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Fan fiction

Fan fiction or fanfiction (also abbreviated to fan fic, fanfic, fic or FF) is fictional writing written in an amateur capacity by fans, unauthorized by, but based on an existing work of fiction. The author uses copyrighted characters, settings, or other intellectual properties from the original creator(s) as a basis for their writing. Fan fiction ranges from a couple of sentences to an entire novel, and fans can retain the creator's characters and settings and/or add their own. It is a form of fan labor. Fan fiction can be based on any fictional (and occasional non-fictional) subject. Common bases for fan fiction include novels, movies, musical groups, cartoons, anime, manga, and video games.

New Adventures of Alice (1917) by John Rae, an early pastiche or fan fiction

Fan fiction is rarely commissioned or authorized by the original work's creator or publisher and is rarely professionally published. It may infringe on the original author's copyright, depending on the jurisdiction and on legal questions such as whether or not it qualifies as "fair use" (see Legal issues with fan fiction). Attitudes of authors and copyright owners of original works to fan fiction have ranged from indifference to encouragement to rejection. Copyright owners have occasionally responded with legal action.

The term came into use in the 20th century as copyright laws began to delineate between stories using established characters that were authorized by the copyright holder and those that were not.[1]

Fan fiction is defined by being related to its subject's canonical fictional universe, either staying within those boundaries but not being of the canon itself, or else branching outside of it into an alternative universe.[2] Thus, what is "fanon" is separate from what is canon. Fan fiction is often written and published within circles of fans, and therefore would usually not cater to readers who have no knowledge of the original fiction.

Definition

The term fan fiction has been used in print as early as 1939; in this earliest known citation, it is used in a disparaging way to refer to amateurish science fiction (as opposed to "pro fiction").[3] The term also appears in the 1944 Fancyclopedia, an encyclopedia of fandom jargon. It is defined there as "fiction about fans, or sometimes about pros, and occasionally bringing in some famous characters from [science fiction] stories". The book also mentions that the term is "sometimes improperly used to mean fan science fiction, that is, ordinary fantasy published in a fan magazine".[3][4]

History

Before copyright

Before the adoption of copyright in the modern sense, it was not unusual for authors to copy characters, if not entire plots. For example, Shakespeare's plays Romeo and Juliet, Much Ado About Nothing, Othello, As You Like It and The Winter's Tale were all based on relatively recent fiction by other authors.[5]

In 1614 Alonso Fernández de Avellaneda wrote a sequel to Cervantes' Don Quixote, before Cervantes finished and published his own second volume.

19th century

Among 19th-century literature subject to notable depictions not initially authorized by the original author, is included Bram Stoker's Dracula's depiction in the translated adaptation Powers of Darkness.[6] The works of Jane Austen remain one of the most popular works to make unauthorized depictions of,[7] with one notable Jane Austen fan fiction being Old Friends and New Fancies. Many unauthorized stories of Sherlock Holmes by Arthur Conan Doyle have been created, including The Adventure of the Two Collaborators by J. M. Barrie.[8] Also created has been The Space Machine based on The War of the Worlds and Morlock Night based on The Time Machine by H. G. Wells; A New Alice in the Old Wonderland based on Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll; and Wide Sargasso Sea based on Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte.[9]

Star Trek fandom

 
The Star Trek fanzine Spockanalia contained the first fan fiction in the modern sense of the term.

The modern phenomenon of fan fiction as an expression of fandom and fan interaction was popularized and defined via Star Trek fandom and their fanzines published in the 1960s. The first Star Trek fanzine, Spockanalia (1967), contained some fan fiction; many others followed its example.[10]: 1  These fanzines were produced via offset printing and mimeography, and mailed to other fans or sold at science fiction conventions for a small fee to help recoup costs. Unlike other aspects of fandom, women dominated fan fiction authoring; 83% of Star Trek fan fiction authors were female by 1970, and 90% by 1973.[11] One scholar states that fan fiction "fill[s] the need of a mostly female audience for fictional narratives that expand the boundary of the official source products offered on the television and movie screen."[12]

World Wide Web

Fan fiction has become more popular and widespread since the advent of the World Wide Web. According to one estimate, fan fiction comprises one-third of all content about books on the web.[13] In addition to traditional fanzines and conventions, Usenet newsgroups and electronic mailing lists were established for fan fiction as well as fan discussion. Online, searchable fan fiction archives were also established. The online archives were initially non-commercial hand-tended and fandom, or topic, specific. These archives were followed by non-commercial automated databases. In 1998, the not-for-profit site FanFiction.Net came online, which allowed anyone to upload content in any fandom.[14] The ability to self-publish fan fiction at an easily accessible common archive that did not require insider knowledge to join, and the ability to review the stories directly on the site, became popular quite quickly.[15] One popular example of modern fan fiction is E. L. James's Fifty Shades of Grey. This series was originally written as fan fiction for the Twilight series of books and movies and played off the characters of Bella and Edward. In order to not infringe on copyright issues, James changed the character names to Ana and Christian for the purposes of her novels,[16] which is a practice known as 'pulling-to-publish'.[17] Anna Todd's 2013 fan fiction After about the English boy band One Direction secured a book and movie deal with renamed characters in 2014.[18][19] The movie After was released on April 12, 2019.

On May 22, 2013, the online retailer Amazon.com established a new publishing service, Kindle Worlds. This service enabled fan fiction stories of certain licensed media properties to be sold in the Kindle Store with terms including 35% of net sales for works of 10,000 words or more and 20% for short fiction ranging from 5,000 to 10,000 words. However, this arrangement includes restrictions on content, copyright violations, poor document formatting, and use of misleading titles.[20] Amazon shut down Kindle Worlds in August 2018.[21]

Japanese dōjinshi

A similar trend in Japan also began appearing around the 1960s and 1970s, where independently published manga and novels, known as dōjinshi, are frequently published by dōjin circles; many of these dōjinshi are based on existing manga, anime, and video game franchises. Manga authors like Shotaro Ishinomori and Fujiko Fujio formed dōjin groups such as Fujio's New Manga Party (新漫画党, Shin Manga-tō). At this time, dōjin groups were used by artists to make a professional debut. This changed in the coming decades with dōjin groups forming as school clubs and the like. This culminated in 1975 with the Comiket in Tokyo.

Demographics

In a study done in 2010, it was found that 75.2% of account holders on FanFiction.Net allowed for the website to disclose their location. It was found that 57% of accounts originated from the United States, followed by 9.2% created in the United Kingdom, 5.6% in Canada and 4% in Australia.[22]

More recently, a 2020 study of Archive Of Our Own users[23] found that of the surveyed profiles which stated a nationality, 59.7% were located in North America, 16.1% were in Great Britain with an additional 10% otherwise located in Mainland Europe, 6.3% were in Oceania, 2.8% were Scandinavian, 2.2% were in Asia, 1.8% were in South America and the Caribbean, and 0.2% were in the Middle East. This study did not include profiles written in Chinese, Greek, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean, Polish, Russian, or Turkish, which may affect these demographics.[23]

Sex and gender

A 2020 study looking at Harry Potter fan fiction writers on Archive of Our Own found that of users who disclose their gender in their profiles, 50.4% are female or femme-leaning and 13.4% are masculine or masc-leaning. 11% of users disclose that they are transgender, and over 21% identify as nonbinary, genderfluid, and/or genderqueer, with an additional 3.9% indicating that they identify as agender or genderless.[23]

Age

Overwhelmingly, fan fiction writers appear to be in their early- to mid-20s. Demographics have been assessed as being 56.7% university students and other young adults, while 21.3% register as being 30 years and older. 0.2% specify that they are of retirement age; teenagers make up the remaining 19.8%.[23]

Categories and terms

Genres

In addition to the "regular" list of genres, there are a few genres which are particularly associated with fan fiction. These genres can overlap and include:

Angst

A story with an angst-ridden mood centered on a character/characters who are brooding, sorrowful, or in anguish.

