hth: (i'm a veronica)
For years, [livejournal.com profile] marythefan and I have had this running argument over the relative queerness of slash, and here's the thing. I was entirely wrong, and she was entirely right. Now, with the fervor of the convert (the very lazy, conflict-avoidant, cognitively muddled convert...), I want to try to make this idea clear to people like me, who think it sounds like bullshit at first. Hopefully it will take somewhat less effort than moving in with each one of you individually and talking for five years. *g*

There's this thing, this community and tradition, that is slash fandom. But there's also this thing, this somewhat less organized but no less creative and articulate and engaged group of people who are queer media fans. (By this you may wonder whether I mean "queer fans of media" or "fans of queer media." That's not an easy question to answer, but I'll try to get back to it in a second, okay? Stick with me for the moment.) It's a big Venn Diagram: there's slash space and queer space, and then a whole lot of people (like myself) who identify as both, who are entrenched in both perspectives and both communities. And many (most?) of us discovered and entered both communities simultaneously, which is why I think it's so easy for us to assume that the two groups are identical. They aren't.

It's easy to see from one direction, really. The world is FULL of queer people who are science fiction geeks and comic book geeks and pop culture junkies, but who don't give a hot damn about slash fandom. We all know that -- I mean, surely we all know that! Some of them just think it's kind of an oddball thing to be into, some think it's fine and dandy but not their cup of tea, and some of them are pretty suspicious of slash for a multitude of reasons. But they are definitely NOT slashers, and they more often than not don't really understand or appreciate what slash is. They are outsiders to what we do as slashers. They know that, and we know that.

What's harder, it seems like, for some slashers to recognize is that it's exactly the same from the other angle. Being a slasher doesn't mean you necessarily have the slightest insight into, or interest in, the queer community. The acafan and meta-heavy wing of slash fandom has been saying this for some time: that slashers don't necessarily write about queerness, they write about things that relate largely to straight femaleness. Actually, I added in the "necessarily" -- that's often left out of the position statement, which I think is vastly more correct if you include that one word. There ARE slashers who write about queerness -- both straight and queer slashers who do so. Some slash does that. Just not *all* slash.

So, if a lot of ink (virtual and otherwise) has been spilled over what slash is -- what does it mean, separate from that, to have queer fandom? Essentially, I would say it's a space within Fandom that looks at texts for what they say about what it means to be queer. Sometimes that means queer subtext -- sometimes it means queer characters -- sometimes it means texts that challenge social norms about sex and gender in ways that are relevant to queer experience. But in order to do any of this, to participate in a legitimately queer fandom...I'm not going to be the border police and say, yes, you have to be queer -- but you have to have some legitimate, real sense of what "queer experience" could mean. In the majority of cases, yes, that's going to come about because you identify as queer yourself; it's normally going to be lived experience, not the vicarious experience of the ally.

I can already feel the objections some people are going to make to this. Queer people disagree with each other all the time! Gay men have experiences and concerns that are different from those of lesbians! Bisexual people have experiences that are different from both! Bisexual people who live within the queer community have a different perspective than bisexual people in heterosexual marriages! Transgendered people are a whole separate thing! Race! Class! Nationality! Religion! Individual difference! Okay -- yes. "Queer experience" is a false singular; the reality is, of course, "queer experiences." And that's what makes queer fandom fun and exciting -- if we all agreed on what images and media and positions spoke most clearly to us, there'd be no point in talking about it at all. Diversity, huzzah!

However, for the most part, what you can say is that people who identify as queer do so because they feel like their lives are different than they would be if they were straight. People who *don't* believe that are very unlikely to take on the label of queer or be very interested in queer analysis. How different? In what way? How should we use that difference as consumers and producers of media? What are the political uses and limits of the idea of difference? Those are the conversations that go on in queer fandom. That's what we talk about.

Those are not questions that are about slash. Slashers, on an individual level, may participate in queer fandom, and they may bring what's going on over there back into slash. In fact, I think that's been happening at a good clip for the last ten years, leading to an immense surge in fresh, interesting voices in slash that largely weren't there Back In the Day.

Slash is largely about pleasure. That's not to denigrate it as merely porn or merely entertainment: pleasure, particularly female pleasure, is a powerful and politically-charged concept. We still live in a society that is profoundly ambivalent about female sexual pleasure: we're fascinated by it and we resent and fear it as well. For women to take full responsibility for who they are as sexual beings is not unimportant, and for women to insist on varieties of romantic fantasy and erotic stimulation that speak to *them,* not to the people they've been informed they should be -- that matter. Slash matters.

