sideways: (►the girls all fall)
[personal profile] sideways
Something something an interesting Twitter conversation I eavesdropped on about the evolving nature of (a) fandom: "early fic (at least what i read) was deeply in conversation with the source. even aus were very connected to the canon. now, fic is in conversation with other fic." 

Something something the current Goncharov phenomenon consuming Tumblr, in which an entire landscape of fanfiction is being written about a source that doesn't actually exist. A wonderful mess of fleshy fan creation with nary a skeleton to drape it on but familiar patterns and expectations and tropes.

It's been very amusing to watch from the fringes, and there has been gorgeous meta written about the "yes, and" nature of Tumblr and the creative power of collective fandom. But there is something a little bittersweet in it too, for me, and I think the Twitter conversation touches on why.

Date: 2022-11-29 12:34 pm (UTC)
anneapocalypse: Ariane Clairière, an Elezen Warrior of Light with light skin, green eyes, and dark blonde hair. (Default)
From: [personal profile] anneapocalypse

That is an interesting thread--and I think the canon-to-fanon drift is definitely a thing that happens in fandoms and that I've witnessed, though I can't help wondering if there's also some selection bias involved. When you're new to a fandom, you haven't read much fic yet, so if the fic you're reading is heavily influenced by and in conversation with other fics, you're not going to see that. You'll just see, oh, this is a certain take on canon, which I do or don't like. The longer you're in a fandom and the more fic you read, the more you notice the patterns spring up.

With RvB, for example, the period between season 13 and season 15 was an especially uninteresting time for me personally because new work and conversation was focused on one ship and one character (neither of which I actually dislike) to greater and greater exclusion of everything else, and thanks to a popular longfic solidifying some already well-liked fanon, the fic about those things was also increasingly similar. But if I look back to the Freelancer era, when I first came into the fandom--if I go back and read fics from that era--I can now see a similar kind of fanonization, of characters and ships and approaches to the world and the story generally. TL;DR while I dislike the extremes of it, it seems to me that where creative work is being made in a community, the conversation with one another as well as the source material is inevitable.

I'll admit I've been rather charmed by the whole Goncharov phenomenon, with all the collective fiction and the art people are creating, and I think I just enjoy the "mutual pretending" game where we both know the thing isn't real but we're talking like it is. This does not, of course, include trying to actual convince people that the fake thing is real, and I've tried to be conscientious about that when reblogging things.

Edited Date: 2022-11-29 12:35 pm (UTC)

Date: 2022-12-01 02:32 pm (UTC)
anneapocalypse: Ariane Clairière, an Elezen Warrior of Light with light skin, green eyes, and dark blonde hair. (Default)
From: [personal profile] anneapocalypse

Heh, yeah, I'll admit I've never really gotten the coffee shop AU thing, or most other mundane AUs since I mostly like sci fi and fantasy, and the setting and how the characters fit into it is part of the appeal to me. People have explained to me that it's about imagining how characters would behave and interact under different circumstances, which I can sort of understand though it's never held a huge appeal for me--I think I just see who a character is as too tied up in their life circumstances to be especially interested in separating them. But it could be considered a conversation between the writer, the canon, and other tropes that they enjoy.

And I think you're right that the Goncharov phenomenon is sort of similar! It's people having conversation about character archetypes and genre tropes, with this made-up film that is at once an amalgam of those things, and a pastiche of them.

Date: 2022-12-03 06:26 pm (UTC)
anneapocalypse: Ariane Clairière, an Elezen Warrior of Light with light skin, green eyes, and dark blonde hair. (Default)
From: [personal profile] anneapocalypse

There comes a point I just don't think it can be said the author is conversing with canon as much as they are the desire for a good romcom.

Okay, I laughed. 😂 I've never been in a fandom as big as Marvel (Dragon Age is probably my biggest) but the way you describe that distinctly reminds me of that era where the RvB fandom was All Tuckington All the Time but weirdly, even though it was their canon interactions in season 11 that really launched that ship, like 90% of the fic was AU. Like there was clearly something in canon that got people going on it, but very few writers seemed to actually want to deal with the characters' canon circumstances.

Tumblr Creates A David Lynchian Horrifying Absurdist Piece?

I'd pay to see it.

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