Log In

Home
    - Create Journal
    - Update
    - Download

LiveJournal
    - News
    - Paid Accounts
    - Contributors

Customize
    - Customize Journal
    - Create Style
    - Edit Style

Find Users
    - Random!
    - By Region
    - By Interest
    - Search

Edit ...
    - Personal Info &
      Settings
    - Your Friends
    - Old Entries
    - Your Pictures
    - Your Password

Developer Area

Need Help?
    - Lost Password?
    - Freq. Asked
      Questions
    - Support Area



doriangrey ([info]doriangrey) wrote in [info]unfunnybusiness,
@ 2009-06-23 02:05:00


Previous Entry  Add to memories!  Tell a Friend!  Next Entry
Warnings Wank In Bandom
[info]arsenicjade, a popular bandom writer, posts a story to [info]bandombigbang. It contains a scene that could be taken as dub-con, and a few people comment, politely asking her to add a warning. She explains equally politely that she didn't mean the scene to read as dub-con, but promptly adds a warning for consent issues. So far, so good, right?

[info]nightengale comments, long after warnings have gone up. Her comments take three comments to write in full, and are a long, condescending, garbled explanation of why it's important to warn for consent issues (itself rather confusing, since no one was arguing that warnings weren't important). She begins by citing her 'authority': eight years in fandom and a B.A. in Creative Writing. Comments on the post are screened now, but her essay is screencapped here. Many people (including the people who had asked [info]arsenicjade or warnings in the first place) comment to tell her how rude/inappropriate/bizarre her comments are.

The matter probably should have ended there, but [info]megyal steps in. [info]megyal has a friend, [info]ficsoreal. Over a year ago, [info]ficsoreal posted a story called A Lifetime Commitment in which Brendon Urie of Panic At The Disco runs as a frat pledge, and is drugged and then raped with the aid of a speculum. She posted it to her journal and to fic comms without any warnings, and when asked by many people to include them, refused on the grounds of artistic integrity:

"The story is meant to be jarring; you are supposed to be upset. That's not irresponsible; that was the point.I'm not here to hold anyone's hand."

A lot of the original discussion is in the comments to the fic, although she deleted a lot of dissenting comments, and more occurred here.

Anyway, [info]megyal feels that [info]ficsoreal was unjustifiably treated! And that what happened with [info]arsenicjade was exactly the same situation (dub-con + prompt addition of warnings when asked = non-con + total refusal to add warnings, okay?). Clearly, the only reason for this disparity in people dogpiling [info]nightengale on [info]arsenicjade's behalf while getting angry at [info]ficsoreal is because [info]arsenicjade is a BNF while [info]ficsoreal is not. [info]megyal doesn't say so explicitly in her post, but [info]ficsoreal promptly comments:

"Fandom has always played by two sets of rules, one for regular peeps and one for the popular peeps. This incident just shines a light on it."

Also from [info]megyal's post, we learn that it's all about tone, you may only ask for warnings by PM in case you embarrass the authors, anyone who's worried about triggers should start an lj community listing fic with consent issues rather than expecting authors to do all the hard work of warning for them, and if people are triggered by something, they need to seek help if they can't handle reading fic, and really, still being triggered by trauma means you're not a strong enough person.

[info]okubyo_kitsune then makes a post ostensibly defending [info]arsenicjade, which is pretty much the definition of "get off my side, you're making it look stupid". This post offers up gems of advice like:

"I've had cancer, but I know very little about the actual disease. Also, omg! Nobody should ever write a cancer fic without warning for cancer because what if it TRIGGERS ME???? Or, like, a fic with strokes!!! I MIGHT STROKE AGAIN. IT WOULD BE TRAGIC." Yeah, it may be harsh, but it's the truth."

Another commenter, [info]sekkritbandomlj adds another helpful derailment by listing her traumatic trigger associated with the colour orange, which is, of course, totally the same as a victim of assault being triggered by non-con in a fic. Also, she notes that triggers are really broad, so if we start warning for one that's as common and serious a trigger as rape, who knows what would happen next? "Alas! I was reading this lovely fic, and then someone bent over, and it triggered something! The fanart had a picture of an owl and I can't look at owls without hyperventilating! Woe."

