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[personal profile] amanuensis1
[livejournal.com profile] gmth has a post about the difficulties of losing interest in a fandom and the inability to just "make" oneself obsessed with a new one. You can't court the thunderbolt.

It's hard to sustain fannishness for just one thing. And yet, we're only as deeply fannish as we can be when it is for just one thing.

That's how it's been for me with HP. (More specifically HP slash, but let's allow the source material to stand for the smaller focus.) For the most part, I still eat, sleep, and breathe it, but it's a different eat/sleep/breathe than it was at the beginning. At first I was devoted to writing fic, reading fic, viewing art, commenting on fic/art, meta and responding to meta. Over the years it's become something else: reading fic, viewing art, commenting on fic/art, interacting with the friends I've made through HP (and with whom HP is still a large part of our discussions), reacting to disillusionment over the canon, and thinking about writing fic more than the actual writing of it. ^_^

You'd look at that evolution of my obsession and you might say that a lot of that is not HP; surfing livejournal is not merely HP; sympathising with someone over their grandmother's illness is not at all HP; discussing the 300 trailer is not at all HP. But I'd respond, I would not have a livejournal if not for HP. Not just that HP brought me to livejournal; I mean that if HP were not in my life I would be unlikely to want to sustain the journal. When I talk to someone about Torchwood or Pet Shop of Horrors or their cat, there's still this sense of connection that we became interactive friends because we share or once shared that fondness for HP. There's this bit from an old French TV show where Sherlock Holmes's character quotes something, and then says, "Shakespeare." Watson says, wait, that's not Shakespeare, that's Dickens. Holmes quips, "Tout est Shakespeare. Même Dickens," (Everything's Shakespeare. Even Dickens). (ETA: Or is that "Tout sont Shakespeare"? Here I admit my monolingualness, despite all that study.)

All through that, yes, I have had other interests. You might even call them fannish; you might even call them fandoms. I'm not sure I would, because I think fandom implies major dedicated interest. Yes, even as I adore HP fandom, I do watch television, see movies, read books. Stories, in prose and in audio and in visual media, are my life. I do not ever want to have children because that would cut into all of that and I'd effing resent that. I've never missed an episode of 24, never missed one of the new Doctor Who. I have even scribbled a ficlet for each of those sources, and have read a bit of fanfiction for them. Am I in their fandom? I don't really feel I am. I'm a fan, yes. But there needs to be more, needs to be a sense of, "I love this thing, I am really dedicated to thinking about these characters/situations, am highly needy to know more about their off-screen lives and how they'd be in situations that I dream up. I want to see pictures of that and read stories about that and you know what, I have the stories in my head I want to see and I know no one will write them precisely the way I want to see them written so I gotta do it, in fact I can hardly wait to do it, where's my Microsoft Word icon, new document, yes, yes, yes..."

No, I don't think that "in fandom" must equal "fanfiction writer/fanartist" for everyone. Some people have no need to create in that way, and so can't be held to those criteria. But I think you have to want more than the canon, have to think about what's beyond the canon a lot, be needy about it. If you don't die of squee a bit when you discover that someone has drawn a picture of your OTP from the canon, I don't think you really have a deep enough devotion to be "in" the fandom. For me, that latter's a really good criterion; my heart pulses faster when I see the words Harry/Lucius, Harry/Draco, Harry/Sirius on a link in [livejournal.com profile] hp_art_daily. To this day it does, oh yeah.

Some of that is because I really, really, really, really don't want another fandom than HP--I'm spoiled by its vastness. I read Lois McMaster Bujold's The Sharing Knife some months back, freakin' loved it, searched the 'net for any fansites devoted to it. I really wanted me some fanart of the characters. There isn't s**t out there for it. So I squelched my disappointment and thanked my lucky stars again for having been thunderbolted into HP, the fandom which has entire communities devoted to skirtporn and SnapeSlash. Am I eager to stay in this fandom, to actively resist being sucked into another? Hell, yes. Will that matter, will my character be any less if it does happen one day? Hey, you try hiding from a determined thunderbolt.
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Date: 2007-04-07 02:46 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] markeyisapunk.livejournal.com
really interesting post. I feel very much the same way about the buffy fandom. I found the online community through buffy, and a real need to have more/different than canon had to offer. I was a fairly active latecomer to the b/a shipper communtiy, and when buffy (the show) ended, it was an odd feeling to not have that drive that neediness I guess. we all went our separate ways--many buffy fans moved over to the harry potter fandom. and b/a shippers didn't all translate to the same shipdoms in the harry potter world. so friends that I made following b/a forced me to exapnd my harry potter pairing horizons. smilalry, I fell into the slash community at HP because I adore james/sirius and harry/sirius and the twins... and that led me back to buffy writers who were not doing mainstream b/a fics. anyway, it'll be interesting when HP ends, to see where people from HP migrate next. one benefit of teh reduced attachment level (for me) is that I can enjoy more varied types of fics now, whereas when I came into buffy fandom, I disliked pairings that flew against canon (or involved angel and cordelia). in HP, it's a more laid back response ranging from hell yah! to eh, not my cuppa...

rambling a bit, but yeah, there is a warm spot in my heart for the friends I made in the buffy fandom, and even though we don't talk about buffy anymore, really, that fandom brought me onto the internet and shaped teh way I know it--I literally learned to use a chat room to talk with the folks at teh babble board. go nostalgia :)

anyway, thanks for an interesting and thoughtful post.

Date: 2007-04-08 08:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] amanuensis1.livejournal.com
many buffy fans moved over to the harry potter fandom. and b/a shippers didn't all translate to the same shipdoms in the harry potter world.

Whimper! Yeah, that's something sobering to realize; even if everyone jumps to a new fandom, you may not all be enjoying the same subjects. I would feel sad if that happened!

Date: 2007-04-08 08:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] markeyisapunk.livejournal.com
well, it's only sad if you look at it that way. it's true that we can't all squee together about the same pairings, but it also forces you to be a bit more open minded or varied in your reading. and it's interesting to see who goes where and why. change can be both good and bad, but I don't think this is an instance I'd label as bad. and the potential for cross-over fics makes it that much better. I am now waiting for the doctor who/ buffy/ harry potter/ heroes/ /x files/ bionic woman/ a-team/ lost? post-apocalyptic crossover fic where everyone says, you survived how? and everyone else shrugs and pretends to be normal people...

is someone likely to write thsi anytime soon? no, but you have to admit, the odds are getting better!
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