Witness: Jaetion

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Interviews by Fans
Title: Witness: Jaetion
Interviewer:
Interviewee: Jaetion
Date(s): February 25, 2019
Medium: Tumblr post
Fandom(s): Mad Max
External Links: Interview responses
Click here for related articles on Fanlore.

In February 2019, the Tumblr community Mad Max Fanfic Awards (community) posted an interview with Jaetion, a Mad Max fanwork creator, as part of the Mad Max Fandom Creator Spotlight.[1]

Interview

Creator name (AO3): Jaetion

Creator name (Tumblr): Jaesauce

Link to creator works: https://archiveofourown.org/users/Jaetion/works

Creator name (other platform- please specify): Pillowfort: Jaetrix

Q: Why the Mad Max Fandom?

A: MMFR movie was incredible! It hit all of my sweet spots. And the fandom is great: really supportive people, creative fanworks, and great discussions. I’ve been playing around with fandoms online for a long time and I’ve met some awesome people, but the MMFR fandom is just chocked full of interesting fans and ideas (like this spotlight!).

Q: What do you think are some defining aspects of your work? Do you have a style? Recurrent themes?

A: Oof, I’m not sure. I think my style is a lot of conversation, and very little and very poorly written action? As far as themes go, I love referencing music. Music is important to me, so it usually influences my writing. I identify as a feminist and try to put progressive messages into my stuff. I try to write women who form relationships, live their lives, and drive the plot without having to play second banana to men. On a similar, I like writing/reading sex scenes that are fun and funny for the people involved - enthusiastic yes from both/all parties. (Unless I’m filling a fic request that specifies something else, of course.)

Q: Which of your works was the most fun to create? The most difficult? Which is your most popular? Most successful? Your favourite overall?

A: “Take the A Train" was fun because I love writing about NYC. But the stories in “Citadel City Serenade” have definitely been the most rewarding. I really like trying to fit plots and characters together, and it feels awesome when things snap into place. “Six-String Soldier” is my most popular fic, probably because I started writing it right around the release of the movie and it’s shippy. Overall… hm, I think my favorite MMFR thing I’ve written might be “Metal Bars.” I think I did a pretty decent mix of kid naivety and shitty oppression.

Q: How do you like your wasteland? Gritty? Hopeful? Campy? Soft? Why?

A: Hopeful, but realistic, I think. With everything that’s going on in politics, both in America and internationally, and the unbearably awful reports on climate change, I need to cling to some remnants of hope or else I’ll just lie on the floor and never get up. I love solarpunk! Reclaiming/recreating the world is what interests me.

Q: Walk us through your creative process from idea to finished product. What’s your prefered environment for creating? How do you get through rough patches?

A: I write drafts, either as notes on paper or outlines in Google docs. I have a bunch of notebooks full of fragments. I do a lot of editing - I have a hard time articulating things, so it takes a number of attempts until I get it right (or at least close to right). When I get stuck, I read fic. There are so many talented authors who’ve produced so many amazing stories that it’s pretty easy to find something inspiring.

Q: What (if any) music do you listen to for help getting those creative juices flowing?

A: Folk music! I have a couple of playlists on Spotify specifically for writing Mad Max fic.

Q: What is your biggest challenge as a creator?

A: Writing! Specifically writing something good! I’m not sure if this counts as a challenge, but I also struggle with self doubt; posting something that gets no attention really sucks and it’s hard not to take poor reviews/no reviews as a personal affront.

Q: How have you grown as a creator through your participation in the Mad Max Fandom? How has your work changed? Have you learned anything about yourself?

A: I’ve never attempted to write something as long as “Six-String Soldier,” or the whole series of “Citadel City Serenade,” really. Trying to manage a couple of different timelines at once with different POVs has been complicated and fun. Because of this fandom, I’ve also been writing more articles for the Fanlore wiki and tracking down references/resources for preservation. I’m an archivist and being able to use some of my professional skills in fandom and even develop them has been sort of neat.

Q: Which character do you relate to the most, and how does that affect your approach to that character? Is someone else your favourite to portray? How has your understanding of these characters grown through portraying them?

A: I probably relate most to Max: tired, wants to be alone, many grunts. But I prefer to write the Wives. They’re so fascinating, each in their own way. I love how distinct they are and yet how well they work as a team. The first few times I saw the movie, I focused on Furiosa as the feminist hero that we all needed, but the more I watched and the more I read, the more I realized just how courageous, intelligent, and yes, feminist the Wives are. Victory doesn’t require fighting and heroes don’t need to be killers. The Wives achieve so much over the span of the story without physically fighting.

Q: How do you translate various elements from the film, such as the theme of the importance of bodily autonomy and critiques of an oppressive ruling class, into a modern setting?

