hmpf: Cole and Ramse from the show not actually called "Splinter" (meta)
[personal profile] hmpf
fandom seems to have moved to livejournal almost completely, even for those things that aren't necessarily best served by LJ. In fact, very little except the pure socialising part of fandom - which is, of course, an important part, no contest about that! - is *really* best served by LJ. Forums are better suited for discussion, since they allow discussions to stay in the public eye, and thus stay *active* longer, whereas on LJ a discussion will drop off people's friends page pretty quickly, turning discussions into quick, transitory, blink-and-you'll-miss-them things. (Sure, those people who noticed and joined the discussion when it popped up on their friends page often keep at it for days - but on a forum, a new contributor might discover it months after it started, and bring it back to the top by posting to it, and *everyone who contributed until then would notice*, and the discussion would be revitalised. A good LJ discussion goes on for days; a good forum discussion can go on for months.) And archives are much more suited for presenting fan-made content, esp. fanfic, because they don't require the potential reader to first learn about the individual LJs of three or four dozen writers and then search those LJs for fic; also, archives usually allow searching for different categories of fic, *and* they keep stuff accessible. Etc.

But, my general reservations about fandom's near-complete move to LJ (and f-locked LJs, for that matter) aside, my issue here is mainly with fanfic. I find the posting of fic to LJ and *only* to LJ, as seems increasinbly the practice in fandom, a bit antisocial, to be honest. (After turning into one of the official naysayers of Life On Mars fandom, I am now working on discrediting myself in fandom at large... ;-)) And I don't *understand* the attitude behind it, either. I mean, *why* would people not want their fic to find the widest possible readership? And how can they not care if it will still be easily accessible to new readers in a year or two?

The cynical part of me can't help wondering if there's a tendency to move away from fandom as a community and treat it as merely a tool for instant, personal gratification. I.e. as soon as you've posted a fic to your LJ and received an amount of feedback for that fic, you move on to the next fic for which you will get feedback in turn, and old fics become uninteresting simply because they don't generate large amounts of feedback anymore - so why bother keeping them easily accessible? That readers who come into the fandom later might still want read those older fics just doesn't matter, because the gratification to the writer is negligible, and the reader's gratification simply doesn't figure into the equation.

As I said, it's the cynical part of me that came up with that explanation.

Well, no matter what the reasons, it seems to me that the decentralised, dispersed nature of fandom on LJ is a good way to make sure that, instead of amassing a wonderful, huge collective treasure of fanworks for 'later generations' of fen to discover and enjoy, most of our work will simply disappear into obscurity and relative 'un-findability' fairly soon after it's posted.

Am I the only one who finds that perspective a bit sad?

(Also, I dislike the tendency for fandom to happen in a - however slightly extended - big 'NOW' for the personal reason of often being stressed out of my mind. The fact that fandom - discussions, fics, everything - seems to happen so quickly now, and requires you to constantly stay on top of things because you'll never be able to *find* the good stuff again if you don't notice it immediately when it's posted is a considerable additional stress factor. Which is sad, because I'd much rather 'do' fandom at my leisure, and I'm a naturally slow person. So, instead of 'doing' fandom at my own pace, I tend to go into hyperactive fannish phases when I manage to keep up with things for a few months, and then drop out of everything completely for months in turn. Needless to say, that way I hardly know what's happening anymore, and miss most of the good fic, debate etc.)

I've been out of the meta game for ages, so I don't know if this has been discussed on [livejournal.com profile] metafandom, recently or at all. If anyone remembers related discussions and can point me there, that would be much appreciated. I'm mostly interested in the question of why people aren't interested in keeping stuff accessible, because that is something I really, truly do not 'get'. So, if anyone can explain that mindset to me... I'm really curious about it.

Date: 2007-05-25 12:47 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Here via metafandom.

This is an interesting post because I was on livejournal for a couple of years, then got myself banned by LJ Abuse due to a political disagreement about the acceptability of breast-feeding in public (which does seem faintly bizarre, as I find myself mentioning it to make clear that I didn't actually do anything wrong to get banned.... but, anyway) -

I wrote a story on livejournal, MirrorM*A*S*H, that would likely never have got finished if not for the immediate feedback of livejournal: certainly I wouldn't have got as much fun out of it as I did.

But mostly I was using livejournal to post, not stories, but links to stories as I posted them to my website.

Then I got banned.

Suddenly, I don't get comments any more. I have a new journal on greatestjournal, but fandom is very much on livejournal: and having discovered that a fan can be permanently exiled from livejournal by going up against Six Apart's company policy, I do find this somewhat scary - it's a centralization and control of fandom by a single corporation such as has never occurred before, to my knowledge. Granted Six Apart appear uninterested in controlling fandom - but I'd truly hate to see what would happen if FanLib succeeds and FanLib and 6A do a merger.

Jane Carnall
janecarnall.greatestjournal.com

That's a really good point, actually.

Date: 2007-05-25 01:16 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hmpf.livejournal.com
And one that hasn't been raised in this type of debate much so far, I think. (Or at least I can't remember seeing it raised, but then, I *have* been out of the loop.)

And, wow, even just speaking on a personal level, that banning thing sucks. I'm deeply sorry to hear about it; I can only imagine how frustrating that must be for you.

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