yonmei

Recent Entries

You are viewing the most recent 6 entries

August 10th, 2009

12:13 pm: Marked and unmarked: other thoughts
Connie Willis to me (I was invisibly at the back of the audience) "I think you have a major misconception about how writers work" and went on to explain to me that a writer gets an idea for a story because something comes alive for them - as I myself sometimes put it, "something clicks". The story is there - you can write it or refuse to write it, but the essential elements are by that time a given.

My question had been born out of the thought, sitting at the back of the room, listening to four North American voices from people I could not see (none of whose books I was familiar with, though of course I had heard of Sterling and of Willis as writers) why these four North Americans, when they were talking about "writing history" were all talking about British/European history. (One of them clarified, when I asked why they were writing in the histories of continents not their own, that he also writes Japanese history).

Backing up a day, when I was at the Writing Gender Issues panel, I said that I thought I had been invited to be on it because I am a lesbian who writes m/m slash stories: I habitually and regularly write people whose gender is not my own. And of course (even sometimes by other slash fans) I'm asked why. Why do I, a lesbian, want to write about two men and their relationship?

I could answer, as Connie Willis answered me, that this is because the ideas for stories that click for me are pretty much always fanfic about two men in a sexual/sexually charged relationship. Or I could answer, as (I think it was Sterling) answered me, "Because that's what we're taught in school" (because our cultural values are such that writing about that topic is just easy/obvious - we're taught to value men - we're taught to value British/European history - )

And with that response, things clicked for me, and I walked over to Cafe Momus for lunch and to find a computer to post this thought, which relates to the Werewolves of Brigadoon thing too:

For North Americans, at least for white North Americans, writing about British/European history by preference to their own is unmarked. "Medieval England" is an unmarked period for North Americans to be interested in, to research, to write novels about, but writing novels in the same time period in North America would be a marked choice - it would put you outside the circle, to acknowledge that period as part of American history.

Whereas for me, a lesbian writing m/m slash stories, I think it partly confuses people so much (and I have had to explain it/think about it so much that I think in all honesty it's Connie Willis who has a major misconception about "how writers work", not me: I think I've thought about it a lot more than she has) because it mixes things up: what is marked? What is unmarked? I am a lesbian writing: I write about gay male relationships: I am a woman writing about men: I am a fan writing fanfic.

I have had a splendid con, and there is still the Are Fans Slans? panel with Kate Nepvau and Patrick Nielsen Hayden to go. Hee.

(I may sneak out if Kate isn't on it: but oh boy, do I ever want to watch this cage match!)

Current Mood: chipper
Tags: , , ,

June 5th, 2008

06:40 pm: Yay! What? Oh...
Back awhile ago, I noticed that [info]bethbethbeth had announced yet another OTW thingie in her journal, and as I was (a) fairly busy and (b) had decided just to avoid OTW stuff in order not to snark about it being LJ-only, I didn't click on the link.

Then RL/non-online Stuff Happened - really, um, lots of stuff, including but not limited to a major work event and my back going out, and so when [info]bethbethbeth lambasted me for not joining the new IJ OTW-community and explained that yes, uniquely and newly and unlike all other OTW stuff this was not limited to LJ-people only...

...and I literally did not have the time or the energy to even go look at it. (Well, briefly, I did: except I was actually soaking up Scottish sun/writing a crossover story instead. Not really sorry, either.)

But this evening, I thought: I now have three days free! I can join the new OTW community! I can find out what was happening! I can make comments!

...er. It turns out it was a strictly time-limited community, intended to be open to the IJ-public for six days or so, and I missed it.

(I did join it anyway. I can at least see what they were talking about, and if they decide to do it again I'll be there.)

Current Mood: I guess I have to be amused...
Tags: , ,

April 7th, 2008

10:41 am: Snark is *not* a valid way to begin a discussion
(And I apologise to [info]bethbethbeth and [info]elke_tanzer for snarking on their journals, and hereby commit not to snark about OTW on any other OTWsquee posts on anyone else's journal...)