But queerness isn't about female pleasure and female pleasure isn't about queerness. It's just that there are a lot of us for whom the two are related in various ways, and a lot of those very people have been hugely influental in shaping *both* the slash community and the queer fannish community, so that there's a constant flow of ideas and dialogue between the two that can even obscure the fact that it's a conversation *between* rather than a conversation *among* or *within.*

Hopefully this provides some context for some of the things I've said lately, both here and in [livejournal.com profile] cathexys's journal, about my discomfort with the way the slash community often deals with gayness -- the OMG, THAT'S SO GAY! discourse. Because, look, here's the thing: slashers invented slashiness. Not y'all personally, but the current generation of slashers inherited a tradition and shaped it and refined it and evolved it, and we who are slashers, who are within that community, are the sole and unequivocal arbiters of what "slashy" means. Not that we always agree with each other -- again, half the fun! But it would be flatly ridiculous for someone to come in from outside the slash community and tell us what's slashy and what's not. We know slash. That's our turf as slashers.

Queerness is the turf of queer fans, not of slashers. You know who gets to say what's so totally gay? Gay people. Not that they will always agree with each other! Not that they will always *disagree* with what straight people think. But the thing is, people who are saturated in queerness and spend our lives thinking about the queer issues -- guys, we get to be the voice of what's SO GAY.

Doesn't that just make sense? I mean, I have Jewish friends and have studied Judaism and truly admire the religion and the culture in many ways -- but as much as an ally as I consider myself, I would never in a bazillion years blithely assume I could announce what was a so very Jewish way to think, act, be, believe. And if I did, if I wrote in my livejournal about how X character's actions were just, my God! SO JEWISH, you know?!? -- particularly when the character isn't canonically Jewish, but just pings my shiksa sense of what "Jewishness" means...I would expect my Jewish readers to look askance at me. It would be, at best, a weird thing to say, and at worst, an immensely insensitive thing to say. Even if they agreed with me that there was something Jewishy about that moment, I think they'd be justified in wondering wtf I was thinking when I said that.

That's how I often feel when I see people who are entrenched in the slash community but not in the queer fan community making similar statements about queerness. I get that slash fans are generally natural allies; I adore many of my straight sisters in slash fandom, and I believe that most of them truly are innocent of homophobia. But it makes me feel weird to listen to people who are allies, who are interested, but who are outsiders who possess privilege in this situation, pretend to operate from a position of insiderness. It's kind of patronizing, just like it would be if I charged around having all the answers about what, say, Asian-Americans were really like. I might be right in many cases, or I might be dead wrong -- more likely, it's oversimplifying to say yes, I got it right or no, I got it wrong. But whatever, the point is, I wouldn't do it because it's an inappropriate position for me as a white American to take. If I want to talk about Asian-Americanness -- say, because I'm writing a CSI story about Archie or a Buffy/Satsu epic -- I would listen a lot more than I talked. I would try to be faithful to what I heard people whose experience it actually was saying.

That so many slash fans believe that advice can't possibly apply to them -- freaks me out, actually. Being a slasher is not a Gay Ghetto Pass. It's one thing to say, you know, for the purposes of my stories, I don't need to know about queerness, because these characters aren't "really" queer, they're "really" reflections of my experience, on which I am an expert. I have mixed feelings about that statment, but I can appreciate the intellectual honesty of it.

My sense of compromise grinds to a halt when slash fandom claims the authority to parse not what is slashy, but what is gay. If you care about queer experience, do what other power majorities do when they want to learn about and be involved with a minority group: listen, listen some more, and when you speak, speak from a position of someone who is a guest in other peoples' reality, not from a false sense of insiderness or queer credibility. If you don't care about queer experience, that's okay, too. Just don't say that you do. Don't pronounce about gayness as a lark if the reality is that gayness is irrelevant to what you care about as a slasher -- which is slashiness.

Action

Date: 2008-02-15 12:35 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] domarigatosensa.livejournal.com
You confuse thought (imagining sexual acts) with action (having sex), and action with reaction.
Having a reaction to reading something someone else wrote is not 'participating' in any activity.
Your theory may sound interesting, but it is based on air.