[info]impertinence then makes a long, extremely personal post, Sexual Assault, Triggering, and Warnings: An Essay, detailing her sexual assault and explaining how triggers work (note: Very explicit discussion of sexual assault and the nature, anatomy, cause & effect of triggers. Is itself triggery). She suggests that while it's impossible to warn for all triggers, rape should be warned for, since it's so common among women. Most commenters agree or are civil, until [info]cynatnite shows up.

[info]cynatnite starts off abrasively, considering that this is her response to another person's post about her sexual abuse, but fairly sanely:

"Readers should take responsibility for their reading decisions. If they don't like it...stop. Move on to something else. It's that simple. I refuse to be responsible for someone else's emotional issues."

An epic thread ensues, and she soon loses whatever civility she had; asking for warnings is 'bullshit' and emotional abuse, and everyone who disagrees with her is flaming. She also warns that by asking for warnings on rape, soon people will be warning for angry clowns and foot fetishes. Too much is being placed on writers, and too little responsibility being placed on readers! People with triggers have mental issues they need to see a therapist for, and they shouldn't be in fandom. Surely these people can click out of a post as soon as they hit a trigger, and suffer no ill effects? She knows how triggers work; she wrote a fanfic on someone with PTSD, and from this experience she is totally able to tell actual survivors of abuse what they're doing wrong.

Her friend [info]mara_snh shows up to tell people that [info]cynatnite is a good person, really, and everyone disagreeing with her just doesn't know her. Plus, warning for rape is like warning for bugs or or blue bowls; there are so many triggers it's unfair to expect people to warn for any! Tired of fighting, [info]cynatnite comments to let everyone know that she's LEAVING THIS DISCUSSION.

Once [info]metafandom picks up the post, the warnings discussion goes multifannish. [info]zvi_likes_tv makes a post, letting everyone know that triggers are a personal responsibility, like allergic reactions, and if you read fic by authors you don't personally know, it's your own responsibility if you're triggered:

I don't quite see how this is different than if one is, say, allergic to citrus. If you buy a pre-packaged cake in the store, you have a reasonable expectation of being able to read the ingredients label and see that it does or does not contain a citrus ingredient. This is because, in the United States at least, commercial food products are required to list their ingredients by law. Of course, there are many food companies which don't wish to reveal their secret recipes, so they may just say natural ingredients instead of getting specific, and you, as a person with a citrus allergy, would know to stay clear because natural ingredients might be anything at all.

But if you're at a bake sale, and there's a delicious looking confection called boom cake, which doesn't have a description or a list of ingredients next to it, wouldn't you, as someone with a citrus allergy, ask the person doing the selling, "What's in a boom cake?" You might even go so far as to say, "I'm allergic to citrus, is why I'm asking." And if the person doing the selling didn't know, or if you didn't feel comfortable asking the person doing the selling because you're afraid they might mislead you through ignorance or malice, wouldn't you ask your unallergic friend who had bought boom cake if she thought it had citrus? Or, perhaps, buy the red velvet cake instead, since you know that red velvet cakes are chocolate and not citrus.


She also derails what had been a specific fandom conversation about warning for rape into a denounciation of warnings for things like cheating, 'et cetera'. Warning for rape is a slippery slope that leads into warning for ridiculous things!

In the comments to this post, [info]impertinence and [info]liviapenn get into an argument about warnings which I'm going to steal another commenter's summary of rather than summarise myself:

FAN 1 says, "Privilege: you're soaking in it."

FAN 2 says, "WHY ARE YOU ACCUSING ME OF A CONSPIRACY TO HURT YOU PEOPLE?! THERE IS NO CONSPIRACY!! YOU ALL ARE JUST TOO DAMN SENSITIVE! YOU ARE HARSHING MY SQUEE GODDAMMIT!!"


Also, it's appropriatory to talk about 'derailing' or 'privilege' if you're a rape victim rather than a POC.

Triggers: serious business. Unless they're the same as red velvet cake, vicious attacks by telephone cords, or the color orange.

ETA:

[info]lcsbanana posts a round-up of links to all of the worst statements on [info]impertinence's and [info]zvi_likes_tv's posts.

[info]queenofhell makes a post listing all of the common fallacious arguments smacked down during Racefail that have now been used during this argument, even by the people smacking them down during Racefail.

