Words do (not) mean things
Mar. 20th, 2010 05:03 pmSo someone posted a character on oc_analysis to get validation.
It sort of reminded me of an ongoing issue I have with a lot of fandom communication. We tend to have a lot of terms that are clearly positive or negative, but rarely any consensus on what they actually mean. Generally, everyone is against flames and in favor of some level of concrit. People are in favor of good characters and against bad ones. Generally, everyone has a long list of exactly what traits cause them to draw the line.
See, the person on oc_analysis had decided people disliked her character because they were OC haters. So she came to a place for OCs to get validation and, getting something other than "she's awesome! you're right, totally not a sue!" just decided everyone there hates OCs with a passion. So she's made this thing up about being "Original Character Reviewier Cancer Free" and her description of it basically amounts to "I'll judge OCs fairly based on the information I get rather than making a snap judgement". Which is, you know, completely indistinguishable from something someone who actually meant decent OCs might say, after they'd seen people unfairly calling good OCs sues.
Which is why I can like OCs, write OCs, and still react to hearing people talk about how unfair it is people have prejudices against OCs by immediately looking to see if they're talking about their OC Rainbow Sparkleraven. I remember hearing all sorts of how to write a good OC advice back in the day that basically amounted to how to lure readers in by things like pretending the story was mostly about the canon cast and keeping the OC in a supporting role, and then a couple chapters in making it all about the OC. And I can hate marysues but these days do the same to see if they're talking about ICKY ICKY GIRLS ARE GETTING IN MY CANON. And I demand extensive lists of exactly what we're talking about for any type of feedback discussion.
Meanwhile, and I finally figured out why this pisses me off so very much, you've got the people saying that it's possible to write marysues well. And it's because the term mary sue means "a character who is bad in a particular sort of way". If the fact she's a princess isn't a problem, it's not a mary sue. If you define mary sue to cover good OCs too, then you're taking away a word used to mean something so we can have a synonym for a word we already have, and the insistence than marysue and OC are identical just creates other groups that bash all "marysues" using the same definition. People doing this often tend to be using odd definitions of marysue to start, like it meaning specifically self-inserts. Only again, we've got a perfectly functional way of talking about self-inserts, namely by using that actual word. Instead of actually communicating what they usually mean to say (not every last self-insert/OC romance/long lost sister/etc character is a sue, which you can at least talk about), they say that sueishness is a neutral trait, and discussion starts tying itself into a pretzel as people struggle to work out what exactly the bad type of character is.
Oh, and those inscrutable tags that were bothering me on AooO? Support did get back to me and explained I can look stuff up on their wiki to figure out what tags mean. Except my problem is with tags that have vague/conflicting/overlapping definitions, in large part because they get used differently across fandom, and all their wiki does is tell me that yes, I was right and they're used differently across fandom and so are basically useless for anything specific, and all the cross-fandom tags are doing right now is making that even worse.
I don't even know why it always works out this way. Fandom and culture at large both regularly invent new terms, but fandom seems unable to ever set solid definitions (see "drabble"), and people seem to hate just making up a new term for a new idea if they can stretch an old one to fit.
In sum, I hate how if I don't already know exactly what someone means when they say a term, I have no idea what they're saying and have to either find multiple examples to get a decent baseline or else the whole thing might as be about how I really need think about how I zorphle when tendgo, and stop the rampant grenie of aewd. It renders any attempt at agreeing or disagreeing based on the actual arguments largely moot, especially any time when there are two arguing camps and they both insist the good words belong to what they're doing and the bad ones to their opponents. If I wanted this kind of thing I'd follow politics.
It sort of reminded me of an ongoing issue I have with a lot of fandom communication. We tend to have a lot of terms that are clearly positive or negative, but rarely any consensus on what they actually mean. Generally, everyone is against flames and in favor of some level of concrit. People are in favor of good characters and against bad ones. Generally, everyone has a long list of exactly what traits cause them to draw the line.
See, the person on oc_analysis had decided people disliked her character because they were OC haters. So she came to a place for OCs to get validation and, getting something other than "she's awesome! you're right, totally not a sue!" just decided everyone there hates OCs with a passion. So she's made this thing up about being "Original Character Reviewier Cancer Free" and her description of it basically amounts to "I'll judge OCs fairly based on the information I get rather than making a snap judgement". Which is, you know, completely indistinguishable from something someone who actually meant decent OCs might say, after they'd seen people unfairly calling good OCs sues.
