A Splash of Color

From Fanlore
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Meta
Title: A Splash of Color
Creator: Bohemia
Date(s): April 2001
Medium: online
Fandom: Popslash
Topic: songfic and the musical taste of fanfic writers
External Links: online here, Archived version
Click here for related articles on Fanlore.

A Splash of Color is an essay posted to Citizens Against Bad Slash by guest writer Bohemia.

It is "a rant on the 'monochromaticism' of 'N Sync slash and songfics."

Excerpts

Song fics are a great way for authors to bring a little bit of their own world into slash. Usually we see this done with the creation of Mary Sues and Mary Sue's cousins (who would constitute all of the author's friends who wanna be in the story too), but I think that songfics are a nice alternative to the Mary Sue, and I hope you'd agree.

Music is the foremost inspiration for many of my ideas, and all kinds of songs can help me create some great fiction. The right lyrics and beat can conjure up the most gorgeous images for a story. From rockabilly to showtunes to bossa nova, they all have an underlying message that can be translated into the 'N Sync slash fandom (and any other fandom as well).

Ordinarily I see lots of pop music in bad slash, and in good slash there's mostly the use of pussyfied alternative bands (ex. - 'Deep Inside of You' by Third Eye Blind seems to be a favorite) But if there's one type of music that inspires me personally the most, it's hip hop and soul.

Sometimes I wonder if I'm the only author out there whom do hip hop and soul inspire. A fellow slasher once made the comment that I use lots of ethnic characters in my writing, and I think that I do this as a way to a little realer, a little more true. Not only to myself, but also to the world! Everyone knows that white people aren't the only ones out there. As one of the few known black women involved in slash, and especially someone who enjoys hip hop and r&b, it gets kind of frustrating sometimes when I'm gushing about a song that I love to another writer and they're absolutely clueless. Are slash writers really that uninformed and similar? I'd hate to think that we're all a bunch of alt-rock listenin' college students with Pentium 3's and unhealthy obsessions with pop stars. I like to think of a wide array of people behind those computers, from college kids to professionals to high school students to mothers and daughters.