Oddly, I'm not nearly as bothered by the anonymous hate thread/comm thingies as I am by previous iterations of the Protestant self-criticism meme in fandom (I came across this line in some socio-political text or other I read recently. Anglo Protestants built the self-criticism inherent in their religion into other aspects of their lives, including the modern democratic model. Thus the urge to self-police remains even after the religion is lost. Or something like that). In fact I find it extremely funny, a sign that I'm not taking it seriously. ^^; I've thought about it and decided this is precisely because the comments are anonymous. The adoption of anonymity demonstrates that the posters know they'd incur social consequence, or consequence period, by making these comments under their own names. Put it another way: they know they're just being assholes and blowing off steam. It's much better than being unpleasantly ranty under one's own (livejournal) name, which would tend to indicate high levels of self-righteousness, and the underlying belief that one is doing the world a favour by exposing and mocking "bad practices". (Or, as a secondary hypothesis, it would tend to indicate that the person is a vituperative ass and doesn't care who knows it.) I don't have an inherent problem with liminal behaviour as long as it's well contained within a liminal space, and
fanfic_hate certainly serves that purpose. It's like cosplaying: great at a con, but you'll look a right fool dressing up as Tenjou Utena to go to the supermarket. So by all means go and leave your anonymous burning hate all over the hate comm, if you really can't keep it in, and come back a calmer and kinder person for it.
(As for the hit the ficcers presumably take from being called out: I dunno. Maybe - certainly, in fact - I'd be more bothered if someone I knew were put on the spot and made to feel miserable. Personally I don't feel threatened by the idea. Smug in my self-esteem and my native independence, I guess. XD Just as I'm not so insecure that badfic getting more gushing feedback than my own (presumably) goodfic makes me gnash my teeth, so I can't imagine getting bashed on an anonymous forum would really destroy my week. I'd be burningly curious as to whether I knew the person, and I'd probably try to discuss it with them like the dork I am - "Really? What don't you like about the characterisation?" - but bottom line, if I think it's good it's good, and everyone else can go hang.
...That being said, from experience, if a third party says there's something wrong with the fic, and they can say it in good standard English with no errors, then nine times out of ten they're right. It might take me upwards of a year to come around to their POV, but they usually are. Whether or not they're an ass about it is a separate consideration from whether or not they're right, and should be dealt with accordingly. Even so I'd vastly prefer to know if someone were bothered by my fic, or even me personally - I mean what's an Internet person supposed to say about me? "She writes pretentious crap and thinks she's so smart, but guess what, nobody cares"? how can I be insulted by that? It's 100% true XD - because I'm socially dense by nature, and in RL I've been known to put my foot in it. So actually, if anyone has an issue with me, enryo shinaide, get it out in the open. Or mail me if you don't want to make a public issue of it, and we'll set up a nice little early morning duel in a private field somewhere. XDXD)
I suppose a good deal of my view on the matter stems from the fact that I don't perceive "fandom" itself as a liminal space - it's just what I use to communicate with my more geographically disparate social circle based on interest, more or less. Other people might. But personally, I apply the same standards of politeness, restraint and transparency online as I do offline. It's not so much that I have a point to prove, merely that I see no reason to do otherwise. (And once again, so not a hater. XD I was amused enough by the hate comm that I considered posting about some fic I hated, only to reach the conclusion that I don't hate any fic enough to produce a scathingly witty comment. The feelings that badfic produce in me - bemusement, amused dismay - bear no resemblance even to minor irritation, let alone full-blown indignation.)
(As for the hit the ficcers presumably take from being called out: I dunno. Maybe - certainly, in fact - I'd be more bothered if someone I knew were put on the spot and made to feel miserable. Personally I don't feel threatened by the idea. Smug in my self-esteem and my native independence, I guess. XD Just as I'm not so insecure that badfic getting more gushing feedback than my own (presumably) goodfic makes me gnash my teeth, so I can't imagine getting bashed on an anonymous forum would really destroy my week. I'd be burningly curious as to whether I knew the person, and I'd probably try to discuss it with them like the dork I am - "Really? What don't you like about the characterisation?" - but bottom line, if I think it's good it's good, and everyone else can go hang.
...That being said, from experience, if a third party says there's something wrong with the fic, and they can say it in good standard English with no errors, then nine times out of ten they're right. It might take me upwards of a year to come around to their POV, but they usually are. Whether or not they're an ass about it is a separate consideration from whether or not they're right, and should be dealt with accordingly. Even so I'd vastly prefer to know if someone were bothered by my fic, or even me personally - I mean what's an Internet person supposed to say about me? "She writes pretentious crap and thinks she's so smart, but guess what, nobody cares"? how can I be insulted by that? It's 100% true XD - because I'm socially dense by nature, and in RL I've been known to put my foot in it. So actually, if anyone has an issue with me, enryo shinaide, get it out in the open. Or mail me if you don't want to make a public issue of it, and we'll set up a nice little early morning duel in a private field somewhere. XDXD)
I suppose a good deal of my view on the matter stems from the fact that I don't perceive "fandom" itself as a liminal space - it's just what I use to communicate with my more geographically disparate social circle based on interest, more or less. Other people might. But personally, I apply the same standards of politeness, restraint and transparency online as I do offline. It's not so much that I have a point to prove, merely that I see no reason to do otherwise. (And once again, so not a hater. XD I was amused enough by the hate comm that I considered posting about some fic I hated, only to reach the conclusion that I don't hate any fic enough to produce a scathingly witty comment. The feelings that badfic produce in me - bemusement, amused dismay - bear no resemblance even to minor irritation, let alone full-blown indignation.)