Alternative universe (AU)

"What if" fan fiction featuring characters set in a universe other than their canonical one.[24] There are multiple types of alternative universe settings: an alternative universe may make dramatic alterations to the setting (for instance, a "Fantasy AU" that places characters from a non-fantasy canon into a world of magic); it may alter characterization (often referred to simply as someone being "Out of Character" (OOC) rather than an AU proper); or it may alter major plot events to suit the author's purposes (see, for example, "Fix-It Fic").[25]

Crossover

Works featuring characters, items, and/or set pieces from multiple fandoms. This is also called "Fusion Fic" if the two worlds are merged into one.

Soulmate AU

The soulmate AU is a popular genre that envisions characters in a world, often very similar to canon, where soulmates are demonstrably real. Common mechanics for soulmates include each person having the name of their soulmate written on their skin at birth, or a specific change that occurs when two soulmates see or touch each other for the first time. The most common trope in this genre is one character being convinced they don't have/want/deserve a soulmate, only to be proven wrong as they fall in love over the course of the fic.[26]

Time travel AU

A story in which one of the characters is sent back in time to get a second chance with knowledge of the original plot. This is also called the "Peggy Sue", after the movie Peggy Sue Got Married, in which this happens to the titular character. This term may have fallen into disuse due to its similarity to "Mary Sue".

"Groundhog Day," named after the film, is a variation of this trope in which time travel happens repeatedly; typically until the time-traveling character "gets it right."

Darkfic

Stories that are considerably more grim or depressing than the original, often in deliberate contrast to the canonical work(s). Not all stories tagged as "dark" count as darkfic. This is sometimes done with fandoms that are meant to be light-hearted or for children.[27] Darkfic can also refer to content that is "intentionally disturbing" (i.e. physical/emotional violence or abuse).

Fix-it fic

Fix-it fic refers to stories which rewrite canonical events that the fan fiction author disliked or otherwise wished to "fix". This may refer to an authorial misstep- i.e. "fixing" major plot holes- or to a tragic event or ending (for instance, "everyone lives" alternate universes). Fix-it fic that focuses on correcting flaws in the original work is also called "rebuild fic", named for the Rebuild of Evangelion series; if it focuses heavily on critical thinking skills and deductive reasoning, it can be considered a "rationalist rewrite", as popularized by Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality.

Fluff

"Feel good" fan fiction designed to be emphatically happy and uplifting. The plot is often less relevant in these works, as the main focus is to be cheerful. Another term for this genre is WAFF, short for "warm and fuzzy feelings."[28]

Hurt/comfort

A story in which a character is put through a traumatizing experience in order to be comforted.[29] The climax of these stories is typically when one character witnesses another character's suffering and alleviates it; however, a variation that prioritizes focus on the character's suffering (their "hurt"), sometimes to the exclusion of "comfort", is referred to as "whump".[30] Excessive whump may also be considered darkfic.[31]

Self-insert

A genre of fan fiction in which a version of the author is transported to, or discovers they are inside, the world that the fan fiction is based on. Almost always written in the first person.

Multicross self-insert

Instead of a single fictional universe, the inserted author is taken to many in a row, and must usually solve some problems or complete some challenges in each place before moving on. Gaining new powers and occasionally companions from each world is common.

Recursive | meta | fan-verse

Occasionally, a fan fiction will obtain enough popularity to inspire readers to write fan fiction based on that fic. On Archive of Our Own, this kind of recursive fan fiction is called a "remix".[32]

Songfic

Songfic, also known as song fic or song-fic, is a genre of fan fiction that features a fictional work interspersed with the lyrics of a relevant song.[33][34] The term is a combination of "song" and "fiction"; as such, one might also see the genre referred to as "songfiction". As many lyrics are under copyright, whether songfics are a violation of that copyright law is a subject of debate. Some fan fiction websites, such as FanFiction.Net, have barred authors from posting songfics with lyrics outside the public domain.[35]

In an essay in Music, Sound, and Silence in Buffy the Vampire Slayer, University of Sydney professor Catherine Driscoll commented that the genre was "one of the least distinguished modes of fan production" and that "within fan fiction excessive attachment to or foregrounding of popular music is itself dismissed as immature and derivative".[36]

Uberfic

Uberfic is a form of AU fan fiction with characters who physically resemble and share personality traits with their canon counterparts, but have new names and backgrounds in a different setting. The term originated in Xena: Warrior Princess fandom[37] and was inspired by the series episode "The Xena Scrolls", which featured 1940s-era descendents of the characters Xena, Gabrielle, and Joxer, all played by their respective actors, on an archaeological dig in an Indiana Jones pastiche. The Uberfic style lends itself well to original fiction, and many Uberfic authors such as Melissa Good, Radclyffe, and Lori L. Lake have legally published their Xena Uberfic as original lesbian literature.

Vent

Vent fic refers to literature written by an author under duress or for therapeutic purposes, normally to calm themselves following a stressful or upsetting situation.

Terminology

Author's note (A/N)

An abbreviation of "author's note". Author's notes can be written at any point during a fan fiction (in some cases interrupting the flow of the piece by appearing within the body of a fan fiction), but are typically found directly before the beginning of a fan fiction or after it has concluded, and also at the starts or ends of chapters if the story is updated periodically. A/Ns are used to convey direct messages from the author to the reader regarding the piece.[38] This term has fallen somewhat out of use.

Beta reader

A beta reader, or beta, is someone who edits or proofreads someone else's fan fiction.[39][38]

Canon

Canon is the original story. This means anything related to the original source including the plot, settings, and character developments.[38]

Disclaimer

Disclaimers are author's notes typically informing readers about who deserves credit for the original source material,[40] and often containing pseudo-legal language disavowing any intent of copyright infringement or alluding to fair use. Such "disclaimers" are legally ineffective and based on misunderstandings of copyright law, particularly confusion between illegal copyright infringement and unethical plagiarism.[41] Disclaimers have fallen out of use since the Archive of Our Own rose in popularity.

Drabble

A form of flash fiction writing also popular outside of fan fiction, a drabble is typically a piece of writing that is only 100 words.[42]

Fandom

A fandom is a group of fans of a particular work of fiction (e.g. novel, film, television show or video game). Members of a fandom are typically interested in even minor details of the plot/characters of their fandom and often spend a significant portion of their time and energy involved with their interest, that is why most fan fictions are written by members of a particular fandom(s).

Fangirl/fanboy

An individual who is an extremely enthusiastic member of one or more fandoms. Furthermore, the term fangirling/fanboying refers to a moment where a person gets excited about a fandom.

Fanon

Fanon (portmanteau of fan and canon) is an "unofficial canon" idea that is widely accepted to be true among fans, but is neither confirmed nor officially endorsed by the original author or source creator, preventing it from being labeled as canon. Fanon may refer to a whole interpretation of the original work or particular details within it.

