Are you, like Jackie, completely baffled and intimidated by the world of A03, Wattpad, and all other things fanfiction? Don't worry! Jen's taking down the twisty turn-y path that leads us to all thing fandom, canon, and full of ships...not the three-masted schooner kind, though.
Questions/comments/concerns/suggestions? Email us at [email protected]!
Terms:
- fanfiction - fictional writing written in an amateur capacity by fans, unauthorized by, but based on an existing work of fiction
- Fandom - the fans of a particular person, team, fictional series, etc. regarded collectively as a community or subculture.
- 'Ships -Shipping (derived from the word relationship) is the desire by followers of a fandom for two or more people, either real-life people or fictional characters (in film, literature, television series, etc.) to be in a romantic and/or sexual relationship.
- Superwholock - ship that involves Supernatural, Doctor Who, and Sherlock crossover
- Kindle Direct Publishing (KDP) - Amazon's direction publication service
- A03 - Archive of Our Own - a nonprofit open source repository for fanfiction and other fanworks contributed by users
- Wattpad - an online social reading platform intended for users to read and write original stories.
- OTP - One True Pair
- NSFW/SFW - Not Safe For Work / Safe For Work based on content
- Canon - the source material; in fiction-based fandoms, "canon" is simply the source narrative you're referring to when you talk about that thing you like
- Spiritualism - a system of belief or religious practice based on supposed communication with the spirits of the dead, especially through mediums.
- Fanart -artwork created by fans of a work of fiction and derived from a series character or other aspect of that work
- Genderbent -When a character's gender is changed; usually in fanfictions or fanart
- Fanzines- a magazine, usually produced by amateurs, for fans of a particular performer, group, or form of entertainment
- Slash fic / slash fiction - a genre of fan fiction that focuses on romantic or sexual relationships between fictional characters of the same sex. Sic m/m, f/f
- Dead dove - "Dead Dove: Do Not Eat" is a warning or tag used to indicate that a fanwork contains tropes or elements that may be deemed morally reprehensible without explicitly condemning the sensitive aspects (see fanlore.org)
Specific Fics and books we mention:
- "Master of the Universe" fanfic by EL James/Snowdragons Icequeen
- Beautiful Bastard by Christina Lauren
- The Office (No longer available online)
- Tessa Dare P&P fanfiction (not available online, but this is Tessa's blog)
- Naomi Novik "His Majesty's Dragons" - Master & Commander fic
- Pamela
- Shamela
Other episodes we recommend:
- #11 The Cult of Snowqueens Icedragon and 50 Shades
- #25 A (not-so-brief) Brief History of Romance
- #27 Howling for Werewolves
- #33 Exploring the Final Frontier with Science Fiction and Romance
Links:
- Organization for Transformative Works
- "Fan fiction" (Wikipedia)
- The Forgotten Early History of Fan Fiction (Hill, 2016)
- "In A Lonely Lockdown, With Books Slow To Come, Fanfiction Booms" (Çam, 2020)
- "Fan Fiction Was Just as Sexual in the 1700s as It Is Today"
- "How TikTok and Young Creators Turned Fanfiction into a Celebrated Art Form" (Weekman)
- "Fifty Shades Of Green: How Fanfiction Went From Dirty Little Secret To Money Machine" (Cucinello, 2017)
- "The early adventures of the apocryphal Sherlock Holmes" (Jamison, up. 2021)
- "Anne Rice Really Hated When People Made Her Characters Bone" (Jackson, 2021)
- "Why Do Queer People Write Fan Fiction? To See Themselves in Mainstream Culture" (Binstock, 2016)