Case (
case) wrote in
fandomsecrets2012-12-29 02:53 pm
[ SECRET POST #2188 ]
⌈ Secret Post #2188 ⌋
Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.
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Notes:
Secrets Left to Post: 05 pages, 102 secrets from Secret Submission Post #313.
Secrets Not Posted: [ 0 - broken links ], [ 0 - not!secrets ], [ 0 - not!fandom ], [ 0 - too big ], [ 0 - repeat ].
Current Secret Submissions Post: here.
Suggestions, comments, and concerns should go here.

no subject
(Anonymous) 2012-12-30 06:48 am (UTC)(link)Someone who acknowledges that violence needs to stay in fiction and is not actually cool or acceptable if you think about it? Totally chill, and also the vast, vast majority of fans. But switch the situation to Fifty Shades, and suddenly there's loads of people who believe that the relationship is super awesome and need not/should not stay in the realm of fictional. So. That's the difference. (Regardless of what OP said, that is what I would say.)
no subject
(Anonymous) 2012-12-30 10:37 am (UTC)(link)If a Tarantino enthusiast says "The ending of Inglorious Bastards was so badass!" you would assume they had reasonable opinions on real life violence, even though they didn't say anything specifically to confirm that.
If I say “Sylvannas in WoW is so cool” I obviously mean that, in the context of WoW’s fictional universe and what I like to see from a fictional character, she’s cool. I’d never have to specify “Sylvannas is so cool, but of course you realize I mean she’s cool fictionally and she’s obviously really messed up and the things she did were horrible, and I’d never want a person like her to exist in the real world.”
So I don't think it seems that fair to expect, as people seem to, for Twilight fans to stop themselves constantly to explain/verify that they don't actually want their real boyfriends to sneak unto their houses and whatch them sleep. I don't expect that sort of thing from other fans, why is Twilight so different?
no subject
(Anonymous) 2012-12-30 06:59 pm (UTC)(link)no subject
(Anonymous) 2012-12-30 07:36 pm (UTC)(link)There's also the fact that the books are aimed specifically at pre-teens and teenagers, and people are worried about young people who have very little relationship experience reading the books and internalizing that the relationship is romantic, despite being completely unhealthy. So, some of it's kind of concern-trolling, but I don't think it's completely unwarranted, either. Talking to younger fans - and especially pre-teen fans - and telling them it's okay to like the books, but explaining some of the issues with Edward's creepy-ass behavior is generally a good idea, just liking talking to your kids about the media they consume and rl issues in general is a good idea.
I think that there are people who say they think that Bella and Edward's relationship is romantic who wouldn't actually want that irl, but there are those people who, when asked about it, also say that they think that Edward breaking into Bella's room to watch her sleep is "sweet", or even girls who like Jacob who write off his rapey-ness as him just really liking Bella and not being able to handle himself. And honestly, if someone told me they wished that Kill Bill or Inglorious Basterds were real and seemed as sincere about it as some people do when they say they wish they had their own Edward, I would probably back away slowly.
no subject
(Anonymous) 2012-12-31 09:55 am (UTC)(link)Yeah, this is a really reasonable comment and I pretty much agree with you - especially on the point about romantic relationships being something people are actually going to have in real life. If I had kids I wouldn't give them the books, that's for sure.
I just have been feeling pretty devils-advocatey about Twilight fans lately because I see so many people being melodramatic about the woeful mental state such fans must be in, and I feel like it's an overreaction and also kinda hypocritical (i.e. is how a non-rabid Twilight fan feels about the books really that different from how I feel about the stupid angst ship fic I read about questionable pairings.)
Yeah, Twilight is problematic and the fact that it became so instantly popular is maybe concerning. But I wish people would a) stop being melodramatic, because although the books are problematic most Twilight Fans are probably still well-adjusted individuals and b) stop using Twilight's problematic nature as a way to show off how good they are at love by going on about how they can't possibly understand those poor maladjusted girls who actually like such horrible sludge.
I think that if people were primarily concerned with the wellfare of developing teenage girls, they would focus their criticism on the book and talk more about how it's marketed and how it became so popular, and how it fits in with other popular media targeted towards young girls. Instead, the criticism is often laden with condescension towards people who like the books and treats the fans themselves as the problem. Which says to me that while they may be concerned about Twilight's societal implications, they are more concerned about feeling superior.