[info]mara_snh continues to argue on in [info]cyantite's defence, using psychoanalystic babble to dissect [info]impertinence's state of mind. Particularly in this delightful statement:

"I'm wondering if what we're seeing here is a form of free-floating rage. It's not uncommon for survivors of trauma to manifest this. They've never been able to confront their abuser and direct their anger toward him or her. They may also experience self-hatred; it may not be appropriate, but many victims of rape, especially, have been socially conditioned to accept some level of responsibility for the horrible thing that happened to them, and women carrying that awful baggage around with them might well hate themselves for it on some level.

All this externalization of blame seems to me a warping of the otherwise healthy process of letting go of any sense that they brought the abuse on themselves.

There's some pretty serious pathology going on here on a community-wide scale. I wish I understood more about it, or that I had access to the therapist I can no longer afford, to get a better handle on it."


[info]aukestrel jumps on this thread and chimes in:

"I am saying that, having suffered trauma, the victim is elevated to a privileged rank because of that trauma - the privilege would not exist without the trauma... one might make a case for the "privilege of the victim" here."

She then makes another comment she later deletes, which [info]impertinence has reposted for posterity:

Well, I don't quite know how to say this, but you weren't actually called a liar. According to what I read, two of those times you called yourself a liar because you were put in the unworkable position of having to figure out that pleasing your mother was what your survival depended on. You weren't called a liar when it first came up; you made a choice to survive and retracted your original statement. You went to your mom, she asked you in front of your abuser if you were lying, and then you *understandably* said you were. But she didn't call you a liar until (I assume) *after* the fact according to the timeline you supplied.

Do you see why I am questioning this? You seem to look for the negative in any situation and to paint yourself as more of a victim (if you could be) than you already are. I found mara_snh's insights very helpful on that front.

And as you show in your last paragraph, you know very well where the (false) claim of "privilege" could be said to elide. I'm not saying it *does*. But in the original comment, which was an outstanding use of hyperbole, when the privilege comparison was made, it seemed to me - given the way your bandwagon jumped on one person who disagreed with you in a dehumanising and unsettling fashion - that actually one *could* argue there was a weird kind of reverse privilege obtaining. If one wanted to. Which I do not.

Just like cyatnite, I'm not a troll. I've been around fandom for 10 years. (And I do use warnings and have advocated for them in the past.) But I am one of those very few people in fandom who can follow a logic chain for more than three steps.

The people who are shouting your rights from the treetops and using your pain and abuse to excuse and justify the oppression and verbal abuse of another WOMAN could turn around tomorrow and do the same to you if they disagree with you. And that is WRONG. If you, as a human, demand to be treated with compassion and respect then you have a moral obligation - no matter how much or how often someone disagrees with you - to treat others with compassion and respect. (It is clear - meaning no disrespect - that this behaviour was NOT modeled for you as a child and that it is something you are having to learn.) Allowing, encouraging, and even participating in the disrespect and oppression will not help you and will probably harm you emotionally. So if you cannot deal with people with compassion and respect - including me! - then you get yourself out of the situation. Just go away. But don't harm yourself any further.
"


This is, of course, the same [info]aukestrel who argued that all RayV/RayK fics and recs of fics in Due South had to be clearly labelled so as not to cause her trauma by subjecting her to a pairing she loathed, now arguing that asking for warnings for rape is privileged and 'oppressing and verbally abusing another woman', in the comments of a post by a young rape survivor detailing her sexual abuse.

[info]mara_snh retreats to her own lj to be assured by her friends that she is the real victim here, and posts about how [info]impertinence's 'frustrating behaviour' in asking for warnings "curiously mirrors the ambiguous threats her (impertinence's) stepfather subjected her to". Also from her journal: "It's just a dialog between two sides of the 'must stories have warnings' dialog. This time the sides were taken, respectively, by professional victims and irritated writers"; "I swear, there is nothing more vicious than professional victims"; more free analysis of impertinence's mental health; and [info]cynatnite claiming she felt "like a Dem in a room full of Sarah Palins," or a Christian being fed to lions. Another of [info]mara_snh's friends shares her own reaction to the request for rape warnings: "*WAAAA!* Grow up little, fangirl. Other people don't exist to sooth your hurt feelings. You almost sound like an adult but you're not quite there yet. Fandom is for play. Therapy is for you to work on removing your triggers."

