At least with other pairings, there's dialogue to back up the subtext.
A question: I thought "slash" referred only to same-sex pairings - or can it be used for any non-canonical pairing?
If only!I get that subtext isn't a requirement for slash, but you normally don't have slash unless there's some sort of perceived chemistry on screen, you know?Hell no, I've seen pairings of characters who have hardly ever even been in a scene together (and where the only basis for the pairing was obviously that the author finds both those guys hot). Or even those who have NEVER shared a scene (like crossover pairings)...
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At least with other pairings, there's dialogue to back up the subtext.
What is "mainstream fanfic"?I say again... I'm talking about "main stream fanfic", which, as I said before, is an oxymoron, I realize.
Nah, there is a lot of fanfiction that's as good or better than some of the official tie-in literature.Of course, I'm not really talking about fanfiction except to bring up the fact that I never saw the chemistry between J/K on screen. If you don't like fanfiction, that's cool, but it doesn't really address my question, which is where in the series could you interrpret subtext for these two.
I'd hate for this to turn into "fanfic bad".
Word!My Immortal is better than Twilight, IMHO.
I get that subtext isn't a requirement for slash, but you normally don't have slash unless there's some sort of perceived chemistry on screen, you know?
Erm...based on some of the slash pairings...and, er, more-than-pairings...that I've seen, I'd have to disagree.
I'm not missing the point, I think everyone has already answered your question: nobody in this thread sees such evidence anywhere on screen. I thought that you were asking the question because you found a J/K fanfic and were surprised that someone would pair them up? You seem to be implying that there has to be subtext on screen in order for someone to write a slash fanfic about it. My point is that it doesn't. Maybe the writer of the fanfic thought he or she saw the subtext, but you'd have to ask them about it. Or maybe they didn't, but just liked the idea anyway, like some people like to pair up characters who have hardly even been on screen together or characters from different shows because they just think they'd look hot together.I think you're missing my point.
I don't care if you (plural) understand why I find a particular pairing or not. My question was where might we find evidence of such a pairing on screen. It is not why would someone create that pairing in fanfiction.
Please stop saying that I'm surprised and disturbed. It's missing the point of my post.
My apologies if I was not clear enough.
I agree, pairings without evidence just demonstrate lack of understanding on the part of the writer. At least for me, it either needs to be onscreen and stated openly, or SO blatant even though not directly stated, that it's hard to argue with.
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