no subject
Date: 2004-06-23 05:23 pm (UTC)My issue with 90% of all fic is just that it is poorly written, period. The issue with the other seven percent is that it's just not to my taste, and that is not really criticism, but an indicator that I am not in the audience (or that I just am not clever or well-read enough to get it, really, but that goes under not in audience). I'm not sure what "right" really indicates. If what they mean is 'I personally do not find this fic produced the intended effect within myself' this obviously is just a factual statement and is obviously correct. If the person didn't like the work for whatever reason, there must be something wrong there.
The net is sort of a liminal state, psychologically, I believe, not really that fandom is. In real life, people will sometimes actually state that they do hate another person, you know. Frankly, I think that may even happen more often, because you can tell by the look on someone's face that they don't like person X. They don't need to state it publically. I just see my blog as more of a column/soapbox, and stating "I don't like fic X" is worthy material if I can get something out of it, but stating, I don't like person X personally seems rather inappropriate for a soapbox in a public park. Now, I highly disapprove of the action person X has taken might be appropriate (for my blog only, YMMV).
no subject
Date: 2004-06-23 05:36 pm (UTC)Two reasons I see:
A) Some people really don't want to start crap. See "Cassandra Claire, criticism of."
B) Because they don't want to directly tell one of their friends that said friend's fic has a problem.
no subject
Date: 2004-06-23 07:11 pm (UTC)Right. Er... right? o_O; Something like this: "The end kind of threw me. The metaphor seems kind of heavy-handed and repetitive, IMO it's OOC for [insert chara] anyway." To which one responds (mentally if not in so many words), "Fiddlesticks, I like that metaphor and in any case the entire fic was leading up to that scene." And leaves it as is. Except then one reads it months later and goes, "Know what, you were right. The scene goes." I'm not quite sure what the precise word for this is in English, but in French you'd say une faute de goût. A failure of taste. It may not be stereotypically bad even, but you as a writer have done something "wrong". It comes down to gut instinct, so nothing one can argue really.
So: if someone says in good faith you're OOC, straining belief, overly flowery, etc., they're probably right. Even if one'd rather think they were just being an asshat. ^^; Though once again it comes back to one's own judgment: sometimes the appropriate answer is "it's meant to be unrealistic."
It's possibly to dislike someone in RL mysteriously, just because their appearence rubs one the wrong way. :P But since the net removes that factor (and also most occasions for that person to actually do something to you to cause you to dislike them, like an annoying neighbour who plays the radio too loud or a roommate who never does the dishes), my instinct is that online should be more polite than offline, not vice-versa. The last time I stated this I was roundly laughed at. XD
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Date: 2004-06-23 08:54 pm (UTC)No, seriously,
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Date: 2004-06-23 09:11 pm (UTC)Rightness: Yeah, but repetitive and heavy handed and cliche, as terms, are all in the eye of the beholder. But even so, there is the meant to be unrealistic out.
I think it is totally possible to dislike someone online mysteriously. There are people whose writing I find vaguely irksome, in that the way they write about things is just annoying to read, but it's hard to explain why it bothers me. This is probably repetitive, but the reason why people online are less polite is because little is at stake. If something were, they would be more serious and not do trollish things. IRL you can't be an asshat or a troll without getting consequences. Online, the consequences are far less. Also, people online are not who and how they are in real life. After all, 90% of communication is not in the words purely.
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Date: 2004-06-23 09:24 pm (UTC)b) But is 'hate' really the most explicit explanation of that? I guess I only really 'hate' fanfiction that is very poor writing in general. The rest I disagree with or wasn't written for me.
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Date: 2004-06-23 09:46 pm (UTC)(Actually I remember reading quite a few HnG fic in which there was much Go, either literal or metaphorical. Many ficcers out there have greater Go-fu than me, not that it takes much.)
no subject
Date: 2004-06-23 09:58 pm (UTC)You should write that, really. It sounds spiffy! Shit, I'd beta, and give what pathetic Go pointers I could. The white papers are neat, though, even if the whole gnugo smart groups thing kind of baffles me, technically. (Me, I obsessively hit the 'random page' link on sensei's. Suze big nerd.)
What I want to write - and will - is something Ogata being a freak and trying to "solve" Go and being obsessed with actually proving something about the game mathematically (maybe that there's no 'ultimate starting move', but probably something with more algorithmic teeth), thus killing it as a game, moving it into 'solved problem' territory, because he is a crazy INTJ freak spaz. ... I am the only person in the world who likes Ogata, I think.
(Dude, where? Who? I mean, obviously not the Pit of Voles, but... I jones!)