Not content with that, [info]mara_snh posts again, this time to observe that RPS is a totally inappropriate fandom for rape survivors: "ps: Does it strike anyone but me as kind of odd that rape survivors would get off on RPS, which is, like, one of the most invasive and disrespectful things you can do to a celebrity without actually stalking them in person?"

(This 'RPS is violation' argument is particularly hilarious given that [info]impertinence is in bandom, where the musicians being slashed frequently comment on fic, reference it in interviews or give dramatic readings of it, all while appearing to find it hilarious. One guy apparently even designed a t-shirt for his favorite lj community).

ETA 2:

[info]aukestrel posts to her lj about Muchausen's via internet. Deleted! Screencap here thanks to [info]glossing2.

ETA 3: [info]zvi_likes_tv has frozen all comments on her post, and has made two further posts, both of them with comments turned off:

Rape victims don't suffer a lack of privilege as they are not an involuntary group: "The use of the word "privilege" with the categories "reader" and "writer" doesn't make sense. Privilege is talking about systemic advantages accorded to one group of people over another group of people, where membership in either group is either involuntary, a source of a stable sense of identity, e.g. race, religion, gender, health status, age, class."

The second post effectively shuts down all further discussion: "You do not have my permission to comment on any of my dreamwidth entries on these issues, you do not have permission to private message me on these issues, you do not have permission to e-mail me on these issues, you do not have permission to speak to me in chat about these issues, you do not have permission to talk me on the phone or in person about these issues, you do not have permission to send me physical mail about these issues."

[info]cynatnite has deleted all of her comments to [info]impertinence; some of them have been archived in [info]lcsbanana's post, but if you have screencaps, link them.


(Read comments) - (Post a new comment)

So, out of curiousity...
[info]duende
2009-06-29 09:39 am UTC (link)
How many people here arguing for the absolute, on-pain-of-DEATH necessity of warnings buy books from the grownup sections of your local bookstore?

If you do and you're not picketing outside a publication company demanding a comprehensive system of warning codes to be required printing on the copyright information page of every book in existence, you basically have absolutely no right to throw tantrums about fanfiction authors failing to warn for anything except generic content not suitable for minors. Taking steps against distributing adult material to minors is the law. Anything beyond that is something you, as an adult, need to take personal responsibility for. If you can buy a book from the grownup section of the bookstore and decide to close it and set it aside without suffering deep trauma, you can open a fanfic in the grownup section of the internet and decide to close the window if it bothers you.

(Reply to this)(Thread)

Re: So, out of curiousity...
[info]joosetta
2009-06-29 10:24 am UTC (link)
Wow, you haven't been reading, have you? In several places during this discussion it has been pointed out that "grownup" books have much more comprehensive systems for warning - a reader with triggers can check detailed reviews on places like amazon before they purchase the book.

With published fiction, movies and television, survivors (by law in some cases) have the tools to protect themselves from triggering content. They know that they can find the information that they need, and maybe more importantly, they know that silence doesn't indicate a lack of something that may need warning for.

It's also really nice to see you getting into the condescending tone of things though, since everyone should just be a "grownup" and stop throwing "tantrums". It seems like you've got to the core of the issue!

Also, you're labouring under a misconception-
If you can buy a book from the grownup section of the bookstore and decide to close it and set it aside without suffering deep trauma

The point is, they can't do that. What they can do, is check detailed amazon reviews, or elsewhere for content they might find a trigger, and make an informed decision. If a survivor picks up a novel, and stumbles across triggering content, then it is too late. They have a traumatic emotional reaction - they can close the book, stop reading, but they can't set it aside, walk away and forget because the harm has already been done.

And hey - I don't know this because I am a survivor myself - I've just been reading the countless posts on the subject, listed above!

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)

Re: So, out of curiousity...
[info]pfeffermuse
2009-06-29 12:06 pm UTC (link)
I so ♥ you for this.

(Reply to this)(Parent)

Re: So, out of curiousity...
[info]faultypremise
2009-06-29 01:33 pm UTC (link)
Funny thing I saw the other day. I was watching Animal Planet and an episode of Animal Cops came on. It flashed a warning before the program intro even started about the graphic nature of the show.

