tuesday evening? I blame Jen)

Just in case you were wondering if Space Jam fan fiction exists ›

Fan fiction is what literature might look like if it were reinvented from scratch after a nuclear apocalypse by a band of brilliant pop-culture junkies trapped in a sealed bunker. They don’t do it for money. That’s not what it’s about. The writers write it and put it up online just for the satisfaction. They’re fans, but they’re not silent, couchbound consumers of media. The culture talks to them, and they talk back to the culture in its own language.

The Boy Who Lived Forever | Time Magazine

THIS! Can I reblog it over and over again?

(via trappedinamatchbox)

(via mrsvc)

time-lord-swag:

One example is that of Doctor Who writers Russell T Davies and Steven Moffat who wrote fan fiction about the time lord earlier in their careers.

One example is that of Doctor Who writers Russell T Davies and Steven Moffat who wrote fan fiction about the time lord earlier in their careers.

Doctor Who writers Russell T Davies and Steven Moffat wrote fan fiction earlier in their careers.

Obviously there’s nothing wrong with fanfiction qua fanfiction. I’m not into it myself, but I read serial killer profiles at 3 a.m. when I can’t sleep, so no judgment. But the communications scholar Henry Jenkins has an awfully neat way of looking at it: “Fan fiction is a way of the culture repairing the damage done in a system where contemporary myths are owned by corporations instead of by the folk.” I’m skeptical of the “free culture” ethos that informs this kind of argument, mostly because I have absolutely no idea who this “folk” is or, concurrently, in what other time “myths” were “owned” by said population. And I’m also (and probably more importantly) unclear on the precise causal connection between folk-ownership and the production of really good art. Whatever, it’s good that people are writing; it’s good that people are reading. And it’s certainly plausible that a hundred thousand people typing away on the Internet will eventually produce a better “Supernatural” story arc than the writers are capable of doing.