It’s 2024. I have been participating in fandom for 40 years.

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Title: It’s 2024. I have been participating in fandom for 40 years.
Creator: Cimmerians
Date(s): 3 February 2024
Medium: Tumblr Post
Fandom: Star Trek:TOS, Starsky & Hutch
Topic:
External Links: Archived link
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It’s 2024. I have been participating in fandom for 40 years, is a tumblr post by Cimmerians.

The Essay

It’s 2024. I have been participating in fandom for 40 years. This is a ramble commemorating some history I’ve experienced along the way.

In 1984, I attended my first convention, and made a beeline for the one long row of covered tables in the Dealer’s Room that was, according to the whispered lore of my friends, ‘the one’. “um”, I said, very suavely and coherently, except for how it was totally the opposite of those things, “I’m here for the… for the, uh. For-”

“Come around here,” the man behind the table said with exhausted ennui, so I went around, and he lifted up the table skirt next to him and pointed to rows and rows of boxes underneath the line of tables. “It’s all under here.”

It was all under there. Along with about five older ladies with glasses, graying hair, cardigans. Flipping through slash zines and chatting in whispered voices like old friends (which of course they were). I noticed one of them had the good sense to be wearing kneepads. I was still too young and ablebodied to need kneepads when crawling on a carpeted floor, but I immediately found her preparedness skills to be both impressive and hot. “You’re new,” one of the ladies whispered to me–a bit warily, which made sense. “Are you sure you’re in the right place?”

In the faint light (the kneepads lady had also come prepared with a flashlight, additional practicality hotness points for her) I grabbed a comb-bound book with a heavy line art piece on the cover, featuring a musclebound Captain Kirk getting righteously and enthusiastically plowed by a stern-yet-ebullient Spock. “This,” I said, pointing helpfully at the cover, like I was trying to make myself understood in a language I had only the vaguest knowledge of. “I’m here for this.”

Outside at the convention, most of the attendees were wearing large homemade circular pins that shrieked 'K/S is BS!!!’1. But underneath the table, we reveled in the forbidden.

***

In 1985, I fell very hard for Starsky & Hutch fandom. Which was simply referred to at the time as 'the other fandom’, because there were only two. We were upstarts. Many fannish elders predicted that it was just a phase.

***

The 'circulating library’ was a massive stack of barely-legible pages that smelled strongly of mimeograph ink. When you were on the list, you would write stories while you waited for your turn, and when the big box was mailed to you, you would read everything (new finds, old favorites), add your own sloppily-typed or hastily-mimeographed stories, and then mail the whole thing to the next person. For me, at the time, it was an extremely expensive indulgence–but my favorite one.

***

By 1990, slash fandom had grown enough that I no longer knew everyone in it, which was both thrilling and a bit daunting. A young woman at a convention waited for me after a panel I was part of (I think it was 'writing impactful smut’ or something like that), and said she had a question she didn’t want to ask in a group setting. I’d heard that before. I said that’s fine, go ahead and ask; and she came out with: “Why do you have to be gay?”

I blinked. “Is… that a problem?”

She looked annoyed. “Yes, because your stories are on all the recommendation lists and in all the top zines, but if you’re gay and I read something you wrote and I get hot from it that makes me gay, and I’m not gay.”

“Wow.” I grinned, I couldn’t help it. It probably made me look very predatory-dyke-about-to-score-a-toaster. Whatever, it was enough to make her back away from me fast.

When I thought about it later that night, I wondered what it would be like not to be the only queer person in slash fandom.

***

By 1997, slash started appearing on the internet. Many fannish elders claimed it was the death knell of slash fandom, or dismissed it as 'just a phase’.

***

Anyway, I wrote all this for myself as a commemoration of sorts, but if you took the time to read it–thank you. Love you, fandom. I always will.

1 In those days, m/m fandom was known as 'slash’, which grew from the fannish shorthand where 'K&S’ meant a story of Kirk and Spock having adventures or tribulations or what have you, and 'K/S’ meant a story of Kirk and Spock getting it on (Kirk divided by Spock or Spock into Kirk–it was mathy fannish humor and I was into it then and I still am now). Slash was decidedly unpopular in the fannish world in 1984, and there was a concerted effort to force slash authors, artists, and fans out of 'mainstream’ fannish public life. Hence, under the table.[1]

Responses

I remember friends who did a zine in the late 70s and into the 80s. One issue was two parts, one for everyone and one for adults only. About 1979...and slash was already a thing then.

heymerle[2]

References

  1. ^ It’s 2024. I have been participating in fandom for 40 years (archived link) by the-cimmerians. Posted 3 Feb 2024. Accessed 4 Feb 2024.
  2. ^ Reblog by tumblr user heymerle, 6 February 2024. Accessed 6 February 2024.