Headcanon (HC)

Headcanon is a fan's personal interpretation of canon, such as the backstory of a character or the nature of relationships between characters. It may represent a teasing out of subtext present in the canon, but it cannot directly contradict canon. If many other fans share this interpretation, it may become fanon.

Mary Sue

Also of note is the concept of the "Mary Sue" (occasionally "MS"), a term credited as originating in Star Trek fan fiction that has crossed over to the mainstream, at least among editors and writers. In early Trek fan fiction, a common plot was that of a minor member of the USS Enterprise's crew saving the life of Captain Kirk or Mister Spock, often being rewarded with a sexual relationship as a result. The term "Mary Sue", originating in a parody of stories in this wish fulfillment genre, thus tends to refer to an idealized or overpowered character lacking flaws, often taken to represent the author.[43]

One true pairing (OTP)

An abbreviation of the term "one true pairing", where the author or reader ships (wishes for a romantic relationship between) certain characters from a fandom. Additionally, OTPs are also subsetted as OT3s, which reference the reader's one true bonding with three people; this number can be changed to refer to a larger bonding of people.

One shot

A single piece of writing, as opposed to a multichapter work, that can be of any length. May also have sequel works, while still being a one shot.[citation needed]

Real person fiction (RPF)

Fan fiction works that tell stories about real people, usually celebrities, instead of fictional characters. The book After by Anna Todd, later adapted into a film of the same name, was originally a real person fan fiction about One Direction member Harry Styles.

Shipping

Shipping is a variant of romance focused on exploring a relationship between two or more characters from the original fandom(s). It has several fandom-specific subgenres, chief among which are slash (which focuses on homosexual pairings, usually of the male variety) and femslash (same as slash, but exclusively female/female). In another context, the term "shipping" within the community may mean that a fan is heavily invested in a relationship between two characters. Writers of fan fiction often use the genre to explore homosexual pairings for popular characters who are not in (or not specified as being in; see queerbaiting) homosexual relationships in the canon work.[44] A subcategory of this, depicting romantic couples in mundane domestic situations (such as picking out curtains), was previously called "curtainfic", though the term has fallen somewhat out of use.

Smut

Smut, also called porn and (rarely) erotica, is sexually explicit or pornographic fan fiction. This could refer to either a small portion of a story or the story in its entirety. Historically, the terms "lemon" (i.e. explicit pornography) and "lime" (i.e. sexually suggestive works) were euphemisms used to allude to explicit material. These terms were in common use in the 2000s, and fell into disuse before resurging in December 2018 due to Tumblr's censorship on adult content. The use of the terms lemon and lime allow writers to circumnavigate the "explicit terminologies" that may get work flagged by platforms like Tumblr, while still tagging their work as explicit for their readers.

Trigger warning (TW)

Trigger warnings are intended to warn people of content in fan fiction that could be harmful or "triggering" to those who have dealt with traumatic situations. Fan fiction is often tagged using various TWs so that readers may prepare for or avoid certain content. Sometimes CW, an abbreviation of "content warning," is used, either instead of or in addition to a TW.

Trigger warnings are usually inserted when the subject matter of a piece of work deals with issues like drug abuse, mental illness, abuse, or extreme violence. Archive of Our Own has notably codified a system of common warnings into its core tags,[45] requiring authors to either disclose or explicitly choose not to disclose if their work contains graphic violence, major character death, rape, or underage sex.

Interactivity in the online era

Reviews can be given by both anonymous and registered users of most sites, and sites are often programmed to notify the author of new feedback, making them a common way for readers and authors online to communicate directly.[46] This system is intended for a type of bond between the reader and the writer, as well as helping the author improve their writing skills through constructive criticism, enabling them to produce a better work next time.[47][unreliable source?] Occasionally, unmoderated review systems are abused to send flames, spam, or trolling messages. As a result, the author of the story can either disable or enable anonymous reviews, depending on their preference. Internet fan fiction allows young writers access to a wider audience for their literary efforts than ever before, resulting in improved literacy.[48]

There are other ways that fandom members may participate in their fandom community such as gift exchanges [49] or fic exchanges. A gift exchange is an organized challenge in which participants create fan fiction specifically for other participants. They may research what the user receiving their gift enjoys or submissions may include a Dear Creator Letter [50] explaining exactly what the receiver wants or does not want. Awards may even be given at the end of a gift/fic exchange to recognize particularly well-written or enjoyable contributions to the exchange.

Legality

There is ongoing debate about to what extent fan fiction is permitted under contemporary copyright law.

Some argue that fan fiction does not fall under fair use, as it is derivative work.[51][52] The 2009 ruling by United States District Court Judge Deborah A. Batts, permanently prohibiting publication in the United States of a book by Ryan Cassidy, a Swedish writer whose protagonist is a 76-year-old version of Holden Caulfield of The Catcher in the Rye, may be seen as upholding this position regarding publishing fan fiction, as the judge stated, "To the extent Defendants contend that 60 Years and the character of Mr. C direct parodied comment or criticism at Catcher or Holden Caulfield, as opposed to Salinger himself, the Court finds such contentions to be post-hoc rationalizations employed through vague generalizations about the alleged naivety of the original, rather than reasonably perceivable parody."[53]

Others such as the Organization for Transformative Works uphold the legality of non-profit fan fiction under the fair use doctrine, as it is a creative, transformative process.[54]

In 1981, Lucasfilm Ltd. sent out a letter to several fanzine publishers, asserting Lucasfilm's copyright to all Star Wars characters and insisting that no fanzine publish pornography. The letter also alluded to possible legal action that could be taken against fanzines that did not comply.[55]

The Harry Potter Lexicon is one case where the encyclopedia-like website about everything in the Harry Potter series moved towards publishing and commercializing the Lexicon as a supplementary and complementary source of information to the series. Rowling and her publishers levied a lawsuit against the website creator, Steven Vander Ark, and the publishing company, RDR Books, for a breach of copyright. While the lawsuit did conclude in Vander Ark's favor, the main issue in contention was the majority of the Lexicon copied a majority of the Series' material and does not transform enough of the material to be held separately from the series itself.[56]

While the HP Lexicon case is an example of Western culture treatment of fan fiction and copyright law, in China, Harry Potter fan fiction is less addressed in legal conflicts but is used as a cultural and educational tool between Western and Chinese cultures. More specifically, while there are a number of "fake" Harry Potter books in China, most of these books are said to be addressing concepts and issues found in Chinese culture. This transformative usage of Harry Potter in fan fiction is allegedly from the desire to enhance and express value to Chinese tradition and culture.[57]

Some prominent authors have given their blessings to fan fiction, notably J.K. Rowling. By 2014, there were already almost 750,000 Harry Potter fan stories on the web, ranging from short stories to novel-length tomes.[58] Rowling said she was "flattered" that people wanted to write their own stories based on her fictional characters.[59] Similarly, Stephenie Meyer has put links on her website to fan fiction sites about her characters from the Twilight series.[60] The Fifty Shades trilogy was developed from a Twilight fan fiction originally titled Master of the Universe and published episodically on fan-fiction websites under the pen name "Snowqueen's Icedragon". The piece featured characters named after Stephenie Meyer's characters in Twilight, Edward Cullen and Bella Swan.[61][62]

