wendelah1 (
wendelah1) wrote in
xf_book_club2009-03-16 09:15 am
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Story 77: "Dirty Water" by Naraht
This week's selection, nominated by
amyhit, is set in an AU where Fox Mulder was abducted instead of his sister. Samantha Mulder goes to Oxford, gets recruited by the FBI, and finds the X-Files. In "Dirty Water," we meet up with Special Agent Samantha Mulder and her partner, Special Agent Dana Scully, in Boston, where they have gone to investigate the reappearance of J. Edgar Hoover's secret files. In the course of the investigation, Samantha finds out more about her family's history than she wanted to know. In "Such Devoted Sisters," also set in the same universe, Dana has invited Samantha to spend Thanksgiving with her family. I enjoyed both stories and keep hoping Naraht will give us more of this fascinating AU. I believe "Such Devoted Sisters" is first chronologically in this series.
Please give the writer some feedback, then come back for the discussion. You can leave suggestions for next time in our nomination post.
"Such Devoted Sisters"
"Dirty Water"
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Please give the writer some feedback, then come back for the discussion. You can leave suggestions for next time in our nomination post.
"Such Devoted Sisters"
"Dirty Water"
Re: Still Not Quite a Gender Discussion, But We're Getting There.
Whatever she might eventually be to Dana, Sam is never going to be that.
and above a ways:
My problem with this alternative universe is that, finally, it isn't a universe. On second reading for me, it still feels incomplete.
i think these two issues are interconnected (in my reading of the fic, anyway). while it is, naturally, incomplete, i don't feel as though this universe is in any way insufficient in the information and detail it supplies us with in the reading. it feels, to me, all the more real for some of its vagueness. and i do feel as though there is at least the potential to have 'that' relationship develop between sam and scully. i think my feeling might differ from yours in the way that we each approach an AU scenario. when i approach an AU i don't approach it with a tabula rasa, blank slate mindset. i don't tend to look upon an AU as an entirely independent universe. i most often regard the new universe as a template that has been laid over the canonical universe - like tracing paper, say. the writer (playing god, in a sense) tries to write a universe that hangs together integrally and doesn't devolve into nonsense or transform back into the canonical universe. but the canonical universe has a metaphysical presence that asserts itself into the AU, making it difficult/impossible to maintain an integral AU that is independent of the canonical universe.
because i approach an AU with the preexisting structure of canon in mind as a skeleton, so to speak, i don't feel that i need very much information about the AU in order for it to hold together.
I know MSR people resist the idea that Scully is identified in Mulder's mind with his sister, and is an emotional substitute for her.
you won't get any arguments from me. i agree with you here, right down to the 'quasi-incestuous' angle. (as an aside, have you read August's 'Absolute Zero'? it has a section in it that described that sister-substitute dynamic beautifully, if briefly)
Re: Still Not Quite a Gender Discussion, But We're Getting There.
But to take a major character out, and put another major character in, who is incidentally a different sex, that's just a whole other ballgame to me, which is why I feel like Naraht has violated her contract with the reader to some extent. I truly expected her to write much, much more in this universe. It has amazing potential.
I love the idea of Scully with Skinner. Scully with Sam, not so much, but maybe my heterosexual privilege is showing here. In any case, I still contend we just don't know much about SamandScully, not from this story, not enough to do much more than speculate. I also think it would be a less interesting story were it to turn into femslash, but, hello, noromo in the house. One of the things I liked about this universe was the possibility of it being and staying gen fic. We need more gen fic in XF. Dammit.
Re: Still Not Quite a Gender Discussion, But We're Getting There.
Re: Still Not Quite a Gender Discussion, But We're Getting There.
oh goodness, yes. I in no way want to have the scully/sam relationship (whatever it may be) explained to me or spelled out or placed in a box/circle/shapeofyourchoosing. in fact, part of what i found so novel about TXF to begin with, and have continued to cherish now that i realize how rare it is, is that the canonical telling of the story was, for so long, a nearly gen story. shippers often seem to move towards the idea that because the romanti-sexual aspect of the M/S relationship was eventually (vaguely) established, the show itself was always definitively romanti-sexual towards mulder and scully. i don't see that as the case. for years it was entirely up to the individual viewer to decide what they thought was 'going on' in that respect.
and actually, something that draws me to naraht's fic universe is its similar gen aspect. it takes what is indefinite and complex and runs so deep between mulder and scully and seems to derive potency from that. the sam/scully dynamic seems preternatural, founded in something under the surface that the characters themselves can't know about.
"I don't think I know what to make of you, Sam," she says finally.
The right answer. Sam smiles and squares her shoulders, shaking off the memories. "That makes three of us. I don't know what to make of me either."
then again, i've always seen gen as an invitation to speculate. in this fic it feels to me like all but a dare to speculate, and i find that delicious.