Of course, when things like this happen, a couple of things always happen in response. First, fandom unites. Second, we all play lawyers on the Internet. I like to try to avoid doing the second, and I don't always succeed. I apologize for that, because it doesn't actually improve the discourse.
However, here's the deal. I am a published writer. I plan to be an even more published writer. And I write fanfiction. And I will never stop writing fanfiction. And I do not believe what I do to be illegal. And so, unless you are a lawyer, and, more specifically, my lawyer, I'd appreciate you not telling me I'm committing a crime, disrespecting authors or not being a Real Writer. I won't listen to you, and I'll probably even be cranky, and sadly, not necessarily gracefully. I do know my flaws, if nothing else.
But here's the part I where I get really flumoxed: fandom and fanfiction are HUGE parts of what I do. I met my partner through fanfiction. I write fanfiction with my friends. I have published perfectly legal work for money that is arguably in the category of fanfiction. I do scholarship about fandom and fan culture. And yes, to be super blunt, I read porn people write about other people's characters on the Internet, and every once in a while it has changed my life.
I'm not interested in defending fanfic, although I sure get called to a lot in all sorts of ways. And when it's not about how it's illegal or how I'm wasting my life with low-culture (arguments I have nearly always lost in the minds of those who start them before the discussion even begins, because they are almost always about scolding and shaming, achieving status by denigrating another's, and playing that serious man vs. silly woman card1), I am pretty much always interested in talking about it.
Of course, because I have no self-control and am easily indignant, I get into these things where I want to mention the Gabaldon thing in passing and then here I am defending fanfiction or playing a lawyer on the Internet or otherwise engaging the topic in a way that is counterproductive for me, you, and it.
But seriously, if you think the existence of fanfiction, the enjoyment of it, the respect for it, the curiosity about it, the creation of it is illegal, immoral or a weakness of character, then I would seriously, seriously question why you're here. While this is something we can agree to disagree on to a given extent because, ultimately, your views don't affect me, if you think I'm immoral or criminal or just pathetic... well, I just don't get it, no matter how much you like my other content. But hey, an audience is an audience, and ultimately this stuff is more about you than me. *shrug*
1 Seriously. As much as I have a lot of discomfort with the "fanfiction is by women for women" angle that the OTW promotes because I don't live in a world that dichotomous and I'm in a fandom that is much less gender-skewed than many others, fanfiction discussions get ugly on gendered terms very, very quickly as a rule. Whether that's the craft and significance of fic getting dismissed because it's "just women," the policing of female and queer sexuality, the fetishization of the men who do write fanfiction (or accusations of same), or the calling people out for just wanting attention (hello mode of women attacking other women that Gabaldon engaged in so effectively in her first screed on the subject), this stuff happens all the time. I can't tell you how often in a fanfiction discussion someone has said to me something along the lines of "I thought you were a serious woman" as opposed to "I thought you were a serious person." It's deeply, deeply telling.
Re: Thank you
Date: 2010-05-05 08:59 pm (UTC)