dreamer_easy: (guv luv)
Via [livejournal.com profile] qthewetsprocket - a Life on Mars fanfic of pure brilliance: Just a Slightly More Dramatic Note. Even if you're not a fan of the show, give it a look, it's dead clever and funny. :)
dreamer_easy: (torchwood ot3)
SPOILERS: Torchwood: Children of Earth

Random links and thinkage. Simply disgusting quantities of shipping. YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED.

Did I mention there were SPOILERS? )

Mary Sue

Feb. 5th, 2009 11:22 am
dreamer_easy: (WRITING bunny)
"If members reserved their criticism of female characters for those who fit the Mary Sue stereotype, I would have expected to see many female characters develop in the fan fiction with the support of the community. In fact, Johana Cantor's challenge posed in 1980, 'Why is it that in a group that is probably 90% female, we have so few stories about believeable, competent, and identifiable-with women?' remains substantially unmet. The term Mary Sue seems to expand to encompass the characters women write to overcome that onus... participants at a panel discussion in January of 1990 noted with growing dismay that any female character created within the community is damned with the term Mary Sue.

"At Clippercon in 1987, a panel of women who do not write female characters in their stories described similar experiences as the reason they write only about the male characters that appear in the source products themselves:
-[... [e]very time I've tried to put a woman in any story I've ever written, everyone immediately says, this is a Mary Sue.
- The automatic reaction you are going to get is 'that's a Mary Sue'.
In her analysis, Johanna Cantor suggests an explanation...
...Could it be also that we are afraid, as women, to put into our creations that touch of humanity for which read touch of self, that might make them a little too real?... We're not going to get rid of the term Mary Sue... But we can be prepared to turn a resolutely deaf ear, as we work on what we want to work on."
- Camille Bacon-Smith, Enterprising women: television fandom and the creation of popular myth (University of Philadelphia Press, 1992), pp 110-111.
dreamer_easy: (WRITING bunny)
Writing well about cultures not one's own generally requires a lot of homework. A professional writer, or hopeful professional, may be able to invest the necessary time and effort. But is this a stumbling block for fan fiction? Some fanfic writers lavish care on their work, but on the whole, fanfic is written fairly rapidly and without immense effort (gods know mine is). Mind you, plenty of hopeful writers don't want to spend the time and effort either, and plenty of professionals try and fall on their faces; I just wondered if fanfic might be particularly susceptible to dodgy characterisations of the Other because of its comparatively quick-and-dirty nature.
dreamer_easy: (tardis)
Comment screening is now switched on - apologies for the screwup!

[Poll #1322079]
dreamer_easy: (Default)
"A writer, either professional or amateur, must realize that she... is not omnipotent. She cannot force her characters to do as she pleases... The writer must have respect for her characters or those created by others that she is using, and have a full working knowledge of each before committing her words to paper."
- Kendra Hunter, "Characterization Rape", 1977

Ha ha ahahahaha aha ha no.

What the lady meant - writing three years after the fanzine publication of the first K/S story - is that one oughtn't to write slash 'cos it's OOC. Fine, whatever, but whence the idea that the writer can't make their characters do whatever they like, and that they already have to have their character sheets rolled up before they start typing?! I tell you, when hopeful writers begin to realise the complete power they have over their stories - that they're not recounting, they're creating - they make a big leap towards their goal of publication.
dreamer_easy: (tardis)
Third and final installment of [livejournal.com profile] drox's fic avec le Eighth Doctor, Benny, and Fitz. Also available! Part one and part two.

Here be bees )
dreamer_easy: (Default)
A thought-provoking rant worth the attention of my fellow fandom feminists: A Short Treatise On Why, Maybe, Women Writing Fanfic Prefer To Write Male Characters. [Sadly, this is now flocked due to wank.]

I've been reading a lot of XKCD. Here's what the Doctor is probably like in bed.

Walking to Babylon passes the Bechdel Test. Sweet!

Inexplicably, Triple J is playing You Make Me Feel Like Dancin'. Sweeeeeet!
dreamer_easy: (tardis)
Part two of [livejournal.com profile] drox's fanfic! Part one is here.

Honey honey )
dreamer_easy: (WRITING bunny)
The grinding of gears on the "How to Write Better Fan Fic" panel at Chi-TARDIS has an obvious source: the differences between professional writing and amateur writing.

The first hurdle in discussing those differences is the connotations of "professional" and "amateur". If you bristled just at the sight of those words, you know exactly what I mean. To get over the hurdle, we need to borrow a page from academia, and forget about trying to define what kinds of writing are somehow valid or important or good while others aren't.

Professional writing, then, is any writing done with the intention of getting paid for it. (And presumably published, although it's not unusual to be paid for writing that never actually makes it into print.) It's easy to determine if a piece of professional writing is successful: the writer is paid for it.

Amateur writing is writing done without the intention of getting paid for it. By this definition, fan fiction is a kind of amateur writing. It's much harder to determine whether a piece of amateur writing is successful. Personal satisfaction, peer acclaim - there are numerous possible criteria.

(These definitions obviously aren't perfect, but they'll do for the purposes of this posting. Keep in mind that "professional" and "amateur" here refer only to the intention of the writer, not to the status or quality of the work.)