Which is why I can like OCs, write OCs, and still react to hearing people talk about how unfair it is people have prejudices against OCs by immediately looking to see if they're talking about their OC Rainbow Sparkleraven. I remember hearing all sorts of how to write a good OC advice back in the day that basically amounted to how to lure readers in by things like pretending the story was mostly about the canon cast and keeping the OC in a supporting role, and then a couple chapters in making it all about the OC. And I can hate marysues but these days do the same to see if they're talking about ICKY ICKY GIRLS ARE GETTING IN MY CANON. And I demand extensive lists of exactly what we're talking about for any type of feedback discussion.
Meanwhile, and I finally figured out why this pisses me off so very much, you've got the people saying that it's possible to write marysues well. And it's because the term mary sue means "a character who is bad in a particular sort of way". If the fact she's a princess isn't a problem, it's not a mary sue. If you define mary sue to cover good OCs too, then you're taking away a word used to mean something so we can have a synonym for a word we already have, and the insistence than marysue and OC are identical just creates other groups that bash all "marysues" using the same definition. People doing this often tend to be using odd definitions of marysue to start, like it meaning specifically self-inserts. Only again, we've got a perfectly functional way of talking about self-inserts, namely by using that actual word. Instead of actually communicating what they usually mean to say (not every last self-insert/OC romance/long lost sister/etc character is a sue, which you can at least talk about), they say that sueishness is a neutral trait, and discussion starts tying itself into a pretzel as people struggle to work out what exactly the bad type of character is.
Oh, and those inscrutable tags that were bothering me on AooO? Support did get back to me and explained I can look stuff up on their wiki to figure out what tags mean. Except my problem is with tags that have vague/conflicting/overlapping definitions, in large part because they get used differently across fandom, and all their wiki does is tell me that yes, I was right and they're used differently across fandom and so are basically useless for anything specific, and all the cross-fandom tags are doing right now is making that even worse.
I don't even know why it always works out this way. Fandom and culture at large both regularly invent new terms, but fandom seems unable to ever set solid definitions (see "drabble"), and people seem to hate just making up a new term for a new idea if they can stretch an old one to fit.
In sum, I hate how if I don't already know exactly what someone means when they say a term, I have no idea what they're saying and have to either find multiple examples to get a decent baseline or else the whole thing might as be about how I really need think about how I zorphle when tendgo, and stop the rampant grenie of aewd. It renders any attempt at agreeing or disagreeing based on the actual arguments largely moot, especially any time when there are two arguing camps and they both insist the good words belong to what they're doing and the bad ones to their opponents. If I wanted this kind of thing I'd follow politics.
no subject
Date: 2010-03-21 03:41 am (UTC)Witness Smogon, for example. Everybody loves to bitch about Smogon's tier list, but while forums . There are certainly people who are confused about what the terminology means if they're new to competitive battling, and people who have no clue but like to be helpful anyway and spout incorrect definitions, but for the most part, there's not a whole lot of debate about what an "uber" is. There's just a debate about what should be classified as one, and even there, most people adopt the majority of Smogon's list. In this case there's pretty much one major board for competitive battling, which various smaller battling sections across the 'net tend to take their cues from. There's no real equivalent in the world of fanfiction--FFN is arguably the hub of fanfiction on the internet, but its structure is such that fandoms are still largely separate and there's not a whole lot of communication even between authors within a section; the setup just doesn't support it very well. So people develop their own little definitions of terms, or invent new terms, and hearsay and misunderstandings abound. (As a side note, how frustrating is it that all the forums, in every FFN section, seem to be RP's rather than actual fanfiction discussion?)
no subject
Date: 2010-03-21 01:14 pm (UTC)for the most part, there's not a whole lot of debate about what an "uber" is. There's just a debate about what should be classified as one, and even there, most people adopt the majority of Smogon's list. In this case there's pretty much one major board for competitive battling, which various smaller battling sections across the 'net tend to take their cues from.
That's a good point...and tellingly, the term's transition into being used to talk about fanfic pokemon hasn't gone well for it.
This is probably one of those things that feeds on itself - the less sure you are there's any real definition, and the more you see people using words to mean all sorts of things, the more people do it.
(As a side note, how frustrating is it that all the forums, in every FFN section, seem to be RP's rather than actual fanfiction discussion?)
I was put off initially, but it's not really surprising. FFN tends to give people a few tools and then they use them in odd ways to fix some other deficiency. Fanfic writers and roleplayers tend to overlap a lot, and people have always treated FFN as, to a greater or lesser degree, a social site. Most of the non-RP forums I've seen are just endless spammy posts of "hi guys! I'm bored" between the same half-dozen people.
Dunno, really. The current setup has obvious flaws (a billion little forums, making it hard to actually discuss things) but being able to control your own area has points in its favor.
Huh, maybe a partial fix in this area would be to make a thread defining words. At a certain point I don't even care which definition people are using - I'll make up a new damn word if they want to stretch marysue to cover all OCs, I just want it clear what we mean when we talk.