Re: Free Star Trek eBook by S&S (US only) and return of Strange New Wo
Oh, okay. JJ Abrams isn't George Lucas, and he says he's a fan, so Star Wars: The Force Awakens is a fan film. Just fanfic on screen.
Fan fiction has meant fiction produced, unpaid, not professionally published, by fans, for many decades now. It's not just the pros who get commissioned, get paid, get edited, go through licencing approvals, and get professionally published books that cost money who insist on the distinction. I've seen a lot of fanfic writers argue for the distinction as well, because in their eyes fanfic is purer, free from financial motives and, more importantly, free from the licencing approval process. They can do slash, crossovers, overwrite canon, whatever they want.
There's another part of the issue: some people refer to the pro stuff as fanfic because it means they don't have to bother with it, it's important to them to be current with everything official tied to their fave series but they don't want to have to read books, so they decide it's just fanfic and can be ignored. It's dismissive. Meanwhile, there are other people calling the pro stuff fanfic because their Star Trek/Twilight slash fanfic was read by 30 people who really liked it and therefore it's just as valid as anything by a "pro."
We're talking about two very different activities, with different rules, different participants, different expectations. How is it helpful to start using the same word for both of them?
As for SNW: it's about pro credits, helping fans become pros. Thousands of people tried to get into SNW. It meant more to them than posting a story on a fanfic site. They knew there was a difference.
Oh, okay. JJ Abrams isn't George Lucas, and he says he's a fan, so Star Wars: The Force Awakens is a fan film. Just fanfic on screen.
Fan fiction has meant fiction produced, unpaid, not professionally published, by fans, for many decades now. It's not just the pros who get commissioned, get paid, get edited, go through licencing approvals, and get professionally published books that cost money who insist on the distinction. I've seen a lot of fanfic writers argue for the distinction as well, because in their eyes fanfic is purer, free from financial motives and, more importantly, free from the licencing approval process. They can do slash, crossovers, overwrite canon, whatever they want.
There's another part of the issue: some people refer to the pro stuff as fanfic because it means they don't have to bother with it, it's important to them to be current with everything official tied to their fave series but they don't want to have to read books, so they decide it's just fanfic and can be ignored. It's dismissive. Meanwhile, there are other people calling the pro stuff fanfic because their Star Trek/Twilight slash fanfic was read by 30 people who really liked it and therefore it's just as valid as anything by a "pro."
We're talking about two very different activities, with different rules, different participants, different expectations. How is it helpful to start using the same word for both of them?
As for SNW: it's about pro credits, helping fans become pros. Thousands of people tried to get into SNW. It meant more to them than posting a story on a fanfic site. They knew there was a difference.