But nevertheless, I could wish that the reaction of OTWers to the point that if you are not on livejournal, you are excluded from OTW, was rather more constructive than blank denial.

If you do not have a livejournal, you cannot participate in the Organisation of Transformative Works. It's set up that way. While this makes me feel snarky whenever I see someone squeeing about OTW, for a number of reasons including the fact that just about the last thing fandom needs is yet another organisation exclusively for livejournal fans, what makes me really cranky is that OTW fans will not acknowledge that their organisation is exclusively for livejournal fans.

Signed,

Cranky Platypus.

Current Mood: cranky
Tags: , , , ,

February 25th, 2008

03:01 pm: The Final Word on Nutrition
After an exhaustive review of the research literature, here's the final word on nutrition and health:
1. Japanese eat very little fat and suffer fewer heart attacks than us.
2. Mexicans eat a lot of fat and suffer fewer heart attacks than us.
3. Chinese drink very little red wine and suffer fewer heart attacks than us.
4. Italians drink excessive amounts of red wine and suffer fewer heart attacks than us
5. Germans drink beer and eat lots of sausages and fats and suffer fewer heart attacks than us.

CONCLUSION: Eat and drink what you like. Speaking English is apparently what kills you.

speaking of which )

Tags: , , , , , , ,

January 18th, 2008

09:22 am: Seven Reasons Why Fanfic Is Like Gay Marriage
I like this:

1) A lot of people believe it is immoral and illegal--despite some forms of it being legal in some places, and having a history that goes back thousands of years.

2) A lot of the reactions are based not on rational or legal arguments, but personal squick--specifically, anti-sex squick, where the objector believes that any form of sexuality they don't like should be forbidden to everyone.

3) There's a long mainstream history of ignoring or denigrating both alternative-to-mainstream sexualities, and alternative-to-mainstream creativities: and strong connections between both.

4) Both inspire a common reaction of, "well, I suppose some people Do That Stuff, but do they need to be public about it? Why can't they just keep it to themselves and not inflict their weirdness/perversion on the rest of us?"

5) A serious, public interest in either can result in lost job opportunities and community ostracisation. It is common enough for people to argue in both instances "you're not actually being prosecuted - what more do you want?"

6) Some people reply to either with "well, you can want that, of course... but you should be able to control your impulse to act on those wants."

7) Most of the people getting outraged are not personally affected by either. In very basic terms, they are trying to control the behaviour of other people that has absolutely no effect on them. If you don't believe in gay marriage, don't marry someone of the same gender. And if you don't believe in fanfic, neither write it nor read it. A hefty helping of MYODB is now being served at the control-freak buffet. Please help yourself.

(Credit to [info]elfwreck and [info]aislingthebard, responding to a specific ranty-mcranty-pants post about the ingratitude of fanfic writers that they are not constantly being sued.)


Tags: , , , , ,

June 9th, 2003

07:34 pm: Fred continues to multiply...
[info]mhw interviewed me:

1) Do you still write much slash? and did you ever think, when you showed me the K/S stuff and I was decidedly perplexed and not-at-all-sure, that I might end up years later writing slash?

Yes. I never think. )

2) Do you think you'll ever move away from Edinburgh? if you had to leave, where would you move to?

I did. But I came back. )

3) How do you think you've changed since we last met?

ten years after )

4) How did you select your LJ name, and what, if anything, does it signify?

yonmei is... )

5) At the wave of a magic wand, I find myself solvent and mobile again, and shall be able to come up to Edinburgh for a few days. There must be oodles of stuff there we haven't seen or done together: what would you suggest for a splendid day's itinerary?

morning, noon, and night )

If you want Fred to continue propagating, ask me to ask you questions.

Tags: , , , , ,
Powered by InsaneJournal