Considering the debate that's going on lately, I got a good chuckle out of it and changed the channel. While animals in pain isn't triggering for me, it does make me upset enough to choke the assholes who abuse their pets.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)

Re: So, out of curiousity...
[info]gmth
2009-06-29 01:43 pm UTC (link)
It's the same thing with The Sopranos. There's an episode where one of the character is raped pretty violently, and HBO very clearly warns about it at the beginning of the ep. They also warn for graphic violence for nearly every episode. These warnings absolutely DO exist for TV shows.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)

Re: So, out of curiousity... - [info]faultypremise, 2009-06-29 04:29 pm UTC
Re: So, out of curiousity... - [info]oodlesoquim, 2009-06-29 04:36 pm UTC
Re: So, out of curiousity... - [info]tsubaki, 2009-06-29 05:01 pm UTC
Re: So, out of curiousity... - [info]lady_ganesh, 2009-06-29 05:03 pm UTC
Re: So, out of curiousity... - [info]oodlesoquim, 2009-06-29 08:16 pm UTC
Re: So, out of curiousity... - [info]ecchaniz0r, 2009-06-29 11:32 pm UTC
Re: So, out of curiousity... - [info]faultypremise, 2009-06-30 12:38 am UTC
Re: So, out of curiousity... - [info]lilpocketnin, 2009-06-30 01:44 am UTC
Re: So, out of curiousity... - [info]lady_ganesh, 2009-06-30 01:57 am UTC
Re: So, out of curiousity... - tree, 2009-06-30 07:12 am UTC
Re: So, out of curiousity... - [info]lady_ganesh, 2009-06-30 12:48 pm UTC
Re: So, out of curiousity... - [info]faultypremise, 2009-06-29 05:58 pm UTC
Re: So, out of curiousity... - [info]oodlesoquim, 2009-06-29 06:59 pm UTC
Re: So, out of curiousity... - [info]faultypremise, 2009-06-29 09:26 pm UTC
Re: So, out of curiousity... - [info]pfeffermuse, 2009-06-29 10:08 pm UTC
Re: So, out of curiousity... - [info]sandglass, 2009-06-29 04:53 pm UTC
Re: So, out of curiousity...
[info]rodo
2009-06-29 10:41 am UTC (link)
Funny, I haven't watched the latest episodes of Robin Hood yet, because I had the feeling one of my triggers might show up. Turns out I was right (I looked at the reviews first). I will watch them when I've sufficiently prepared myself for it. That might take weeks or months.

Likewise, I knew what I was getting into when I started reading the fifth Harry Potter book. I knew someone was going to die. It was warned for all over the place.

Most of the time, the clues for readers when it comes to books are much more subtle. There's a certain genre, there are reviews, covers, blurbs - all that gives the reader a clue.

You're also forgetting that books are not fanfiction. Both are read for different reasons and with different expectations. A trigger might have more impact in a fanfic (because the reader is more attached to the characters, for example) than it would have in a book.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)

Re: So, out of curiousity...
[info]sparklepuss
2009-06-29 03:29 pm UTC (link)
Yes, I completely agree with your point about attachment to characters in fic. It's rare that I have gotten as attached to a character in profic (except in the case of a few long series) as I have to characters from my favorite TV shows. I've cried hysterically over TV/fic characters dying, but I don't know if I ever have for a character in a book.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)

Re: So, out of curiousity...
[info]lady_ganesh
2009-06-29 05:33 pm UTC (link)
Hercule Poirot. Curtain. I think I cried for a week. But note that he was a series character.

(Reply to this)(Parent)

Re: So, out of curiousity... - [info]agilebrit, 2009-06-29 07:53 pm UTC
Poor Thomas - [info]sequinedlizard, 2009-06-30 12:59 pm UTC
Re: So, out of curiousity...
[info]faultypremise
2009-06-29 01:24 pm UTC (link)
Yeah, and I can read the back of that 'adult book' and decide for myself if the contents are anything that might be triggering. I can go online and do some research and if I find a review that says 'rape and marital abuse are present in this book' then I can say 'Yeah, don't want that thanks.'