However, in 2003, a British law firm representing J.K. Rowling and Warner Bros. sent a letter to webmasters requesting that adult Harry Potter fan fiction ("stories containing graphically violent and sexual content") be removed from a prominent fan fiction website, citing concerns that children might stumble upon the illicit content. In response, the webmasters from several websites hosting adult Harry Potter fan fiction, among other types of fan fiction, "made claims of 'fair use' and nonprofessional status" to justify their right to continue hosting the adult content.[63]

As an example of changing views on the subject, author Orson Scott Card (best known for the Ender's Game series) once stated on his website, "to write fiction using my characters is morally identical to moving into my house without invitation and throwing out my family." He changed his mind completely and since has assisted fan fiction contests, arguing to the Wall Street Journal that "Every piece of fan fiction is an ad for my book. What kind of idiot would I be to want that to disappear?"[64]

However, Anne Rice consistently and aggressively prevented fan fiction based on any of her fictional characters (mostly those from her famous Interview with the Vampire and its sequels in The Vampire Chronicles). She, along with Anne McCaffrey (whose stance has been changed by her son, Todd McCaffrey, since her death) and Raymond Feist, asked to have any fiction related to their series removed from FanFiction.Net.[59] George R.R. Martin is also strongly opposed to fan fiction, believing it to be copyright infringement and a bad exercise for aspiring writers.[65][66] Sharon Lee and Steve Miller, creators of the Liaden universe, strongly oppose fan fiction written in their universe, with Lee saying that "Nobody else is going to get it right. This may sound rude and elitist, but honestly, it's not easy for us to get it right sometimes, and we've been living with these characters ... for a very long time."[67]

See also

References

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  41. ^ "Fan Fiction, Plagiarism, and Copyright". March 18, 2012.
  42. ^ "Drabble - Fanlore". fanlore.org. Retrieved June 30, 2020.
  43. ^ Segall (2008). Fan Fiction Writing: New Work Based on Favorite Fiction. Rosen Pub. p. 26. ISBN 978-1404213562.
  44. ^ Hayes, Sharon; Ball, Matthew (2010), Scherer, B. (ed.), "Queering cyberspace: fan fiction communities as spaces for expressing and exploring sexuality", Queering Paradigms, Switzerland: Peter Lang Publishing, pp. 219–240, ISBN 978-3-03911-970-7, retrieved October 21, 2020
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  48. ^ Tosenberger, Catherine (2008) "Homosexuality at the Online Hogwarts: Harry Potter Slash Fanfiction" Children's Literature 36 pp. 185-207 doi:10.1353/chl.0.0017
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Further reading

External links

  •   Media related to Fan fiction at Wikimedia Commons
  • "Quentin Tarantino's Star Wars?: Digital Cinema, Media Convergence, and Participatory Culture"—Henry Jenkins on fan fiction


