wendelah1: (Angel)
wendelah1 ([personal profile] wendelah1) wrote in [community profile] xf_book_club2009-12-13 05:06 pm
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Story 98: "Untitled Random Case File #4664" by Jess Mabe

Continuing my unofficial boycott of all things serious, I bring you something different, courtesy of a timely nomination by [livejournal.com profile] infinitlight. This metafic by Jess Mabe is clever, funny, and offers some interesting observations about writing fan fiction. She rates the fic "R" for Raunchy "but no actual sex was harmed in the making of this story." Damn, even her liner notes make me laugh.

Although the author has left the fandom, and has no working email address, at least none that I am aware of, we would love to know what you think of her story. Please leave us suggestions for next time, too. Humor is especially appreciated by the management at this time.


Untitled Random Case File #4664

[identity profile] estella-c.livejournal.com 2009-12-18 09:51 pm (UTC)(link)
Well, sure, the slams are aimed at writers and readers if you "see through" the fic to the meta, which it is the nature of metafics to encourage you to do. But the corruption of our beloved characters into seductive exhibitionists struck me as darn funny. I have no writer's guilt, nor do I think of Mulder and Scully as real people, important as they may loom in our shared imagination.

Actually, they are palimpsests. So many good, bad, and mediocre writers have reinvented their motivations and behavior that they have taken on a thousand-layered richness. Maybe that's the definition of icon. Or demigod.

I love all the many layers of Jess: flippant through ironic to heartbreaking. As New Year's is coming up, I recommend "Resolutions," a smutfic that totally gets the job done. It might be possible to criticize its structure, but nobody says you *have* to.


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[identity profile] amyhit.livejournal.com 2009-12-19 04:04 am (UTC)(link)
[livejournal.com profile] estella_c said, But the corruption of our beloved characters into seductive exhibitionists struck me as darn funny. I have no writer's guilt, nor do I think of Mulder and Scully as real people, important as they may loom in our shared imagination.

to which [livejournal.com profile] wendelah1 said, Maybe this is a writer's disease? I know I am not alone in this madness.

and i think this is precisely why i felt like i was straining when i read this fic. because as a reader i completely agree with estella, but as a writer thhat's not how i feel. as a fan and a person i feel that the single most important thing about fandom is that nothing is automatically undervalued, or judged based on a prejudice, or heaven forbid disallowed.

but as a writer i have a strong (-"drive" is too soft a word so i'm going to go with-) obsession to write the characters as they are, or as near to it as i possibly can. since conversing with [livejournal.com profile] tree i have come to think of this as "presumptive consent"; that one is not doing anything to the characters that would be abrasive or degrading to them (though please don't quote her on that, because my interpretation of the term "presumptive consent" is my own).

usually, when reading fic, i am capable of seperating my writer's mind from my reader's mind, which is why i can adore stories like Iolokus, even though they alter the characters profoundly. but Jess has "plunked herself spang in the middle of it. No passive-aggressive MarySue, she appears under her real name and reveals her own story ambitions and secret fantasies." this makes it impossible to seperate writer's mind and reader's mind, because the fic is actively engaging both.

other fics like Our Scullys by Punk Maneuverability have a kind of reverence about them, whereas Untitled Random Casefile is, truly, irreverent. and while i firmly believe that there is nothing whatsoever wrong with this kind of irreverence - that it can actually be extremely constructive and important in the maintenance of a healthy fandom - as a writer i want to cringe away from this fic, because it is unnerving. like watching someone cut open a pair of bodies that look like Mulder and Scully, smiling, saying, "it's okay, look, i made these ones - it's not them."

[identity profile] infinitlight.livejournal.com 2009-12-19 05:18 am (UTC)(link)
Judging from the responses here, I think perhaps this is a fic that is easier to read if you're not also a writer! Which hadn't occurred to me.

I think being less invested in the characters from that point of view makes the criticism of fandom as a whole easier to take--I can distance myself far more easily from fandom as a reader (there being potentially thousands of anonymous lurky readers in fandom) than it would be if I was participating and putting my ideas and stories out there.

ike watching someone cut open a pair of bodies that look like Mulder and Scully, smiling, saying, "it's okay, look, i made these ones - it's not them."

Excellent simile, very fitting.

[identity profile] estella-c.livejournal.com 2009-12-21 03:53 pm (UTC)(link)
I noticed a long time ago that readers seem able to take a more inclusive or lenient view of canon and character than fic writers. In fact, many writers have a "personal canon" which includes what happened on the show--generally--as well as their own noble efforts to make sense of it all. And they hew to it with all their hearts and souls.

I respect this attitude, but I don't share it. Although I take aesthetic and ethical umbrage (what a line) to what some writers do to the characters, I don't feel protective towards them. (Though if someone had arranged a hit on Chris Carter back in the day and had asked for donations...)

Um, just joking. Respect the Net.