And I am not one of those arguing on pain of death, I'm arguing that it'd be nice if authors would please warn (and most do, for which I am grateful).

It's just amazing how many people would rather say 'Fuck you, I wanna be an asshole' instead.

(Reply to this)(Parent)

Re: So, out of curiousity...
[info]gmth
2009-06-29 01:34 pm UTC (link)
That's a whole lot of not getting it, right there. You know that whole argument the anti-warnings crowd is throwing around, about how you should get a friend to vet a fic you're not sure about? That's what the whole internet is for when it comes to profic. Go to Google, type in the book's title, and you'll find out if it's got triggering content. That IS taking personal responsiblity. Until Amazon or bn.com or whatever starts collecting reviews of fan fic, your argument is invalid.

(Reply to this)(Parent)

Re: So, out of curiousity...
[info]ingrid
2009-06-29 01:36 pm UTC (link)
How many people here arguing for the absolute, on-pain-of-DEATH necessity of warnings

You find me the person arguing for that.

A request =/= a mandate. Unless the little voices in one's head are telling them that.

you basically have absolutely no right to throw tantrums

Be moar condescending, pls. It adds such value to the discussion.

(Reply to this)(Parent)

Re: So, out of curiousity...
[info]sparklepuss
2009-06-29 03:25 pm UTC (link)
Wow, look at you using words like "grownup." You're terribly clever, aren't you?

(Reply to this)(Parent)

Re: So, out of curiousity...
[info]oodlesoquim
2009-06-29 03:53 pm UTC (link)
Nobody is arguing for warnings on "pain of death." People just respectfully asked folks to consider warning for content that could send a rape survivor or PTSD sufferer into hours, days or weeks of flashbacks, nightmares and incapacitation. And when tons of fan fic writers started screaming "HOMG SENSERSHIP HOW DAER U HARSH MAI SQUEE!!1111one" and accusing those making the requests of being whiny babies and lying about their rape to get attention, a few of those survivors got angry and started speaking less than politely. But nobody insisted on warnings or demanded them. Because how, exactly, can you fucking force somebody to do that?

Nice try at a derail, though.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)

Re: So, out of curiousity...
[info]ardath_rekha
2009-07-02 02:27 pm UTC (link)
The nice thing is that those of us running archiving sites can force writers to use the warnings. As in, if you don't warn, we can your fic and you can take it elsewhere. XD Ah, the power is so heady.

I'm surprised at some of them. Even the Pit of Voles does this... and will pull fics that violate their rules. Assuming they're reported, of course.

(Reply to this)(Parent)

Re: So, out of curiousity...
[info]oodlesoquim
2009-06-29 04:10 pm UTC (link)
Also, you might want to try doing a little reading into seeing exactly why triggers that touch off bouts of mental illness =/= being merely "bothered" by something.

Here, I'm feeling like a generous Magical Educating Disabled Person today, so I'll even help you.

http://ptsd.about.com/od/selfhelp/a/CopingTriggers.htm

Google's really fucking hard to use, isn't it?

And before you get up on us whiny survivors for being impolite and swearing at you, consider that maybe we're sick of dealing with this kind of ignorance every day, day in and day out, and don't particularly want to deal with it when we're just looking for fics to read.

(Reply to this)(Parent)

Re: So, out of curiousity...
[info]lady_ganesh
2009-06-29 04:33 pm UTC (link)
I'm sure it's not worth my trouble to feed your trollbait, but I don't have PTSD or triggers and I check IMDb and/or other resources for rape every time I see a movie I'm not sure of. Books and fic don't bother me as much, but I still feel sick to my stomach when I find surprise sexual assault.

Most "grownups" don't feel the need to complain loudly about how sexual assault victims are 'throwing tantrums, btw.

(Reply to this)(Parent)

OBLIVION!
[info]sandglass
2009-06-29 04:50 pm UTC (link)
YOU FAIL!

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)

Re: OBLIVION!
[info]galletas
2009-06-30 12:13 am UTC (link)
OMG, this was the only thing in this thread that made me crack up. Thank you, fellow WoW geek. :)

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)

Re: OBLIVION! - [info]sandglass, 2009-06-30 01:01 am UTC

[info]chikane
2009-06-29 05:10 pm UTC (link)
Whoa, that's quite a tantrum you're throwing there.