fiction, other, uses, fiction, fanfiction, also, abbreviated, fanfic, fictional, writing, written, amateur, capacity, fans, unauthorized, based, existing, work, fiction, author, uses, copyrighted, characters, settings, other, intellectual, properties, from, or. For other uses see Fan Fiction Fan fiction or fanfiction also abbreviated to fan fic fanfic fic or FF is fictional writing written in an amateur capacity by fans unauthorized by but based on an existing work of fiction The author uses copyrighted characters settings or other intellectual properties from the original creator s as a basis for their writing Fan fiction ranges from a couple of sentences to an entire novel and fans can retain the creator s characters and settings and or add their own It is a form of fan labor Fan fiction can be based on any fictional and occasional non fictional subject Common bases for fan fiction include novels movies musical groups cartoons anime manga and video games New Adventures of Alice 1917 by John Rae an early pastiche or fan fiction Fan fiction is rarely commissioned or authorized by the original work s creator or publisher and is rarely professionally published It may infringe on the original author s copyright depending on the jurisdiction and on legal questions such as whether or not it qualifies as fair use see Legal issues with fan fiction Attitudes of authors and copyright owners of original works to fan fiction have ranged from indifference to encouragement to rejection Copyright owners have occasionally responded with legal action The term came into use in the 20th century as copyright laws began to delineate between stories using established characters that were authorized by the copyright holder and those that were not 1 Fan fiction is defined by being related to its subject s canonical fictional universe either staying within those boundaries but not being of the canon itself or else branching outside of it into an alternative universe 2 Thus what is fanon is separate from what is canon Fan fiction is often written and published within circles of fans and therefore would usually not cater to readers who have no knowledge of the original fiction Contents 1 Definition 2 History 2 1 Before copyright 2 2 19th century 2 3 Star Trek fandom 2 4 World Wide Web 2 5 Japanese dōjinshi 3 Demographics 3 1 Sex and gender 3 2 Age 4 Categories and terms 4 1 Genres 4 1 1 Angst 4 1 2 Alternative universe AU 4 1 3 Crossover 4 1 4 Soulmate AU 4 1 5 Time travel AU 4 1 6 Darkfic 4 1 7 Fix it fic 4 1 8 Fluff 4 1 9 Hurt comfort 4 1 10 Self insert 4 1 11 Multicross self insert 4 1 12 Recursive meta fan verse 4 1 13 Songfic 4 1 14 Uberfic 4 1 15 Vent 4 2 Terminology 4 2 1 Author s note A N 4 2 2 Beta reader 4 2 3 Canon 4 2 4 Disclaimer 4 2 5 Drabble 4 2 6 Fandom 4 2 7 Fangirl fanboy 4 2 8 Fanon 4 2 9 Headcanon HC 4 2 10 Mary Sue 4 2 11 One true pairing OTP 4 2 12 One shot 4 2 13 Real person fiction RPF 4 2 14 Shipping 4 2 15 Smut 4 2 16 Trigger warning TW 5 Interactivity in the online era 6 Legality 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksDefinition EditThe term fan fiction has been used in print as early as 1939 in this earliest known citation it is used in a disparaging way to refer to amateurish science fiction as opposed to pro fiction 3 The term also appears in the 1944 Fancyclopedia an encyclopedia of fandom jargon It is defined there as fiction about fans or sometimes about pros and occasionally bringing in some famous characters from science fiction stories The book also mentions that the term is sometimes improperly used to mean fan science fiction that is ordinary fantasy published in a fan magazine 3 4 History EditBefore copyright Edit See also History of copyright law Before the adoption of copyright in the modern sense it was not unusual for authors to copy characters if not entire plots For example Shakespeare s plays Romeo and Juliet Much Ado About Nothing Othello As You Like It and The Winter s Tale were all based on relatively recent fiction by other authors 5 In 1614 Alonso Fernandez de Avellaneda wrote a sequel to Cervantes Don Quixote before Cervantes finished and published his own second volume 19th century Edit Further information Pastiche and Unofficial sequel Among 19th century literature subject to notable depictions not initially authorized by the original author is included Bram Stoker s Dracula s depiction in the translated adaptation Powers of Darkness 6 The works of Jane Austen remain one of the most popular works to make unauthorized depictions of 7 with one notable Jane Austen fan fiction being Old Friends and New Fancies Many unauthorized stories of Sherlock Holmes by Arthur Conan Doyle have been created including The Adventure of the Two Collaborators by J M Barrie 8 Also created has been The Space Machine based on The War of the Worlds and Morlock Night based on The Time Machine by H G Wells A New Alice in the Old Wonderland based on Alice s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll and Wide Sargasso Sea based on Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte 9 Star Trek fandom Edit The Star Trek fanzine Spockanalia contained the first fan fiction in the modern sense of the term The modern phenomenon of fan fiction as an expression of fandom and fan interaction was popularized and defined via Star Trek fandom and their fanzines published in the 1960s The first Star Trek fanzine Spockanalia 1967 contained some fan fiction many others followed its example 10 1 These fanzines were produced via offset printing and mimeography and mailed to other fans or sold at science fiction conventions for a small fee to help recoup costs Unlike other aspects of fandom women dominated fan fiction authoring 83 of Star Trek fan fiction authors were female by 1970 and 90 by 1973 11 One scholar states that fan fiction fill s the need of a mostly female audience for fictional narratives that expand the boundary of the official source products offered on the television and movie screen 12 World Wide Web Edit Fan fiction has become more popular and widespread since the advent of the World Wide Web According to one estimate fan fiction comprises one third of all content about books on the web 13 In addition to traditional fanzines and conventions Usenet newsgroups and electronic mailing lists were established for fan fiction as well as fan discussion Online searchable fan fiction archives were also established The online archives were initially non commercial hand tended and fandom or topic specific These archives were followed by non commercial automated databases In 1998 the not for profit site FanFiction Net came online which allowed anyone to upload content in any fandom 14 The ability to self publish fan fiction at an easily accessible common archive that did not require insider knowledge to join and the ability to review the stories directly on the site became popular quite quickly 15 One popular example of modern fan fiction is E L James s Fifty Shades of Grey This series was originally written as fan fiction for the Twilight series of books and movies and played off the characters of Bella and Edward In order to not infringe on copyright issues James changed the character names to Ana and Christian for the purposes of her novels 16 which is a practice known as pulling to publish 17 Anna Todd s 2013 fan fiction After about the English boy band One Direction secured a book and movie deal with renamed characters in 2014 18 19 The movie After was released on April 12 2019 On May 22 2013 the online retailer Amazon com established a new publishing service Kindle Worlds This service enabled fan fiction stories of certain licensed media properties to be sold in the Kindle Store with terms including 35 of net sales for works of 10 000 words or more and 20 for short fiction ranging from 5 000 to 10 000 words However this arrangement includes restrictions on content copyright violations poor document formatting and use of misleading titles 20 Amazon shut down Kindle Worlds in August 2018 21 Japanese dōjinshi Edit A similar trend in Japan also began appearing around the 1960s and 1970s where independently published manga and novels known as dōjinshi are frequently published by dōjin circles many of these dōjinshi are based on existing manga anime and video game franchises Manga authors like Shotaro Ishinomori and Fujiko Fujio formed dōjin groups such as Fujio s New Manga Party 新漫画党 Shin Manga tō At this time dōjin groups were used by artists to make a professional debut This changed in the coming decades with dōjin groups forming as school clubs and the like This culminated in 1975 with the Comiket in Tokyo Demographics EditIn a study done in 2010 it was found that 75 2 of account holders on FanFiction Net allowed for the website to disclose their location It was found that 57 of accounts originated from the United States followed by 9 2 created in the United Kingdom 5 6 in Canada and 4 in Australia 22 More recently a 2020 study of Archive Of Our Own users 23 found that of the surveyed profiles which stated a nationality 59 7 were located in North America 16 1 were in Great Britain with an additional 10 otherwise located in Mainland Europe 6 3 were in Oceania 2 8 were Scandinavian 2 2 were in Asia 1 8 were in South America and the Caribbean and 0 2 were in the Middle East This study did not include profiles written in Chinese Greek Indonesian Japanese Korean Polish Russian or Turkish which may affect these demographics 23 Sex and gender Edit A 2020 study looking at Harry Potter fan fiction writers on Archive of Our Own found that of users who disclose their gender in their profiles 50 4 are female or femme leaning and 13 4 are masculine or masc leaning 11 of users disclose that they are transgender and over 21 identify as nonbinary genderfluid and or genderqueer with an additional 3 9 indicating that they identify as agender or genderless 