Because the two kinds of writing have different goals, professional writers and amateur writers need to use different methods in order to succeed.

And this is where the confusion stems from. In the Fan Fic panel, I started to go on (and on, and on) about the relative unimportance of spelling, grammar, and punctuation. Now, this is good advice if your goal is publication. I suspect every professional goes through a phase where they worry way too much about the wrong stuff, the stuff that's relatively easy to see. But if you're gonna get a rejection slip, it's not gonna be because you didn't use an Oxford comma. There are a world of technical things that can go wrong with stories which have nothing to do with whether you stapled your ms or misspelled "Arcturus" throughout.

Crucially, though, it's not such good advice if your goal is not to take the money while someone else does the publishing. Publishers have a staff whose job it is to polish up your rough work, from the editor who works with you on major changes at all stages of the writing, to the copy editor who proofreads the resulting ms before it goes off to the printers (or goes up on the Web page). Amateur writers don't have the luxury of a team whose job it is to make them look good; they have to attend to that final polish themselves (perhaps with the help of a beta). So for the fanficcer, spelling, grammar, and punctuation take on more importance than they do for the pro.

That said, it's still possible for an fanficcer to overestimate their importance. There's little point in proofreading a first draft; save that polish for the final draft. If someone's story is boring as rocks, don't waste time on Britpicking, suggest some ways they can introduce conflict.

On the panel, we never did manage to get around to the topic of how to write better fan fiction. I was trying to give advice on how to get published, which actually isn't much use. The panellists, I think, needed to work out where the techniques of pro and amateur fiction overlap, and where they're distinct. A few examples did pop up: both fanfic and pro fic need good pacing; the fanficcer needs to worry about eagle-eyed readers swooping on small errors (perhaps, in this area, fanfic is more like technical writing or non-fiction writing than like pro fic?). What are the pleasures that fanfic writers derive from their work, what are the pleasures their readers want and expect, and how do these compare to pro fiction? Perhaps the next panel could have pro writers and fanfic writers each describing how they have improved their own work, then looking for the similarities and differences between the two approaches. I think that'd be fascinating. Certainly less fraught. :)

A postscriptum: a couple of panellists were certain there were legal precedents involving fanfic - can someone point me to those cases?

ETA: Something I meant to add about not proofreading first drafts - not only is this likely to be a waste of time, but it can be a positive danger. If you're really determined to get the best out of the story, you may find yourself having to cut out great swathes of text, or rip the whole thing up and start again - just moving the words about a bit may not be enough to solve major structural problems. Mind you, few of us have the time and energy to put fanfic through draft after draft in this way, whereas a scribbler hoping to escape the slush pile may have no other choice.
dreamer_easy: (Default)
Chicago TARDIS is utterly splendid - efficiently run and a ton of fun - and the organisers are taking excellent care of us. Laughing with other fans is the cure to that blinkered view of fandom that the Intersplat gives you: it's not all about bile and repetition, after all. The slash and sex panels were full of fresh ideas, and there was further thought provokage at the novels retrospective (plus Paul and Gary being hilarious and witty as usual) and the "look back at the RTD era" thing (Simon Guerrier makes me lol so much). Only thing that's gone off the rails a bit so far was "how to write better fanfic", which I fear was consumed by me ranting about the unimportance of punctuation. Next year I think we ought to do it as a jelly-wrestling contest.

It's snowing a bit.

ETA: I made Lars Pearson literally fall on the floor laughing by doing an impression of the Master shagging the Doctor with the help of the chair I was sitting in. Result!

ETA 2020: I was literally out of mind at this convention: hypomanic, agitated, irritable, and generally out of control. It's one of my great regrets.
dreamer_easy: (tardis)
First installment of [livejournal.com profile] drox's fic. It carries on from the end of [livejournal.com profile] hexacontium's fic, which is here. (See what I did there? :)

Eighth Doctor, Fitz, and Benny )
dreamer_easy: (tardis)
At last, the final part of [livejournal.com profile] outsdr's fic. Part one here, part two here. Set after the end of S4, so beware SPOILERS.

Part the Third... )
dreamer_easy: (tardis)
Second part of [livejournal.com profile] outsdr's fic request (part one here). The voice here was a bitch to get. Thank goodness for Doctor Who Transcripts 2005+! Set after the end of S4, so beware SPOILERS.

Part the Second... )

NB

Sep. 27th, 2008 08:00 pm
dreamer_easy: (WRITING bunny)
I'm mindful that I still owe the rest of one charity fanfic, and all of another! I'm working on them, I promise. :)
dreamer_easy: (tardis)
[livejournal.com profile] outsdr set me quite a task with his fic request... here's the first part of three. Set after the end of S4, so beware SPOILERS.

Who could it be now... )
dreamer_easy: (tardis)
ETA again: GUYS, QUIT IT. [livejournal.com profile] outsdr already donated the $25. I'll write fic for the two other donations as well, but that's all.

ETA: Instantly snagged by [livejournal.com profile] outsdr! :-)

Amnesty wants $25 from me to help Iraqi refugees. Donate all or part of that, email me the receipt (korman@spamcop.net), and I'll write fanfic to your specifications (including porn, but no rape pls) at a rate of $1 for 100 words. I'll post the fic here. You may remain anonymous if you wish. First come first served. AI have no idea I'm doing this.

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