xparrot: (wormholes suck)
[personal profile] xparrot
I've seen a couple discussions about the negative turn SGA fandom has taken, re: McKeller, people, mostly Keller fans (or at least not anti-Keller fans) who are feeling actively driven from the fandom by aggressive character/pairing hate. They feel this is a recent trend, and I concur; while SGA had its share of past wank, I think it was one of the lower-conflict fandoms for its size. And if that's changed now, then I blame shipping. Or rather, canon shipping.

Every fandom I know of that has these battles, has these levels of anger and resentment between fans, is a fandom with canon ships. Witness Smallville, or HP. Ships going canon wreak havoc on a fandom. Nothing embitters your average fan as much as a ship that sinks their own, and an embittered fan can be eager to share their hate, wants the solidarity of all of fandom telling TPTB that they're wrong, wants all of fandom together seeking change. Even killing a character doesn't cause the kind of conflict that shipping does...

There are other things that get fans' backs up, but the majority of fen are shippers, and ships are often why they fan. There are exceptions, there are other types of fans - and other types of shippers - but in modern Western media fandom, the majority of fans (slash, het, even many gen fen) are in it for particular relationships. Mess with those relationships in canon, and you get fandom meltdown.

(I think there's a reason that a lot of the old fan shows, the big ones, were series that never had canon ships, never had any romances that lasted more than a single episode. Star Trek, Starsky & Hutch, The Sentinel, all those old episodic shows that never really progressed the character relationships - that never changed them, never pulled the figurative rug out from under fannish feet. The only series I know of with low-conflict canon ships are ships which were introduced in the first season, that the fandom grew up around, and even in those there's often little interaction between contrasting shippers. I also suspect it's a major reason why new female characters are viewed with such suspicion, because while male characters are often introduced for plot purposes, nine times out of ten a new female character is going to mean new canon ships.)

I don't blame shippers. I'm a shipper myself; I wouldn't fan without my ships. I need my OTPs to fic. And I strive to be reasonable and fair to all my fellow fans, but I still have been known to go utterly psycho batshit when I feel my OTP is "threatened," so it doesn't surprise me to see other otherwise reasonable types lose it over shipping. It's frustrating since the fandom used to be cooler about it - but then the fandom didn't have canon ships before. A fandom with canon ships has ship wars. It just seems to be a fact of fandom; it's why I tended to avoid Who fandom, or Avatar fandom, why I often keep wary distance from anime fandoms.

My OTPs aren't canon, generally (at least not in my fic fandoms, my active "Type B" fandoms - and I tend to avoid main fandom for my Type As, because I'd just as soon not get drawn into shipping wars.) But I don't need my OTPs to be canon to be satisfied, don't need my interpretation of the characters validated above all other interpretations. As long as they're never actually denied, I'm good. The more open-ended canon is, the more freedom there is for all fans, all different shippers, to peacefully co-exist, and I like it that way.

If I sound like I'm saying I'd rather not have canon ships in my ficcing fandoms - yeah, I am. Bring on the subtext and the UST, and leave the consummations to the fanfic. Maybe it's unrealistic and maybe it's boring, but I don't care. It's more peaceful that way XP

Date: 2009-02-24 04:43 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jujuberry136.livejournal.com
I totally agree. I'm fine with ships introduced as solid in the first season (see Zoe and Wash in Firefly) but I much prefer to play around with shows that don't have a defined canon couple. The UST is just more FUN than the actual relationship most of the time, AND it gives all the fans wiggle room to play with their own OTP if it doesn't appear in canon.

Date: 2009-02-24 04:58 pm (UTC)
ext_3572: (no idea what they're doing (sga/op OTP!))
From: [identity profile] xparrot.livejournal.com
Yes, for me it's the "play around" that matters. There's quite a few shows I watch that I like the canon ships just fine - but I don't fic for them. In the shows I'm ficcing for, I prefer a more free, open canon - wiggle room, as you say. So I resent canon shipping in a canon that didn't have anything overt for over three seasons. Grrr!

Date: 2009-02-24 05:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jujuberry136.livejournal.com
For me, the fun part of fan fic is the play value. Obviously I'm involved in fandom because there is something more I want from the show- be it a pairing, a lack of screen time for my favorite character, or a plot hole from a recent episode. In some respects, I like fanfic to "fix" canon (explore emotional impacts, create a deeper back story, etc).

Romance, especially in shows that are at heart serialized action stories, is pretty much always done clumsily and thus makes me angry because they take away time from the elements I do like. The part about the show that drew me to fandom in the first place (in SGA it was the team!action and the focus on four specific characters) is often neglected for new romantic scenes- not what I had signed up for when I began watching the show.

Thanks for posting this. It's definitely helped me examine some of my thoughts and behaviors in fandom!

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