23 Age Edit Overwhelmingly fan fiction writers appear to be in their early to mid 20s Demographics have been assessed as being 56 7 university students and other young adults while 21 3 register as being 30 years and older 0 2 specify that they are of retirement age teenagers make up the remaining 19 8 23 Categories and terms EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Fan fiction news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message See also Slash fiction Femslash Yaoi Yuri genre and Mary Sue Genres Edit In addition to the regular list of genres there are a few genres which are particularly associated with fan fiction These genres can overlap and include Angst Edit A story with an angst ridden mood centered on a character characters who are brooding sorrowful or in anguish Alternative universe AU Edit Main article Alternative universe fan fiction What if fan fiction featuring characters set in a universe other than their canonical one 24 There are multiple types of alternative universe settings an alternative universe may make dramatic alterations to the setting for instance a Fantasy AU that places characters from a non fantasy canon into a world of magic it may alter characterization often referred to simply as someone being Out of Character OOC rather than an AU proper or it may alter major plot events to suit the author s purposes see for example Fix It Fic 25 Crossover Edit Works featuring characters items and or set pieces from multiple fandoms This is also called Fusion Fic if the two worlds are merged into one Soulmate AU Edit The soulmate AU is a popular genre that envisions characters in a world often very similar to canon where soulmates are demonstrably real Common mechanics for soulmates include each person having the name of their soulmate written on their skin at birth or a specific change that occurs when two soulmates see or touch each other for the first time The most common trope in this genre is one character being convinced they don t have want deserve a soulmate only to be proven wrong as they fall in love over the course of the fic 26 Time travel AU Edit A story in which one of the characters is sent back in time to get a second chance with knowledge of the original plot This is also called the Peggy Sue after the movie Peggy Sue Got Married in which this happens to the titular character This term may have fallen into disuse due to its similarity to Mary Sue Groundhog Day named after the film is a variation of this trope in which time travel happens repeatedly typically until the time traveling character gets it right Darkfic Edit Stories that are considerably more grim or depressing than the original often in deliberate contrast to the canonical work s Not all stories tagged as dark count as darkfic This is sometimes done with fandoms that are meant to be light hearted or for children 27 Darkfic can also refer to content that is intentionally disturbing i e physical emotional violence or abuse Fix it fic Edit Fix it fic refers to stories which rewrite canonical events that the fan fiction author disliked or otherwise wished to fix This may refer to an authorial misstep i e fixing major plot holes or to a tragic event or ending for instance everyone lives alternate universes Fix it fic that focuses on correcting flaws in the original work is also called rebuild fic named for the Rebuild of Evangelion series if it focuses heavily on critical thinking skills and deductive reasoning it can be considered a rationalist rewrite as popularized by Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality Fluff Edit Feel good fan fiction designed to be emphatically happy and uplifting The plot is often less relevant in these works as the main focus is to be cheerful Another term for this genre is WAFF short for warm and fuzzy feelings 28 Hurt comfort Edit A story in which a character is put through a traumatizing experience in order to be comforted 29 The climax of these stories is typically when one character witnesses another character s suffering and alleviates it however a variation that prioritizes focus on the character s suffering their hurt sometimes to the exclusion of comfort is referred to as whump 30 Excessive whump may also be considered darkfic 31 Self insert Edit A genre of fan fiction in which a version of the author is transported to or discovers they are inside the world that the fan fiction is based on Almost always written in the first person Multicross self insert Edit Instead of a single fictional universe the inserted author is taken to many in a row and must usually solve some problems or complete some challenges in each place before moving on Gaining new powers and occasionally companions from each world is common Recursive meta fan verse Edit Occasionally a fan fiction will obtain enough popularity to inspire readers to write fan fiction based on that fic On Archive of Our Own this kind of recursive fan fiction is called a remix 32 Songfic Edit Songfic also known as song fic or song fic is a genre of fan fiction that features a fictional work interspersed with the lyrics of a relevant song 33 34 The term is a combination of song and fiction as such one might also see the genre referred to as songfiction As many lyrics are under copyright whether songfics are a violation of that copyright law is a subject of debate Some fan fiction websites such as FanFiction Net have barred authors from posting songfics with lyrics outside the public domain 35 In an essay in Music Sound and Silence in Buffy the Vampire Slayer University of Sydney professor Catherine Driscoll commented that the genre was one of the least distinguished modes of fan production and that within fan fiction excessive attachment to or foregrounding of popular music is itself dismissed as immature and derivative 36 Uberfic Edit Uberfic is a form of AU fan fiction with characters who physically resemble and share personality traits with their canon counterparts but have new names and backgrounds in a different setting The term originated in Xena Warrior Princess fandom 37 and was inspired by the series episode The Xena Scrolls which featured 1940s era descendents of the characters Xena Gabrielle and Joxer all played by their respective actors on an archaeological dig in an Indiana Jones pastiche The Uberfic style lends itself well to original fiction and many Uberfic authors such as Melissa Good Radclyffe and Lori L Lake have legally published their Xena Uberfic as original lesbian literature Vent Edit Vent fic refers to literature written by an author under duress or for therapeutic purposes normally to calm themselves following a stressful or upsetting situation Terminology Edit Author s note A N Edit An abbreviation of author s note Author s notes can be written at any point during a fan fiction in some cases interrupting the flow of the piece by appearing within the body of a fan fiction but are typically found directly before the beginning of a fan fiction or after it has concluded and also at the starts or ends of chapters if the story is updated periodically A Ns are used to convey direct messages from the author to the reader regarding the piece 38 This term has fallen somewhat out of use Beta reader Edit Main article Beta reader A beta reader or beta is someone who edits or proofreads someone else s fan fiction 39 38 Canon Edit Canon is the original story This means anything related to the original source including the plot settings and character developments 38 Disclaimer Edit See also Legal issues with fan fiction Disclaimers are author s notes typically informing readers about who deserves credit for the original source material 40 and often containing pseudo legal language disavowing any intent of copyright infringement or alluding to fair use Such disclaimers are legally ineffective and based on misunderstandings of copyright law particularly confusion between illegal copyright infringement and unethical plagiarism 41 Disclaimers have fallen out of use since the Archive of Our Own rose in popularity Drabble Edit A form of flash fiction writing also popular outside of fan fiction a drabble is typically a piece of writing that is only 100 words 42 Fandom Edit A fandom is a group of fans of a particular work of fiction e g novel film television show or video game Members of a fandom are typically interested in even minor details of the plot characters of their fandom and often spend a significant portion of their time and energy involved with their interest that is why most fan fictions are written by members of a particular fandom s Fangirl fanboy Edit An individual who is an extremely enthusiastic member of one or more fandoms Furthermore the term fangirling fanboying refers to a moment where a person gets excited about a fandom Fanon Edit Fanon portmanteau of fan and canon is an unofficial canon idea that is widely accepted to be true among fans but is neither confirmed nor officially endorsed by the original author or source creator preventing it from being labeled as canon Fanon may refer to a whole interpretation of the original work or particular details within it Headcanon HC Edit Headcanon is a fan s personal interpretation of canon such as the backstory of a character or the nature of relationships between characters It may represent a teasing out of subtext present in the canon but it cannot directly contradict canon If many other fans share this interpretation it may become fanon Mary Sue Edit Also of note is the concept of the Mary Sue occasionally MS a term credited as originating in Star Trek fan fiction that has crossed over to the mainstream at least among editors and writers In early Trek fan fiction a common plot was that of a minor member of the USS Enterprise s crew saving the life of Captain Kirk or Mister Spock often being rewarded with a sexual relationship as a result The term Mary Sue originating in a