veronica_rich (
veronica_rich) wrote2008-03-26 01:44 am
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The spammage continues
(I feel like this should become "Vacation: Day Five-01" or something)
Surely everybody and their pet iguana has likely seen the link to the blog entry by now from the woman who claims that writing and reading m/m slash is perpetuating male heirarchy and expectations, rather than being the subversive, non-mainstream thing we all thought it was when many of us got into it several years ago - before the mainstream actually had ever heard of "slash" or "fanfiction."
My take on slash is that I enjoy it as a form of romance in a way that I don't any longer enjoy the vast majority of "typical" m/f romance novels, by and large. When I buy a book, I buy something about science or history, or suspense and sci-fi, but rarely do I buy a categorical romance, though I did when I was much younger. I understand this sounds like a rather shallow reason for enjoying something that takes up several hours of my life each week, but it would be disingenuous for me to pretend otherwise.
And as much as I love reading and occasionally contributing my own meta on my preferred slash pairings, the fact is that I rarely give it the kind of internal examination we were required in college to give Chaucer, or the reasons behind the 19th century labor movement. I am capable of that level of dissertation - I just don't want to, with slash, or even fanfic, all that much. Perhaps this is why I grew so impatient with all the POTC meta-chatter following DMC - are we not allowed to have something we just enjoy, without having to defend why, so long as we're nice to our fellow fen and don't try to step on their toes? I mean, I asked someone at another post earlier to define radical feminism and explain its appeal over what he called "liberal/status quo feminism." And while he gave me a pretty good explanation, and it's something I would gladly see parts of applied to real-world changes ... the fact is, when you try to apply it to something you do alone in your off-hours to unwind, it just comes across as so much overblown horseshit. Am I alone? Or just exceedingly shallow, that I don't see "something" political in EVERYTHING that comes across my field of vision on a daily basis?
EDIT: Unless lesbian fanfic is being written with an eye toward reality (e.g., women who don't have Barbie-figures and long, flowing hair, who don't want a man in their bed or between them and their girlfriend, or WATCHING), how is it any different from what I have to put up with out of many men on a regular basis? The only difference between their lesbian fantasies and my m/m ones is that they can discuss theirs out in public and it's accepted as being part and parcel of being a hetero man ... but if I try to discuss the fact that I like to watch two hot men get it on for my benefit, I'm perverted and weird. So ... I'd love for this FEMINIST to tell me why I should spend MY time and effort perpetuating a MAN'S fantasy in written form.
Surely everybody and their pet iguana has likely seen the link to the blog entry by now from the woman who claims that writing and reading m/m slash is perpetuating male heirarchy and expectations, rather than being the subversive, non-mainstream thing we all thought it was when many of us got into it several years ago - before the mainstream actually had ever heard of "slash" or "fanfiction."
My take on slash is that I enjoy it as a form of romance in a way that I don't any longer enjoy the vast majority of "typical" m/f romance novels, by and large. When I buy a book, I buy something about science or history, or suspense and sci-fi, but rarely do I buy a categorical romance, though I did when I was much younger. I understand this sounds like a rather shallow reason for enjoying something that takes up several hours of my life each week, but it would be disingenuous for me to pretend otherwise.
And as much as I love reading and occasionally contributing my own meta on my preferred slash pairings, the fact is that I rarely give it the kind of internal examination we were required in college to give Chaucer, or the reasons behind the 19th century labor movement. I am capable of that level of dissertation - I just don't want to, with slash, or even fanfic, all that much. Perhaps this is why I grew so impatient with all the POTC meta-chatter following DMC - are we not allowed to have something we just enjoy, without having to defend why, so long as we're nice to our fellow fen and don't try to step on their toes? I mean, I asked someone at another post earlier to define radical feminism and explain its appeal over what he called "liberal/status quo feminism." And while he gave me a pretty good explanation, and it's something I would gladly see parts of applied to real-world changes ... the fact is, when you try to apply it to something you do alone in your off-hours to unwind, it just comes across as so much overblown horseshit. Am I alone? Or just exceedingly shallow, that I don't see "something" political in EVERYTHING that comes across my field of vision on a daily basis?
EDIT: Unless lesbian fanfic is being written with an eye toward reality (e.g., women who don't have Barbie-figures and long, flowing hair, who don't want a man in their bed or between them and their girlfriend, or WATCHING), how is it any different from what I have to put up with out of many men on a regular basis? The only difference between their lesbian fantasies and my m/m ones is that they can discuss theirs out in public and it's accepted as being part and parcel of being a hetero man ... but if I try to discuss the fact that I like to watch two hot men get it on for my benefit, I'm perverted and weird. So ... I'd love for this FEMINIST to tell me why I should spend MY time and effort perpetuating a MAN'S fantasy in written form.
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Your reason doesn't sound shallow at all, we're all here for the entertaining quality of fanfiction and in my world, it's not to be taken so very seriously. With the differences between peoples likes and dislikes, it would be impossible to live in even this kind of harmony that the communities I linger in, have.
I, for example, read and write slash and am quite particular about it, simply because that's the only kind of romantical literature I read, period. I've never appreciated the typical romance novels for the sole reason of them being absolutely unfathomable to me. I'm a terribly crude person, so I like to have my romances with a nip of austere and a splash of vehemence all peppered with the occasional wickedness and two characteristic and pretty men in a relationship tend to have that, so my literature of choice is rather obvious.
It's a pastime activity, a hobby, like you said; something to unwind with and it's shitloads of every kinds of fun.
Someone thinks that's twisted or peculiar, then, hey, by all means, there's no publicly announced thought-police as of yet :)
Dragging political and/or other 'real world' views and issues into something so completely leisurely just takes the breath away from it.
