Reasons for Fanfic and Impact on Characterization

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Title: Reasons for Fanfic and Impact on Characterization
Creator: Lorelei Jones
Date(s): November 24, 2000
Medium: online
Fandom:
Topic: Fanfiction, West Wing
External Links: Reasons for Fanfic and Impact on Characterization/WebCite
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Reasons for Fanfic and Impact on Characterization is an essay by Lorelei Jones.

It is part of the Fanfic Symposium series.

Excerpts

Recently on the Prospect-L list, someone brought up the topic of slash for The West Wing and gave a URL for an archive. As a fan of West Wing, I decided to pop over and check it out. Despite my conviction that there is something very slashy going on with Josh and Sam, I found myself rather disappointed. Not really in the stories, though none of them captured the wit and edge that make the show so good in my estimation, but more in the focus of the stories. They were almost…too personal. Which got me thinking about why I read fanfic and what I expect out of it.

In most of my fandoms, I don't read or write fanfic to get more of the show. I read fanfic to get what was *missing* in the show. I read for a favorite character who didn't get enough screentime, I read for overt declarations of love or physical intimacy, I read for realistic consequences to actions, a sense of continuity, deeper exploration of a theme barely touched on in the show. I read for the things I wish had been in the show and weren't.

Sometimes, though, and West Wing seems to be one of these cases, I seek out fanfic because I *do* want more of the show. I want more of that snappy dialogue, the interweaving intricacies of politics and people, the working relationships and intensity of purpose, and the beautiful undercurrents that will occasionally let something surface, but not for long and not completely. I guess you could say this is one show where the subtext is so satisfying, I have no desire to see it become text. Rather like the Mulder/Scully relationship, I prefer what lies between these people to remain a deep, unspoken something that lends extra depth to other situations, but is never brought to light itself. I suppose I'm talking about the fanfic equivalent of UST. Pre-slash? Proto-slash? Probably not even that, as I don't want the relationship to be the focus of the stories. At the same time, I don't want any possible relationships ignored or even denied, as sometimes happens in gen.