lettered: (Default)
It's Lion Turtles all the way down ([personal profile] lettered) wrote2009-08-27 09:35 pm

Fandom is SRS, guys

When I write, I do it because something in my gut needs to say something. Often with fanfic, it's saying, "I need to get these characters together!" or "I need to see what happens next!" But whatever the need is, I always get to a point in the writing where I start thinking about it. Lots of time the thinky thoughts--analysis of the need, thoughts about why this should exist, ideas about purpose--stymie my process. I suddenly have to rehaul everything I've written, because it's become more. It's not just my need to fulfill intensely personal desires any more, it is a need to say something about universal desire, about our world and myself.

To put it in fanfic terms, I start out writing crack. Then I get caught up in meta. Sometimes I start over so I can just write more crack. Sometimes I start over and just write meta. In rare instances I keep what I have and manage to turn the crack into something meta.

I've often been frustrated by this meta impulse when it comes to fanfic. It is for some people, but for me, fanfic is not that much SRS BIZNESS. It's a chance to satisfy crack impulses, which often involve porn, while my higher brain can be engaged in say, writing original fic. But that's never actually true. Fanfic always turns into SRS BIZNESS for me, whether I like it or not. As I said in my rec of One Thousand Kisses Deep by [livejournal.com profile] seraphcelene, the thinkyness is fun. Fandom isn't always just about getting off; it's about analysis and our need to express our own thoughts on the thoughts of others that we consume.

I've been talking a lot to [livejournal.com profile] my_daroga about this. We both feel we have Things To Say, which are thoughtful and important and could produce impressive works of well, art. But at the same time we're in this to get our rocks off--I don't even mean we're in it for the porn, but for those intensely personal needs I was talking about. It seems to me like we're both having difficulty reconciling that latter impulse with broader ideals. Which is interesting, because in the end both of these drives are still to satisfy ourselves.

So, has this ever happened to you? Start out writing "for funsies" and have it turn wicked serious? What did you do with that? Did you stop yourself from getting too serious because it's supposed to be "fun"? Or did you start something else that was more serious, or did you allow it to organically become serious? And what was your reaction to the fic changing on you like that? Is this something that only happens with fanfic? What are some links to fic you've written that turned serious somewhere in the process, and is the "transition" visible? Does it happen the other way around--you want to write something poetic and thinky, and it turns out a lark? AM I CRAZY?
ext_98010: pipe of the crotchfruit (pic#)

[identity profile] misterwalnut.livejournal.com 2009-08-28 01:31 pm (UTC)(link)
This sort of happens to me a lot, actually. I usually fic when I become heavily invested in a fandom (or relapse into an old fandom I thought I'd abandoned), and I feel like I have to write something - carry out a what-if scenario, give the characters a happy ending - anything, to satisfy my ship or whatever.

But then during the writing process, I always quickly lose interest because the fic is already composed in my head - I feel like writing it all down becomes a hassle, because I've already salved my need to 'extend' on the canon, and I don't feel like anyone else would be interested in what I write (especially if it's an obscure fandom).

After reading your post, though, I've decided to commit myself to finishing an old WIP. So, er, thanks. :P
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[identity profile] tkp.livejournal.com 2009-08-30 12:44 am (UTC)(link)
HEE. Cool. You get that WIP in shape!

This is interesting considering the way stories form in my head. I always have a fully formed beginning, a sort of hazy middle, and then there's an endline in sight, like a far off horizon, but that last stretch is completely a mystery. As I move through writing the story, things keep getting clearer and clearer. It's usually when the middle is clear and the end is hazy, or the middle is done and the end is clear, that I give up. I know what happens, how it happens, and as you said, writing it down feels like work.

There's something to be said for hacking away at it, though. I've found sometimes I think know what's going on, but in the process of writing surprising things happen!