transemacabre: (Rose Red)
transemacabre ([personal profile] transemacabre) wrote2014-03-09 09:25 pm

WTF? Fic moment of the day

I was a-gog at this throwaway line in an Avengers fic found on A03:

"[Bruce had] spent last Christmas sweating in a Maori hut in New Zealand. His hosts had known it was Christmas but they didn't care, and honestly neither had Bruce. Bruce had more important things to do than spend money and wear sweaters, and in the end he'd been able to trace that tribe's dysentery outbreak to donated foodstuffs from overseas."

Like, wait, WHUT? Okay, this raises so many questions.

-- Maori tribe in huts? Really?
-- Why did this Maori tribe have dysentery from donated food from overseas? Why were they eating donated food from overseas in the first place? I mean, it's New Zealand. Not really a place that, even during national disasters, needs donated food (from aid workers?) sent to it.
-- Even if these hypothetical hut-dwelling Maoris got dysentery, why do they need Bruce Banner to care for them? Why not go to any of NZ's excellent, free hospitals and partake of that godless socialized healthcare?
-- It's 20-fucking-14, I'm pretty sure it's not a Thing for Maoris to be aware of the existence of Christmas.
-- I don't give a shit what anyone says, that is straight copy-pasted from Medecins Sans Frontieres website, with cholera replaced by dysentery and Haiti replaced with NZ.

[identity profile] transemacabre.livejournal.com 2014-03-13 11:57 pm (UTC)(link)
What makes me crazy, and this is not just for history-based fandoms, although common in them, is when fanfic writers can't be bothered (or as you might say, arsed) to do any research and so set all their fic in modern-day AUs. There's a massive fandom for the recent Les Mis movie; and 3/4ths of the fic is set in present-day American (not even French!) universities, or coffee shops, or high schools. That's why, despite being all squee about the movie, I dumped that fandom like a hot potato. Why the fuck even bother reading Les Mis fic if it's going to be set in Milwaukee?

The reason these AUs are so popular is that, of course, they're EASY to write. "Write what you know": extraordinary characters and situations mapped onto painfully ordinary American life.

I also did a lot of early scribbling in my notebooks when I was a kid, and played make-believe in the backyard or in the woods behind my house. Quite a bit of it was proto-fanfic; having adventures in Narnia, etc. I'd like to think it helped me improve as a writer for when I did get online at age 16.
ext_120533: Deseine's terracotta bust of Max Robespierre (Dwarf)

[identity profile] silverwhistle.livejournal.com 2014-03-14 01:42 am (UTC)(link)
What makes me crazy, and this is not just for history-based fandoms, although common in them, is when fanfic writers can't be bothered (or as you might say, arsed) to do any research and so set all their fic in modern-day AUs.
Yes: that is sheer laziness. Another thing that bugs me are modern-self-insertion-character dropping into settings where that simply isn't appropriate. In something like Doctor Who, it can be made to fit with the universe depicted, but any more vapid "modern girls falling into Middle-Earth" and I will ask Bob if I can borrow the Orcrist to slice and dice 'em!
I also did a lot of early scribbling in my notebooks when I was a kid, and played make-believe in the backyard or in the woods behind my house. Quite a bit of it was proto-fanfic; having adventures in Narnia, etc.
Same here, using old desk-diaries to write in! But I didn't hear the term 'fanfic' until the 1990s, by which time I was in my 30s, and had thought it was just a quirk of mine. (Just as I didn't know until I was in fandom circles online that h/c wasn't just a personal quirk, either!)
I'd like to think it helped me improve as a writer for when I did get online at age 16.
I didn't get online until 1997-ish, by which time I was in my early 30s.

[identity profile] transemacabre.livejournal.com 2014-03-14 03:53 am (UTC)(link)
I got into fandom in like late 1998 or early 1999, so I would've been 15! X-Men was the first fandom I ever read, but it was awhile before I started writing.

Fandoms been around for a bazillion years, since people started writing Gilgamesh's adventures in cuneiform, or maybe before that. It took a loooong time to coalesce into the form we know it today. Imagine a coffee shop AU with Gilgamesh/Enkidu! Jesus! (or should I say Bel?)
ext_120533: Deseine's terracotta bust of Max Robespierre (Rudel)

[identity profile] silverwhistle.livejournal.com 2014-03-14 12:11 pm (UTC)(link)
Fandoms been around for a bazillion years, since people started writing Gilgamesh's adventures in cuneiform, or maybe before that. It took a loooong time to coalesce into the form we know it today.
Oh indeed! One of the great examples of it, I think, is the expansion of the Arthurian corpus in the Middle Ages, as you get people making up stories about OCs and sticking them on by saying, "He's a Knight of the Round Table you've not heard of before!" The Guenevere/Lancelot ship was, I suspect, invented by someone who was squicked out by her original canonical ship (with her husband's nephew/son).
Edited 2014-03-14 12:13 (UTC)

[identity profile] transemacabre.livejournal.com 2014-03-17 11:28 pm (UTC)(link)
There were even over-invested shippers way back when, like the ones that harassed Alcott to make Jo/Laurie endgame in Little Women. I think she even admitted that she had Jo marry some other dude and Laurie marry Jo's little sister just to fuck with the rabid shippers.