A: This is an amazing question, thank you for asking! MMFR portrays a reality that is uncannily close to our own - In fact, it might as well be a peek into our future. In my mind, there’s not even much of a need to translate those elements/themes because oh god we’re dealing with them right now. What I was trying to translate with “Citadel City Serenade” is the victory of the characters over those adversities. In MMFR, the characters participate in violent, bloody battle; in CCS, they start social movements. Which is something we can do in the real world! Marches, protests, grassroots activism in general are tools we can use - Music, art, hell even gardening can be parts of a revolution.

Q: Do you ever self-insert, even accidentally?

A: Nope! I’m far too pathetic to survive in the wasteland. Hopefully I’ll just die in the initial blast.

Q: Do you have any favourite relationships to portray? What interests you about them?

A: Yes! I’m a shipper at heart, so I am all about the couples. My two favorites are Capable/Nux and Toast/Slit. I love having the women be the ones leading the relationships - not only setting the boundaries but also expanding the War Boys world into completely new territory. I’m also totally into male characters who are sexually inexperienced. Alpha male dudes are meh in my opinion - Give me someone sweet and enthusiastic, someone whose love is based on respect, someone whose enthusiastic about learning. I think Nux is firmly in the category of awesome boyfriend, and I like trying to figure out how to lead Slit in that direction. There’s also the idea of redemption in their relationships that I find fascinating.

Q: How does your work for the fandom change how you look at the source material?

A: Hm, I think that I definitely view the film through a feminist gaze. It’s entirely possible that MMFR is just an action film but that’s not my take on it!

Q: Do you prefer to create in one defined chronology or do your works stand alone?

A: Why or why not?Bit of both! I just want to read, read, read - As long as the fics are well written, it doesn’t matter to me if the settings are consistent. As far as my own writing goes, I get so many ideas for fics that it’s not really possible to have them all exist in a single chronology.

Q: To break or not to break canon? Why?

A: The great thing about fanfiction is that it’s transformative. To me, canon is the foundation, but you can build whatever you want on it. Hopefully I keep the characters close to their canon portrayals, but other than that, I like to mix things up. Also, a modern AU setting just fits so damn well in the Mad Max world. I think also that canon itself can be flexible. Death of the author and all that. Once media is out in the world, it’ll be interpreted by the audience - and sometimes those interpretations are vastly different from one another.

Q: Share some headcanons.

A: I don’t really have any! Since most of my stuff is AU, the headcanons are limited to those settings.

Q If you work with OCs walk us through your process for creating them. Who are some of your favourites?

A: I have a smatterings of OCs who populate the world as background characters: Vuvalini, milking mothers, and War Boys. I played a MMFR tabletop RPG a couple of years ago, and my character from that and an NPC she saved both ended up in 6-String. That particular War Boy (Stacks) now has a couple of fans and so I’ve been giving him more screentime, as it were. He’s sort of interesting as a foil to Nux and Slit: those two have girlfriends to learn from, but Stacks is on his own as he tries to escape from the WB life.

Q: If you create original works, how do those compare to your fan works?

A: I do! I participate in NaNo every year. I think my fanfiction is better than my original stuff since I write, since the fanfic is intended to be shared and thus I have to write decently enough to get readers. However my stuff tends to be in the speculative fiction genre, so that’s something my fanfic and original fic share.

Q: What are some works by other creators inside and outside of the fandom that have influenced your work?

A: There are so many! In Mad Max, @supergirrll, @redcandle17, pbp (@primarybufferpanel), @bonehandledknife, Tyellas (@thebyrchentwigges), and hell all of the Boltcutters are all really important; the early writers of Nux/Capable fics also really influenced and inspired my love of the characters and the ships. Spicyshimmy, an author in the Dragon Age fandom, has also been one of my favorite authors for years, and I return to her stuff regularly to see how awesome writing can be.

Q: What advice can you give someone who is struggling to make their own works more interesting, compelling, cohesive, etc.?

A: I struggle with this myself, so I don’t think I really have an answer unfortunately other than read everything you can get your hands on, write everything you can think of. I write basically what I want to read; if I can make the reader!me happy, then at least I’ve satisfied one person. However, what I consider interesting, compelling, etc, isn’t always what other people want. Maybe my advice is to try not to take it personally when your hard work isn’t rewarded. Which again, I’m not always able to do.

Q: Have you visited or do you plan to visit Australia, Wasteland Weekend, or other Mad Max place?

A: Yes, Wasteland Weekend! It was a lot of fun and I’m hoping to go again. Being able to immerse myself in the world was a great experience - A totally new way for me to engage with fandom.

Q: Tell us about a current WIP or planned project.

A: Still chugging along with “Citadel City Serenade!” The two main stories in that series are going to intersect in a meaningful way soon. In fact, they’re going to crash. Looking forward to getting that out there (and getting it done!).

References

  1. ^ Witness: Jaetion. Posted February 25, 2019. Retrieved April 13, 2019.