author_by_night: (cool_large)
author_by_night ([personal profile] author_by_night) wrote2020-01-03 01:38 pm

Snowflake Challenge: Fandom, A History

 In your own space, talk about your fannish history. Leave a comment in this post saying you did it. Include a link to your post if you feel comfortable doing so. Timeline, narrative, bullet points, tell us your history as a fan!

Oh boy. The deer is teal with this one. Some of it's things a lot of you've heard before, but I tried to mention things I don't think I have, and/or a little extra insight.

It all started the summer of 2000, when I got an AOL account. I was fifteen. I immediately found a bunch of messageboards for my favorite book series at the time, Harry Potter. I found the teen forum first, but they annoyed me, so I went to the adult fandom. The presence of so many people my age there would cause a lot of consternation in subsequent years, but that's a whole other story. (Being an adult now, I can see both sides. On the one hand, I'm sure all of us using purple font and saying LOL while quoting lines got annoying. On the other hand, from what I remember anyway, some of them could be a little mean.) 

Also in 2000, I found forums for another book series I loved, Earth's Children. Contrary to the massive fandom Harry Potter would become, Earth's Children - always small - would only get smaller.

Back to the Harry Potter fandom, the boards I found fanfiction.net and a few other sites. The Leaky Cauldron was my main "news site" (I even remember when it was HP Photos! Or at least I think it was?) but I never really got into the subfandom for TLC. I instead moved to Fiction Alley, Sugar Quill, and Phoenix Song much later on.

And yes, I was a  Ron/Hermione and Harry/Ginny shipper, although the latter more so after OoTP.  Before that, Harry/Ginny was kind of like Remus/Sirius to me, a ship that I could get on board with but didn't necessarily go out of my way to read fic for.  The only real "conflict", and it wasn't much of one, is that I initially thought shipping was about predicting what might happen in canon. I didn't even realize until a bit later that there were people who purposely sought things that weren't. Which on one hand kept me tolerant of shippers I felt just interpreted the text differently, but on the other hand made certain ships really confusing.

Ship wars pissed me off, though, and there was even a point where I was annoyed with my fellow shippers. I'm not saying this was even close to all Ron/Hermione shippers, I really don't think it was, but many of them were very smug after the sixth Harry Potter book in ways that made me deeply uncomfortable. Like calling Harry/Hermione shippers "delusional" - in the company of JK Rowling, no less. Nope. Not cool.   I also heard that some people made fun of Harry/Draco shippers during a Harry/Draco panel at a convention, which... seriously? I never got into Harry/Draco, but killing people's joy is just unnecessarily petty. I never got into shipping in future fandoms either, and I honestly think Harry Potter fandom just wore me out when it came to shipping. I mean, I still have ships, but not SHIPS. Does that make sense?
 

I had two and a half waves of LJ. I got into LJ first in 2002 or 2003, but we don't talk about that account because I was seventeen or eighteen and it was the most butthurt, emo piece of filth ever. In my very objective and not at all embarrassed opinion, of course. :P I came back in 2004.  I didn't do a lot with fandom on LJ initially, LJ being more of a space to keep in touch with people I'd met online than anything else. It was sort of the Facebook of fandom to me, as well as a place to relay fandom thoughts that were too tl;dr for forums or for comments in other LJ posts. I liked LJ a lot though, it was a great way to meet other fans in a way that was a bit harder on forums. Before LJ, I only met a few people from forums. (By "met" I mean we talked on IM, although I did eventually meet a few IRL.) LJ allowed me to get to know more of them better, and of course I met even more people from friending memes.  

I tried to get into the Heroes fandom between 2006 and 2007, but I didn't fangirl Sylar, which seemed to be an entry level requirement. Plus, I stopped liking the show, so that was a bit of a problem. :P I tried joining the Firefly and Buffyverse fandoms, but I found both way too late. Now I pretty much just dabble in everything - I'd say I have more fannish interests than fandom, although what I do might still be considered fandom nowadays. I don't think fandom is really as contained or communal as it used to be.


I probably would've done better in certain classes without fandom, though. Kids in the audience, fandom's great, but you have to remain on top of your responsibilities too.
lunabee34: (Default)

[personal profile] lunabee34 2020-01-04 12:38 am (UTC)(link)
*nods nods*

I just know how Dramatic I was as a teen, and I'm sure I'd have been a flouncing, emo drama queen. LOL