just how kosher is fanfic?
Jul. 30th, 2009 11:05 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Continuing the "literary" discussion series from earlier this week. *SNORT*
OK, SRS BZNS TIEMS. Seriously. If you are a writer ... how would you feel about fanfic** if you were an original author/creator of something being ficced? If you're in that position or have been, how DO you feel about it? Would your opinion be affected by if you knew the fans doing the writing ("knew" them online, that is) and if you liked them personally or not? Would you be flattered or offended by particular storylines or pairings involving your characters? Or would you have a blanket feeling - good or bad - about the phenomenon as a whole? Would you interact with your fans as "one of" them (as it's rumored Rowling does - I have no clue if it's true), or would you holler and protest like Anne Rice? Would you see it as plagiarism or something else?
A few weeks ago, I was on a panel with three published authors of erotica at a small convention - the title was something like "romance, erotica, and porn." At least one of the 2 female authors started out in fanfic. The male author was the only one to say he thought fanfic has helped drive the market for original erotica and porn written for and purchased by women in recent years. Both women were courteous and not dismissive of me as the token fanficcer, but I got the feeling that if I hadn't been on the panel (not me personally, but me as a fanfic writer), there are things either or both might have said that they wouldn't outright say in front of me. One did say she regarded fanfic as basically something you do until you mature enough to write original fiction (which I did counter with polite disagreement, since I know authors who also dabble in fanfic on the side).
**By "fanfic" I'm referring only to FPF, not RPF. RPF doesn't really apply in this case, anyway.
OK, SRS BZNS TIEMS. Seriously. If you are a writer ... how would you feel about fanfic** if you were an original author/creator of something being ficced? If you're in that position or have been, how DO you feel about it? Would your opinion be affected by if you knew the fans doing the writing ("knew" them online, that is) and if you liked them personally or not? Would you be flattered or offended by particular storylines or pairings involving your characters? Or would you have a blanket feeling - good or bad - about the phenomenon as a whole? Would you interact with your fans as "one of" them (as it's rumored Rowling does - I have no clue if it's true), or would you holler and protest like Anne Rice? Would you see it as plagiarism or something else?
A few weeks ago, I was on a panel with three published authors of erotica at a small convention - the title was something like "romance, erotica, and porn." At least one of the 2 female authors started out in fanfic. The male author was the only one to say he thought fanfic has helped drive the market for original erotica and porn written for and purchased by women in recent years. Both women were courteous and not dismissive of me as the token fanficcer, but I got the feeling that if I hadn't been on the panel (not me personally, but me as a fanfic writer), there are things either or both might have said that they wouldn't outright say in front of me. One did say she regarded fanfic as basically something you do until you mature enough to write original fiction (which I did counter with polite disagreement, since I know authors who also dabble in fanfic on the side).
**By "fanfic" I'm referring only to FPF, not RPF. RPF doesn't really apply in this case, anyway.
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Date: 2009-07-30 04:59 pm (UTC)I don't think that I will ever grow out of fan fic. I am all ready 24 yrs old. It may seem childish to some, but not to myself. I can always learn. Fan fic is basically my testing grounds. If I have an original plot, I'll do an AU fan fic and see if anyone will read it. If they do than I can go and write the original story. Sometimes I don't do that though. Sometimes I get the muse to write original stuff from a fan fic.
Fan Fic is a tool to use. I think that Anne Rice would have a huge, bigger than she does now, fan audience if she had allowed for fan fic to be written. Thats why 'Twishite' is so popular, because of the fan fic and the tweenies wanting to live out their Vampyre dreams.
I'd let my stuff be ficced. Just htink about how small the HP world would be if Rowling didn't let her books be ficced. I think that its a great marketing tool. If someone, unknown to HP comes across a fan fic and start reading it (thats how I slightly got into Gundam Wing) than they'll get curious about the original works and pick them up.