Domo

Re: Action

Date: 2008-02-15 07:31 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] liviapenn.livejournal.com
ext_108: Jules from Psych saying "You guys are thinking about cupcakes, aren't you?" (Default)

.... what is *with* the multiple journals (this one and thelademonessa) that are being created solely to comment on this discussion?

It's pretty obvious that these journals were both created in the past 24 hours and have only ever been used to comment on this thread. It makes it very difficult to take comments seriously when it appears that they come from someone creating multiple sockpuppets.

Re: Action

Date: 2008-02-15 08:28 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] becky-h.livejournal.com
I'm pretty sure they're non-LJ users creating journals rather than leaving anon comments. A lot of Trek fandom (which [livejournal.com profile] mrs260 is obviously part of) still happens off LJ.

Re: Action

Date: 2008-02-15 09:38 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] thelademonessa.livejournal.com
I'm not a sockpuppet, I just hate live journal and yes, I did create this identity specifically to comment on this discussion--more accurately, I created this account to refute a rude, small minded bully who attacked my friend.

I have been a slash writer since 1996 on ASCEM. I served as its moderator at one point and I happen to prefer newsgroups to live journal. I'm one person; JA Ingram. I used to write under the name JA Chapman before I was married. My most recent slash was a series of novels known as The Garak and Bashir Mysteries. If you need a resume I can give it, but I'm not a made up entity who exists solely to confuse you or anyone else.

I also am not usually as incendiary as I was in my post to this woman, but I dislike bullies intensely. I am very open about who I am, what I write, and what my opinions are and I try, usually, to be as fair minded as possible, but I dislike it when someone upsets my people.

You see, Mark is a gentle and loving person and he tries to be as respectful to people as he possibly can. He never attacks anyone, he's very passive, and he'll blame himself before blaming the other guy--even when they are dead wrong.

He e-mailed us, his friends, about this discussion asking if he had said something wrong. He blamed himself for this woman's bad manners and felt awful despite repeatedly attempting to clarify himself. *HE* felt bad. He did not ask me to step in, I did that on my own and I apologized to HIM for getting overprotective. It was suggested to me that this Sarah/ Harriet Spy blogger is not the person she appeared to be here and I was told it would be best if I apologized to her as well.

I have no intention of doing so.

As I see it, Mark is owed an apology. If calling me and mine 'sockpuppets' makes it easier to maintain that one of you was 100% right and the other 100% wrong, so be it. Call me a shadow or a puppet. Go over to ASCEM or any other established trek site or discussion list and ask if LaDemonessa is real and see what they say. I'm not trying to be arrogant, but I've paid my dues. I've been here--in the slash world--long enough to have established a reputation, and for the most part that reputation is pretty solid.

Call me whatever you like, just back it up when you do.

---Jen

Re: Action

Date: 2008-02-16 08:16 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] liviapenn.livejournal.com
ext_108: Jules from Psych saying "You guys are thinking about cupcakes, aren't you?" (Default)

1) I didn't call you anything. I wasn't even talking to you.

2) I didn't say you were a sockpuppet. I said that the sudden creation of *multiple* brand-new empty journals, made it hard to take part in the conversation because it *appeared* that sockpuppets were being employed.

I understand that you're new to livejournal, so maybe you're not familiar with the way these things are perceived. But in general, when multiple brand-new journals are being created to take part in an argument, most people's first thought is going to be "sockpuppet," especially if one of the brand-new journals is being used to make threats and personal attacks.

Re: Action

Date: 2008-02-16 08:42 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] thelademonessa.livejournal.com
And I apologize if you thought I was attacking you. I wasn't. I was clarifying myself. You stated that you thought we were sockpuppets and I took that to mean you assumed Mark had invented us to strengthen his position. I wanted to make it clear that I am a very real person and not Mark nor did I threaten you. I stated, quite clearly, why I commented and what the situation was. In case I was not clear then let me say this another way:

Mark made a simple comment that rubbed Sarah the wrong way. Sarah attacked. Mark attempted to correct himself. Sarah attacked. Mark attempted again to clarify himself. Sarah continued to attack. So on and so forth and then Mark, very upset and assuming he was in the wrong asked several friends to read the thread and decide if he was out of line and if he was how he should go about making it right.