parody of stories in this wish fulfillment genre thus tends to refer to an idealized or overpowered character lacking flaws often taken to represent the author 43 One true pairing OTP Edit An abbreviation of the term one true pairing where the author or reader ships wishes for a romantic relationship between certain characters from a fandom Additionally OTPs are also subsetted as OT3s which reference the reader s one true bonding with three people this number can be changed to refer to a larger bonding of people One shot Edit A single piece of writing as opposed to a multichapter work that can be of any length May also have sequel works while still being a one shot citation needed Real person fiction RPF Edit Main article Real person fiction Fan fiction works that tell stories about real people usually celebrities instead of fictional characters The book After by Anna Todd later adapted into a film of the same name was originally a real person fan fiction about One Direction member Harry Styles Shipping Edit Shipping is a variant of romance focused on exploring a relationship between two or more characters from the original fandom s It has several fandom specific subgenres chief among which are slash which focuses on homosexual pairings usually of the male variety and femslash same as slash but exclusively female female In another context the term shipping within the community may mean that a fan is heavily invested in a relationship between two characters Writers of fan fiction often use the genre to explore homosexual pairings for popular characters who are not in or not specified as being in see queerbaiting homosexual relationships in the canon work 44 A subcategory of this depicting romantic couples in mundane domestic situations such as picking out curtains was previously called curtainfic though the term has fallen somewhat out of use Smut Edit Smut also called porn and rarely erotica is sexually explicit or pornographic fan fiction This could refer to either a small portion of a story or the story in its entirety Historically the terms lemon i e explicit pornography and lime i e sexually suggestive works were euphemisms used to allude to explicit material These terms were in common use in the 2000s and fell into disuse before resurging in December 2018 due to Tumblr s censorship on adult content The use of the terms lemon and lime allow writers to circumnavigate the explicit terminologies that may get work flagged by platforms like Tumblr while still tagging their work as explicit for their readers Trigger warning TW Edit Trigger warnings are intended to warn people of content in fan fiction that could be harmful or triggering to those who have dealt with traumatic situations Fan fiction is often tagged using various TWs so that readers may prepare for or avoid certain content Sometimes CW an abbreviation of content warning is used either instead of or in addition to a TW Trigger warnings are usually inserted when the subject matter of a piece of work deals with issues like drug abuse mental illness abuse or extreme violence Archive of Our Own has notably codified a system of common warnings into its core tags 45 requiring authors to either disclose or explicitly choose not to disclose if their work contains graphic violence major character death rape or underage sex Interactivity in the online era EditReviews can be given by both anonymous and registered users of most sites and sites are often programmed to notify the author of new feedback making them a common way for readers and authors online to communicate directly 46 This system is intended for a type of bond between the reader and the writer as well as helping the author improve their writing skills through constructive criticism enabling them to produce a better work next time 47 unreliable source Occasionally unmoderated review systems are abused to send flames spam or trolling messages As a result the author of the story can either disable or enable anonymous reviews depending on their preference Internet fan fiction allows young writers access to a wider audience for their literary efforts than ever before resulting in improved literacy 48 There are other ways that fandom members may participate in their fandom community such as gift exchanges 49 or fic exchanges A gift exchange is an organized challenge in which participants create fan fiction specifically for other participants They may research what the user receiving their gift enjoys or submissions may include a Dear Creator Letter 50 explaining exactly what the receiver wants or does not want Awards may even be given at the end of a gift fic exchange to recognize particularly well written or enjoyable contributions to the exchange Legality EditMain article Legal issues with fan fiction There is ongoing debate about to what extent fan fiction is permitted under contemporary copyright law Some argue that fan fiction does not fall under fair use as it is derivative work 51 52 The 2009 ruling by United States District Court Judge Deborah A Batts permanently prohibiting publication in the United States of a book by Ryan Cassidy a Swedish writer whose protagonist is a 76 year old version of Holden Caulfield of The Catcher in the Rye may be seen as upholding this position regarding publishing fan fiction as the judge stated To the extent Defendants contend that 60 Years and the character of Mr C direct parodied comment or criticism at Catcher or Holden Caulfield as opposed to Salinger himself the Court finds such contentions to be post hoc rationalizations employed through vague generalizations about the alleged naivety of the original rather than reasonably perceivable parody 53 Others such as the Organization for Transformative Works uphold the legality of non profit fan fiction under the fair use doctrine as it is a creative transformative process 54 In 1981 Lucasfilm Ltd sent out a letter to several fanzine publishers asserting Lucasfilm s copyright to all Star Wars characters and insisting that no fanzine publish pornography The letter also alluded to possible legal action that could be taken against fanzines that did not comply 55 The Harry Potter Lexicon is one case where the encyclopedia like website about everything in the Harry Potter series moved towards publishing and commercializing the Lexicon as a supplementary and complementary source of information to the series Rowling and her publishers levied a lawsuit against the website creator Steven Vander Ark and the publishing company RDR Books for a breach of copyright While the lawsuit did conclude in Vander Ark s favor the main issue in contention was the majority of the Lexicon copied a majority of the Series material and does not transform enough of the material to be held separately from the series itself 56 While the HP Lexicon case is an example of Western culture treatment of fan fiction and copyright law in China Harry Potter fan fiction is less addressed in legal conflicts but is used as a cultural and educational tool between Western and Chinese cultures More specifically while there are a number of fake Harry Potter books in China most of these books are said to be addressing concepts and issues found in Chinese culture This transformative usage of Harry Potter in fan fiction is allegedly from the desire to enhance and express value to Chinese tradition and culture 57 Some prominent authors have given their blessings to fan fiction notably J K Rowling By 2014 there were already almost 750 000 Harry Potter fan stories on the web ranging from short stories to novel length tomes 58 Rowling said she was flattered that people wanted to write their own stories based on her fictional characters 59 Similarly Stephenie Meyer has put links on her website to fan fiction sites about her characters from the Twilight series 60 The Fifty Shades trilogy was developed from a Twilight fan fiction originally titled Master of the Universe and published episodically on fan fiction websites under the pen name Snowqueen s Icedragon The piece featured characters named after Stephenie Meyer s characters in Twilight Edward Cullen and Bella Swan 61 62 However in 2003 a British law firm representing J K Rowling and Warner Bros sent a letter to webmasters requesting that adult Harry Potter fan fiction stories containing graphically violent and sexual content be removed from a prominent fan fiction website citing concerns that children might stumble upon the illicit content In response the webmasters from several websites hosting adult Harry Potter fan fiction among other types of fan fiction made claims of fair use and nonprofessional status to justify their right to continue hosting the adult content 63 As an example of changing views on the subject author Orson Scott Card best known for the Ender s Game series once stated on his website to write fiction using my characters is morally identical to moving into my house without invitation and throwing out my family He changed his mind completely and since has assisted fan fiction contests arguing to the Wall Street Journal that Every piece of fan fiction is an ad for my book What kind of idiot would I be to want that to disappear 64 However Anne Rice consistently and aggressively prevented fan fiction based on any of her fictional characters mostly those from her famous Interview with the Vampire and its sequels in The Vampire Chronicles She along with Anne McCaffrey whose stance has been changed by her son Todd McCaffrey since her death and Raymond Feist asked to have any fiction related to their series removed from FanFiction Net 59 George R R Martin is also strongly opposed to fan fiction believing it to be copyright infringement and a bad exercise for aspiring writers 65 66 Sharon Lee and Steve Miller creators of the Liaden universe strongly oppose fan fiction written in their universe with Lee saying that Nobody else is going to get it right