whynot: etc: oh deer (Default)
Las ([personal profile] whynot) wrote2009-12-18 05:16 am

and at some point i also have to finish my yuletide fic

So my anthropology final is going to be about fanfiction as a platform for the expression of subaltern rhetoric (specifically, pro-LGBT and pro-women rhetoric), and I'll be using Merlin and Narnia fandoms as case studies. Basically, my essay is about: YOU GUYS. I have a 4-page outline for 20-ish (15-ish?) pages and it's due on Tuesday omg.

It was such a trip making this outline. I was writing about The Last Battle, and my gut instinct was to warn for spoilers. Spoilers! Warning for spoilers in an academic essay: I WON'T DO IT, but it feels wrong not to anyway! I'm probably going to compile stats & figures from LJ comms, fic archives, and [livejournal.com profile] kinkme_merlin (OMG I'M GONNA TALK ABOUT KINKME_MERLIN IN AN ACADEMIC PAPER) to support my claim that, what, people are into slash. Maybe I'll even make a table of it and put it in the appendix?!? MAYBE I'LL MAKE PIE CHARTS D: D: (XD)

There are peer-reviewed journals and published books about this stuff, but this paper doesn't feel like a grad-level anthro final. It feels like a "what I did over my summer vacation" essay, or an especially self-indulgent LJ post.

I've some interview questions for you guys, 'cos it's not everyday that the subject of my paper topic is but a flist away! Answer one, some, or all; I'd be happy with whatever.


1) Activism within fandom: is it effective? What are examples? I'm talking about when fandom bands together and does something concrete-ish in terms of fund- and awareness-raising. Like, what was that thing not so long ago where ppl were like, "Donate money to this pro-LGBT cause and I'll produce a fanwork for you!"? Or what about the Strikethrough migration, what the hell was up with that? This question is asked in context of why we choose fantasy fiction as a valid battleground for identity politics.

2) Why DO you write fanfiction? What are the relationships between ficcer, fic, and canon to you? (I'm especially interested in the opinions of those who porn, because I do not tend to porn and feel like I'm missing out on a huge subsection of fandom because of it.)

3) How tangible is the fannish community? Do you chat with these people everyday? Do you email them often, or about non-fannish things? Do you meet them IRL? What is the value of your interactions with fellow fans?

4) Small fandom (e.g. Narnia) vs. large fandom (e.g. Merlin): do you have a preference? Why?

5) "Fanfiction is the act of taking something that doesn’t represent you and transforming it into something that does." Discuss.



Non-interviewy questions--

a) What is that article about Merlin when it was new, in which Colin and Bradley were surprised/chuffed that the show was so embraced by the gay community?
b) Do you guys have links to the Merlin producers/publicists blatantly shipping Bradley/Colin, even if just for the slash fans' benefit? Like, that time when Bradley was playing charity soccer and Julian Jones or wtfe was like yeah, Colin's gonna be there with a sponge and bucket to wipe him down.
c) Not for my essay, but: are Katie McGrath's eyes green or blue? THEY'RE GREEN DAMMIT, but I've seen a lot of blue in fics. (GREEN.)
ext_2135: narnia: home sweet home (soraki) (Default)

Re: hi, this is bedlam and your daily dose of sounding completely crazy (part, uh, 2/2)

[identity profile] bedlamsbard.livejournal.com 2009-12-29 07:06 am (UTC)(link)
I don't know if there's really a specific fandom food, I was just kind of vaguely thinking about when people come up with recipes that are inspired by some kind of food that a canon will mention. So I'm not sure how related that is; since it's not a group activity, it may not qualify as -- as fandom-related as, say, a fic or a wallpaper. (Then again, there are Harry Potter- and Battlestar Galactica- and Red Dwarf- and Bones- inspired knitting patterns, too, so -- I'm not sure how much that sort of thing qualifies as a fandom activity, rather than something that's purely done "by fans." Those are just the patterns I could think of off the top of my head, BTW, not to say that knitters who are fans don't do other fandoms.)

I have been looking back at the 2009 14 Valentines round-ups all afternoon and am fascinated. Not by the fic, since I'm not really reading at the moment, but by the icons and the music and the essays, and -- well, it's me, the recipes and the knitting.