Mark, by the way, is studying to be a Quaker if that says something. He's very, very kind and soft hearted. He did not ask us to save him, he did not speak ill of Sarah in the least.

*I* read her posts and found her behavior appalling. *I* decided to say something. I said it and that was that.

Apparently, other people found it a bit over the top as well because, as you noticed, they--like me--created accounts specifically to refute this argument.

You stated that it was hard to take any of our opinions seriously when we were obviously sock puppets. A kind and observant lady pointed out that we were not regular LJ members and joined specifically to comment on this. I decided to make it clear to you and everyone else that I am a real person, not Mark. I didn't want Mark to have to undergo more stress because of me or this thread.

As for personal attacks, I don't know Sarah. A friend of mine does and says she's a very nice person. She may be, I don't know. I only know her behavior was very bad and she attacked my friend. The first attack was understandable; Mark's comment could be misconstrued easily. He misspoke. It was the fact that she relentlessly pursued him that angered me.

Now, if you want to follow her lead and get angry and use this as an opportunity to vent, that's your right. Believe it or not I pride myself on being a reasonable person and I don't like to fight. This isn't that important to me and I've said what I needed to say so I'm willing to drop it. For all I know you're just doing what I did; defending your friend, Sarah, because you see her as being unfairly persecuted. I can admire that, but if Mark had been wrong and if he had been rude, I wouldn't have defended him. I would have told him to back out gracefully and apologize. In my opinion the right thing to do would be for Sarah to apologize to Mark but that's probably not going to happen and does it really matter anymore?

Now we know each other and where we stand. Hope this helped. :)

Re: Action

Date: 2008-02-18 10:33 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] mysticdreamer32.livejournal.com
Well, I sometimes create xanga's or lj's to separate my recs lists, (like my go recs here http://www.xanga.com/home2.aspx?user=chrstys_go_recs ) But I link to them, and every one knows their mine. But I know what your saying--I've seen people make lj's to circumvent being banned by a user or community..and that my friend is scock puppet. And I'm seeing more and more of them. Unfortunately all they need is a email to get an lj. honestly It's pissing me off cause they make it alot harder on others. Because communities are getting feed up with them witch makes it harder on us join a community,or friend someone.


Re: Action

Date: 2008-02-15 11:27 pm (UTC)From: [personal profile] ex_mrs260625
As Jen said, I asked a few friends to give me some feedback about my part in the above argument in this subthread, so I could avoid similar misunderstandings in the future. I didn't ask anyone to comment, though I neglected to ask them not to comment specifically on my behalf. (I do apologize for extra strife caused by that neglect.)

As far as I'm aware, Jen is the only one who created an LJ specifically to comment on this discussion after being made aware of it by me. (I have no idea whether I know domarigatosensa, but I suspect not.)

Re: Action

Date: 2008-02-16 08:24 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] liviapenn.livejournal.com
ext_108: Jules from Psych saying "You guys are thinking about cupcakes, aren't you?" (Default)

What's a nice way to say this? Maybe in the future Jen isn't the *very* first person you want to ask for feedback about livejournal netiquette.

Re: Action

Date: 2008-02-16 08:48 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] thelademonessa.livejournal.com
Actually that wasn't a very nice way of saying it, but then you weren't trying to be very nice, were you?

Doesn't matter though. This sort of teen age melodrama bores me. I just don't get it. I just don't understand what thrill you people get from being snarky and nasty to one another.

'LiveJournal netiquette'. I'll be sure to make note of it when I see a good example of some.

Re: Action

Date: 2008-02-16 08:20 am (UTC)From: [personal profile] vass
vass: Small turtle with green leaf in its mouth (Default)
Jen Ingram (the demonessa one) used to be a BNF in usenet trek fandom. She's still active on lists. She did sign her comment (whatever you or I might think of that comment) with her real name, including the name (JA Chapman) that she used on usenet - I think it's worth taking that as earnest of her not being a sockpuppet.

Edit: never mind, I saw her response and yours. I don't know why I'm getting involved anyway.

Re: Action

Date: 2008-02-16 08:51 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] thelademonessa.livejournal.com
Well, thank you anyway and you are a wiser person than I am. I'll bow to your superior wisdom and do the same.

And thank you again. I really appreciate what you said and I'm sorry I had to show my ass in front of you like this.

---Jen

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hth: recent b&w photo of Gillian Anderson (Default)
Hth

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