This may sound rude and elitist but honestly it s not easy for us to get it right sometimes and we ve been living with these characters for a very long time 67 See also EditCanon fiction Collaborative fiction Fandom Parallel novel Pastiche Revisionism fictional References Edit Fanfiction A Legal Battle of Creativity Reporter Magazine February 5 2016 Retrieved March 19 2018 Schulz Nancy December 31 2001 Fan Fiction TV Viewers Have It Their Way Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved November 23 2018 a b Jeff Prucher ed 2007 fan fiction Brave New Words The Oxford Dictionary of Science Fiction New York Oxford University Press Inc p 57 ISBN 978 0 19 530567 8 John Bristol 1944 Fancyclopedia The Fantasy Foundation William Shakespeare Shakespeare s sources Encyclopaedia Britannica Fleming Colin April 19 2017 The Icelandic Dracula Bram Stoker s vampire takes a second bite The Guardian The early adventures of the apocryphal Sherlock Holmes The Daily Dot January 16 2014 In long lost play the author of Peter Pan spoofs Sherlock Holmes and the mystery genre PBS NewsHour August 10 2017 Anderson Hephzibah The book that changed Jane Eyre forever BBC Verba Joan Marie 2003 Boldly Writing A Trekker Fan amp Zine History 1967 1987 PDF Minnetonka MN FTL Publications ISBN 0 9653575 4 6 Archived from the original PDF on September 10 2016 Retrieved April 3 2017 Coppa Francesca 2006 A Brief History of Media Fandom In Hellekson Karen Busse Kristina eds Fan Fiction and Fan Communities in the Age of the Internet Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Company pp 41 59 ISBN 978 0 7864 2640 9 Bacon Smith Camille 2000 Science Fiction Culture University of Pennsylvania Press pp 112 113 ISBN 978 0 8122 1530 4 Boog Jason September 18 2008 Brokeback 33 Percent Mediabistro Archived from the original on February 10 2013 Retrieved January 22 2012 Buechner Maryanne Murray March 4 2002 Pop Fiction Time Archived from the original on February 18 2007 Retrieved May 29 2010 Bradley Karen Winter 2005 Internet lives Social context and moral domain in adolescent development New Directions for Youth Development 2005 108 57 76 doi 10 1002 yd 142 PMID 16570878 Marah Eakin February 12 2015 Holy crow Fifty Shades Of Grey is crazy similar to its Twilight origin story The A V Club Brennan Joseph Large David 2014 Let s get a bit of context Fifty Shades and the phenomenon of pulling to publish in Twilight fan fiction Media International Australia 152 1 27 39 doi 10 1177 1329878X1415200105 S2CID 140471681 After Movie Paramount Acquires Rights To Wattpad Book By Anna Todd Deadline Hollywood October 16 2014 Retrieved December 26 2014 Ford Rebecca June 4 2015 Mom Writer Susan McMartin to Adapt One Direction Inspired Fan Fiction After Exclusive The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved September 2 2015 Pepitone Julianne May 3 2013 Amazon s Kindle Worlds lets fan fiction writers sell their stories CNN Money Retrieved May 23 2013 Amazon to Shut Down Kindle Worlds The Digital Reader May 15 2018 Kelvin Lord March 18 2011 Fan Fiction Demographics in 2010 FFN Research Blogger Retrieved February 20 2020 a b c d Duggan Jennifer September 1 2020 Who writes Harry Potter fan fiction Passionate detachment zooming out and fan fiction paratexts on AO3 Transformative Works and Cultures 34 doi 10 3983 twc 2020 1863 S2CID 224983629 Retrieved July 10 2021 FanWorks org Fan Works Inc Help amp Tools Index www fanworks org Retrieved January 30 2019 Samutina Natalia July 3 2016 Fan fiction as world building transformative reception in crossover writing Continuum 30 4 433 450 doi 10 1080 10304312 2016 1141863 ISSN 1030 4312 S2CID 147685039 Soulmates Works Archive of Our Own archiveofourown org Retrieved July 11 2021 Darkfic Fanlore fanlore org Fluff Works Archive of Our Own archiveofourown org Retrieved July 11 2021 Fan Fiction Dictionary Your Guide To Fanspeak expressions populli net Linn Rachel Elizabeth September 15 2017 Bodies in horrifying hurt comfort fan fiction Paying the toll Transformative Works and Cultures 25 doi 10 3983 twc 2017 01102 ISSN 1941 2258 Hurt Comfort Works Archive of Our Own archiveofourown org Retrieved July 11 2021 Posting and Editing FAQ Archive of Our Own archiveofourown org Retrieved July 10 2021 Heilman Elizabeth E September 1 2008 Critical Perspectives on Harry Potter Routledge pp 320 321 ISBN 9781135891541 Lugmayr Artur Zotto Cinzia Dal July 23 2016 Media Convergence Handbook Vol 2 Firms and User Perspectives Springer p 148 ISBN 9783642544873 Guidelines FanFiction net Retrieved May 27 2016 Attinello Paul Gregory Halfyard Janet K Knights Vanessa January 1 2010 Music Sound and Silence in Buffy the Vampire Slayer Ashgate Publishing Ltd pp 114 129 ISBN 9780754660415 Whoosh www whoosh org Retrieved May 8 2021 a b c Common Fandom Terms May 2016 Retrieved May 9 2016 Kelley Brittany June 2016 Chocolate Frogs for My Betas Practicing Literacy at One Online Fanfiction Website Computers and Composition 40 48 59 doi 10 1016 j compcom 2016 03 001 Freeman Morgan A Fanspeak Dictionary Retrieved April 20 2017 Fan Fiction Plagiarism and Copyright March 18 2012 Drabble Fanlore fanlore org Retrieved June 30 2020 Segall 2008 Fan Fiction Writing New Work Based on Favorite Fiction Rosen Pub p 26 ISBN 978 1404213562 Hayes Sharon Ball Matthew 2010 Scherer B ed Queering cyberspace fan fiction communities as spaces for expressing and exploring sexuality Queering Paradigms Switzerland Peter Lang Publishing pp 219 240 ISBN 978 3 03911 970 7 retrieved October 21 2020 Tags FAQ Archive of Our Own archiveofourown org Retrieved July 10 2021 Fanfiction Net Review Form Fanfiction net Retrieved April 24 2008 permanent dead link Merlin Missy September 13 2007 Dr Merlin s Guide to Fanfiction Firefox Archived from the original on May 23 2008 Retrieved May 7 2008 Tosenberger Catherine 2008 Homosexuality at the Online Hogwarts Harry Potter Slash Fanfiction Children s Literature 36 pp 185 207 doi 10 1353 chl 0 0017 Gift Exchange Fanlore fanlore org Dear Creator Letter Fanlore fanlore org Lee A T October 1998 What s Derivative Work A Brief Introduction to Copyright for Fanfiction Authors Woosh Retrieved April 24 2008 Library Journal www schoollibraryjournal com Archived from the original on August 5 2009 Chan Sewell July 1 2009 Ruling for Salinger Judge Bans Rye Sequel Cityroom The New York Times Retrieved October 5 2011 Frequently Asked Questions Legal Organization for Transformative Works Archived from the original on October 1 2009 Retrieved September 5 2009 Jenkins Henry 2003 Quentin Tarantino s Star Wars Digital Cinema Media Convergence and Participatory Culture Archived from the original on March 9 2009 Schwabach Aaron 2009 The Harry Potter Lexicon and the World of Fandom Fan Fiction Outsider Works and Copyright University of Pittsburgh Law Review 70 3 387 434 Gupta Suman 2009 Re Reading Harry Potter 2nd Ed Basingstoke UK New York US Palgrave Macmillan p 36 of Don Tresca 2014 Spellbound An Analysis of Adult Oriented Harry Potter Fanfiction pp 36 46 in Kristin M Barton and Jonathan Malcolm Lampley eds Fan CULTure Essays on Participatory Fandom in the 21st Century London McFarland amp Company a b Waters Darren May 27 2004 Rowling backs Potter fan fiction BBC Retrieved April 24 2008 Twilight Series Fansites StephenieMeyer com Archived from the original on October 6 2011 Retrieved October 5 2011 GalleyCat The Lost History of Fifty Shades of Grey mediabistro com Archived from the original on July 27 2014 Retrieved June 30 2015 Fifty Shades of Grey Stephenie Meyer Speaks Out mtv com MTV pp 36 37 of Tresca 2014 Romano Aja May 7 2013 Orson Scott Card s long history of homophobia Salon com Retrieved November 5 2013 Frequently Asked Questions George R R Martin s Official Website Georgerrmartin com Archived from the original on April 14 2012 Retrieved October 5 2011 Martin George R R May 7 2010 Someone Is Angry On the Internet Archived from the original on June 13 2013 Retrieved March 24 2013 Sharon Lee Writer October 26 2013 Lee Sharon The second answer Sharon Lee Writer October 26 2013 Sharonleewriter com Retrieved November 5 2013 Further reading EditBlack R 2008 Adolescents and Online Fan Fiction New York Peter Lang Coppa Francesca 2017 The Fanfiction Reader Folk Tales for the Digital Age University of Michigan Press Jamison Anne 2013 Fic Why Fan Fiction is Taking Over the World Dallas Tx Smart Pop ISBN 978 1 939529 19 0 Jenkins Henry 1992 Textual Poachers Television Fans amp Participatory Culture New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 90571 0 Larsen Katherine amp Zubernis Lynn eds 2012 Fan Culture Theory Practice Newcastle Cambridge Scholars Publishing Lawrence K F 2007 The Web of Community Trust Amateur Fiction Online A Case Study in Community Focused Design for the Semantic Web Ph D thesis University of Southampton Retrieved August 20 2008 Orr David October 3 2004 Where to Find Digital Lit The New York Times Pugh Sheenagh 2005 The Democratic Genre Fan Fiction in a Literary Context Bridgend Wales Seren ISBN 1 85411 399 2 Grossman Lev July 7 2011 The Boy Who Lived Forever Time Hellekson Karen amp Busse Kristina eds 2014 The Fan Fiction Studies Reader Iowa City The University of Iowa Press 2006 Fan Fiction and Fan Communities in the Age of the Internet New Essays Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Co ISBN 0 7864 2640 3 Lipton Shana Ting February 13 2015 How Fifty Shades Is Dominating the Literary Scene Vanity Fair External links Edit Wikinews has related news FanFiction Net adult content purge felt across fandom two weeks on Media related to Fan fiction at Wikimedia Commons Quentin Tarantino s Star Wars Digital Cinema Media Convergence and Participatory Culture Henry Jenkins on fan fiction Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fan fiction amp oldid 1140056490, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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