I think you have quite a lot of growing up to do, because once you do, and bookstores DO let you into the grownup section, you'll discover a few interesting things about these books that will come in handy then.

Like reviews. And summaries. And the concept of genres.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]lady_ganesh
2009-06-29 05:21 pm UTC (link)
I remember my husband was once reading a book with a 'surprise' sexual assault (no warning, completely gratuitous beyond Wow, The Villain Is Bad). He was so upset he put it away and never read anything else by the author again.

Sort of like people do with fanfiction authors. I always new my husband was an evil oppressor!

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)

(no subject) - [info]chikane, 2009-06-29 09:16 pm UTC

[info]ecchaniz0r
2009-06-29 11:31 pm UTC (link)
This has nothing to do with the discussion at hand (I'm trying to keep the SO MUCH RAGE I WANT TO STAAAAAAAAB :D down - no desire to revert to my previous state as a rabid snarlwad), but who is that in your icon? They are adorable.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)

(no subject) - [info]chikane, 2009-06-30 05:10 am UTC
Re: So, out of curiousity...
[info]frequentmouse
2009-06-29 07:09 pm UTC (link)
So very much with the condescention and with bonus not getting it if you act now- what is this, a covert Billy Mayes Memorial Post?

In any case: I don't just go and randomly grab any book off the shelf in the library or book-store, and haven't at any time since childhood. I read book reviews (and started doing so as son as I could read My Weekly Reader: shockorz!), I ask for recommendations, I read the cover. I don't read some genres at all, I avoid some authors entirely, and with other authors I may ask before reading, as I did while reading American Gods if certain parts are likely to cause nightmares.

I also, always, read the first few chapters of the book and then read the ending. Always. Spoilers are my friend.

I have been a grown-up for many,many decades but I've had PTSD issues from early childhood. The funny thing about PTSD is that once you've been broken (by, say, seeing one's pregnant mother fall out of a moving vehicle where she was sitting next to you, and break her leg) then practically any other trauma rebreaks and makes the mended place weaker. Learning how to avoid those situations are an essential tactic to start to heal and grow stronger.

Learning how not to hurt other people is also an essentil skill for a sane and healthy grown-up.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)

Re: So, out of curiousity...
[info]oodlesoquim
2009-06-29 08:22 pm UTC (link)
I don't like the internet shorthand of using "this" to indicate agreement, but: THIS.

And I wish very much that you had not had that happen to you as a child (saying "I'm sorry that happened" to you has always felt strange to me, but that's the sentiment I'm trying to convey). I hope that you are as on the mend as is possible.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)

Re: So, out of curiousity... - [info]frequentmouse, 2009-06-29 08:37 pm UTC
Re: So, out of curiousity... - [info]ecchaniz0r, 2009-06-29 11:41 pm UTC
Re: So, out of curiousity... - [info]frequentmouse, 2009-06-29 11:57 pm UTC
Re: So, out of curiousity...
[info]hilarity
2009-06-29 09:36 pm UTC (link)
All of the logical ways to warn yourself about the content of a published novel aside (they've been mentioned to you in excess, not to mention rehashed in almost every single one of those posts linked above), fan authors are much more directly linked to their audience than are published authors. Fan authors hand deliver their work to the people they want to have read it. Because of this, the readers have much more of a right to stand up and say, holy shit, warn me here, at which point the author can very easily slide in a warning without republishing thousands of had copies.

Fandom is a community and the point of it is to share experiences with the other people in it. Fandom is intimate and exclusive by nature and requires respect and caring. Just as you wouldn't slap an injured stranger in the face while you walk down the street, dismissing people in your community of fans is rude and callous.

Fan fiction isn't the real world. Fan fiction doesn't pretend to be the real world. Fan fiction doesn't want to be the real world. The same rules do not apply.

(Reply to this)(Parent)

Re: So, out of curiousity...
[info]frequentmouse
2009-07-02 08:49 pm UTC (link)
Random check-back proves this a troll post, in the most precise classical definition of the term: make an intentionally provacative statement, and then stand back and watch the reaction. Good show, duende, it was almost like back in 1997 on the AOL parenting boards.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


(Read comments) -

 
   
Privacy Policy - COPPA
Legal Disclaimer - Site Map