Of course it's fun, and yanks the carpet from under everything I just said, when someone writes a great snark toward something they feel strongly about in the form of a fic, but that happens so rarely that it's not really worth mentioning.
Oh, god I've done it again...sorry for ranting, carry on...
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See what you think and get back to me ...
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Sometimes I just want to say, "chill out, mate, just enjoy it" This is my unwinding time and I enjoy its shallowness :)
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However. Doesn't the fact that women are the puppet-masters account for something? I find it far more loathsome when one of the two characters being slashed takes on a weakling, 'femme' persona. Personally, what appeals to me about m/m slash is the idea that two virile men can give into an overwhelming attraction, one that flies in the face of patriarchal constraints.
Not to mention that, as you note, this is supposed to be a hobby. Most men enjoy the idea of 'lesbian' sex when sensationalized through pornography, why shouldn't women exploit the same through the romanticized guise of erotica? The fact that slash has become so prevalent is proof of women being able to own and revel in fantasies they have always had. And some have become authors of original work in their own right. That, to me, is liberation.
Great food for thought!
-G. ;D
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Yes! This is why I don't care for mpreg (I'm suprised she didn't have a long rant about that) besides the obvious anatomical problems.
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Instead of being seen as slaves to the patriarchal patterns of the society, why can't the slash-consumers and -writers be seen as the ultimate feminists, afterall, we are taking our pleasure from making the decidedly male characters dance to our own tune ;)
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*It contains twice the hot men of het pairings!
*I have an attitude of "been there, done that *yawn*" toward het sex scenes.
*To address her sociological issues - I enjoy that the partners are on equal footing, no danger of pregnancy, etc.
Am I lesbophobic by saying that I just really don't care for the female anatomy? I don't care for het porn because of the extreme close-ups. It does nothing for me. I'm all about GLBT rights, and this lady pisses me off by suggesting otherwise. I'm pissed off that I have to defend my preferences at all.
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I read the article. It is so marred by generalisations and (whoops, there they are again) invalid syllogisms that it is laughable. But, of course, she won't enter into any kind of dialogue about her views. Oh, how very 'radical' to set up an opinion and then not listen to anyone else's views about it - to even go so far as to censor responses that disagree. Doesn't that sound like the very worst kind of attitude usually associated in the past with a stereotypical male???
Really, anyone that associates themselves with this lovely little corner of hatred - http://www.questioningtransgender.org/ - couched in nonsensical rhetoric, which I found when having a look at the links to other sites on that page, can only want one thing. Death to difference. Death to inclusivity. Death to any sense of kinship or harmony or compassion.
Wow. It made me SO SO FUCKING mad. I may have to go and write vast amounts of incredibly graphic gay porn to make myself feel better. Sheesh.
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Also, please do! ;D
-G.
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This is what I can not understand in radical feminism. It looks like all they are trying to accomplish is to feel supreme towards males, to be above a gender who's plumbing just happens to be different than the female's, which to me sounds like pursuing the exact same thing they are preaching is so horribly wrong. It has nothing to do with equality or the human rights of anyone.
Sad, very, very sad.
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I will say, though, that I'm happy to see an acknowledgement of fan fiction within academia (if she even fits into such a category). I personally think that it's a fascinating part of the literary culture, although I've definitely reached conclusions that are completely different from the writer of that blog. I'd also like to see more discussion of it at the scholarly level, if only to have people realize that alongside the very badly written fics are surprisingly well-written stories.
Oh, and totally agreed about the generalizations that she makes. Honestly. Her analysis isn't even approaching logical.
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Most m/m authors don't take to that idea any better than most J/E authors have taken to the idea of possible self-insertion through the Elizabeth character.
And besides, 99+% of the people involved are writing for themselves (and/or a small group of like-minded friends) and don't want to hear the psychoanalysis - so it does tend to be outsiders, like this "dissenter," who are pointing at possible problems, without taking the time to involve the interested authors or readers. (The result being that the "research" goes nowhere.)
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Does it matter? Nope. It's what I do for entertainment, and if I'm not libeling anybody or taking their profits, I don't lose sleep at night. :-)
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Enough to make a cat sick
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Not all slash has the chicks-with-dicks, ‘somebody has to be the woman!’, uke/seme dynamic. The fandoms I read in, it is a very small fraction of what is written, thankfully.
The stuff about the relationships ending and everyone returning hetero at the end, WTF. I only saw anything like this once, and it was some twit who underwent some sort of intervention from her church group, which apparently made reading and writing slash and explicit mansex okay, as long as they eventually 'got right' and lived HEA with the perfect woman. (She wrote a pairing I didn't care for but it was a bit of a wank since she kept asking for recs of her new preferences and commenting on others fic in a similar vein.)
And the no lesbians thing, I actually thought lesbians were a bit of a slash trope, make the girlfriend/female lead a lesbian and everyone is happy and getting some, even if it's not explicitly.
Lesbianism in fic
Now, flash forward to most of the women doing the slash fanfic writing; my guess is old enough to have dated and known a few men, heterosexual, some even married. Tell me WHY they would waste their precious private alone time writing their husbands'/boyfriends' lesbian fantasies, which I'm sure they've had to hear about from more than one man in their lives, and not their own - which they're probably discouraged from discussing openly very much, if at all?
Re: Lesbianism in fic
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Seriously, I'm not the most well-read when it comes to slash, but where exactly is the perpetuation of the patriarchy?
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*endlessly amused over "Spongebob" knockoff of "Shaun of the Dead" that she is watching*