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Subj: What's wrong with fan conceptions of romance and relationships Posted: Sun Jul 27, 2008 at 05:27:48 pm EDT (Viewed 399 times) | Reply Subj: Meta essay rec: What's wrong with Whedon-esque romantic relationships Posted: Wed Jul 23, 2008 at 08:54:36 pm EDT (Viewed 525 times) | ||||||
( My apologies for lack of participation on this board; though my time is more and more limited due to grad school commitments, I do want to stop in here and participate more. And seriousfic's article touched on issues of storytelling and pop culture that have bugged me for a long time )... As much shit as Joss Whedon gets over the way he treats his characters, the fact that he is willing to take risks with them is still one of the main reasons why he is a renowned writer/director and legend in fandom, while authors like seriousfic speak to a small corner of LiveJournal ( but act like they have much more importance; the " famous to 15 people " rule of the Internet leads to just as big egos as the " pop cultural phenomenons " are accused of having ). To say that Whedon is always successful when he challenges his characters is false, but to say that the reason he is allegedly a bad writer is because of the way he treats his characters and their relationships shows a very myopic and unsophisticated view of the craft. Seriousfic uses the fact that Whedon does not view his characters as people, but as tools for his plot, as a bad thing, evidence of a cynical and arrogant mind. This is not a flaw with Whedon so much as a fact of fiction. The characters do not have lives of their own; they do not exist, except as tools to convey the artist's message. And that message has to be one that has importance outside of the fictional universe. It has to reach out and touch something in the audience, something they might not think they want to be touched. This involves doing bad things to the characters, making them suffer so we can see them handle it; the essence of drama being conflict, and all. To treat the characters' welfare as paramount over the story is to be completely unable to see the forest for the trees. And yet, this is how a disturbingly large portion of fandom operates; they fall for the characters and want to see them happy and healthy and in good relationships. This is a mindset that treats series fiction not as storytelling but as commitment porn, living vicariously through happy couples. They would like to have seen Xander and Anya live happily ever after and raise a brood of kids and die together in their sleep at a ripe old age. Nobody else would have given a rat's ass about that storyline, but this doesn't matter for the " ship " fan; they just operate on their wants, regardless of what's best for the writer, the general audience ( those not way too invested in the stories ), or the publisher that needs the profits to continue putting out the series. I personally prefer my relationship in real life over any enjoyed vicariously through fiction, but unfortunately that view seems anomalous on too many forums. www.rubysworldcomic.com | |||||||