shiny ivory towers
Oct. 22nd, 2008 11:59 amI find fandom's anti-academic bias absurd. Furthermore, I find the anti-aca/fen debates that make the rounds in fandom every now and then worrisome, and very opposed to that aspect of fannish culture I've come to cherish over the years: tolerance of other people's weird obsessions.
There, I've said it.
I know my biases. I do, after all, harbour notions of getting myself a Ph.D in English; even teaching, perhaps - even though my thoughts on that topic mostly centre around, 'STOP ASKING ME GROWNUP QUESTIONS OK?' I work in a publishing house that thrives on pretentious academic publications. Where I stand today, I need to validate academia. Ooh, look, isn't the ivory shiny?
I also have difficulty comprehending how analysis is not fun, because it's something that comes very naturally to me. Splitting hairs is fun. Studying everything is fun. Fun me for me, anyway - they might not be for you. Which is not the point of this post here. The point here is very simply, why is my version of fun such an issue for you?
Here, for instance: The older I get and the more I have to do with academicians, the more I agree that academia is the enemy. Not, mind you, through any willful doing of evil, but through an insistence that everything must be studied. I lay the blame for the large number of college-educated people who never read for pleasure at the feet of English lit courses, where one is taught to examine the work at the expense of simply enjoying the story.
This posits 'simply enjoying the story' as opposed to 'analysing and ruining the fun in the story', which, as far as I'm concerned, is a false binary, because no, it doesn't work like that. For one, 'simply enjoying' is a vague and deceptive term. What does 'simply enjoying' mean? One assumes it is the pleasure of reading the story and knowing what happens next - except that this mode of 'simple enjoyment' is not inimical to analysis, and, in case of some stories, impossible, because nothing actually happens in them. Or perhaps it is the pleasure of words - soaking up the beauty of a well-written piece; enjoying the beauty of a metaphor; reveling in the mystery of words; etc. And again, this mode of 'simple enjoyment' is not opposed to an academic's brand of reading a text, either, because a lot of academic analysis follows naturally from this 'simple' pleasure (ref. the five hundred million works on language in Shakespeare, where the authors are thisclose to dying of wordgasm).
But more importantly, take away the theory and big words, and leave just the academic and her and her endless analysis and debates, replace the 'Derrida' and 'Foucault' with 'Joss' and 'SGA', replace the big words with, say, 'slashy' and 'canon', and what do you have? Someone very close to - dare I say? - what we call a Fan.
Fandom takes its Cult of Squee very seriously. It's very serious about not being serious. And in this serious not-seriousness there is a reverse snobbery, which posits that if you're not here just for the LULZ and can't see the simple pleasures of life, you must be a boring idiot or a pseudo-intellectual; which proposes that it isn't possible to be genuinely entertained by anything other than the simple way of reading, whatever that might mean. And in this inverse snobbery, fandom becomes precisely what it claims not to be: intolerant. Like Them.
I cannot be having with this.
There, I've said it.
I know my biases. I do, after all, harbour notions of getting myself a Ph.D in English; even teaching, perhaps - even though my thoughts on that topic mostly centre around, 'STOP ASKING ME GROWNUP QUESTIONS OK?' I work in a publishing house that thrives on pretentious academic publications. Where I stand today, I need to validate academia. Ooh, look, isn't the ivory shiny?
I also have difficulty comprehending how analysis is not fun, because it's something that comes very naturally to me. Splitting hairs is fun. Studying everything is fun. Fun me for me, anyway - they might not be for you. Which is not the point of this post here. The point here is very simply, why is my version of fun such an issue for you?
Here, for instance: The older I get and the more I have to do with academicians, the more I agree that academia is the enemy. Not, mind you, through any willful doing of evil, but through an insistence that everything must be studied. I lay the blame for the large number of college-educated people who never read for pleasure at the feet of English lit courses, where one is taught to examine the work at the expense of simply enjoying the story.
This posits 'simply enjoying the story' as opposed to 'analysing and ruining the fun in the story', which, as far as I'm concerned, is a false binary, because no, it doesn't work like that. For one, 'simply enjoying' is a vague and deceptive term. What does 'simply enjoying' mean? One assumes it is the pleasure of reading the story and knowing what happens next - except that this mode of 'simple enjoyment' is not inimical to analysis, and, in case of some stories, impossible, because nothing actually happens in them. Or perhaps it is the pleasure of words - soaking up the beauty of a well-written piece; enjoying the beauty of a metaphor; reveling in the mystery of words; etc. And again, this mode of 'simple enjoyment' is not opposed to an academic's brand of reading a text, either, because a lot of academic analysis follows naturally from this 'simple' pleasure (ref. the five hundred million works on language in Shakespeare, where the authors are thisclose to dying of wordgasm).
But more importantly, take away the theory and big words, and leave just the academic and her and her endless analysis and debates, replace the 'Derrida' and 'Foucault' with 'Joss' and 'SGA', replace the big words with, say, 'slashy' and 'canon', and what do you have? Someone very close to - dare I say? - what we call a Fan.
Fandom takes its Cult of Squee very seriously. It's very serious about not being serious. And in this serious not-seriousness there is a reverse snobbery, which posits that if you're not here just for the LULZ and can't see the simple pleasures of life, you must be a boring idiot or a pseudo-intellectual; which proposes that it isn't possible to be genuinely entertained by anything other than the simple way of reading, whatever that might mean. And in this inverse snobbery, fandom becomes precisely what it claims not to be: intolerant. Like Them.
I cannot be having with this.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-22 08:57 am (UTC)I agree. I gave that up a long time ago. It's been a while since I could simply "ejoy" a story without analyzing the characters, the writing and even the writer itself.
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Date: 2008-10-22 09:25 am (UTC)My father and I argue about this all the time. Every time we watch a movie together, I can never resist talking about it--about themes, characters, symbolism, etc. My father usually comes out with, "Why can't you just watch it and enjoy it? Do you always have to think about it? You should just have fun with it." And he never seems to understand that it is fun for me to think about all those things, and get past the surface of it all. It's--I can't even imagine when I have more fun sometimes. It's like how I can sit in a library for hours and hours and just research and learn about a topic that interests me. It's the reason why I think being a life-long student, attending class after class, writing paper after paper, would be the best life in the world. A reason why I love working in the theatre so much, working on a production and seeing it fifty times (more, usually) is so I could really dig deeply and analyze, learn something new every day. Think about the play as I'm working on it. By the same token, if I watched House just for entertainment, I'd be content with watching an episode once and moving on to the next. But I watch them dozens and dozens of times, looking and picking for new things, things I may have missed that could contribute to my understanding of characters, and themes.
I can't even say how much I enjoy and love absorbing any kind of art form that way. It's almost a way of life. Granted, when it comes to fandom, I do my fair share of squeeing and flailing, but I love discussing these characters and their world, analyzing it, and--Yes, it's just so amazing. When I find other people who love to do that, too, I want to marry them. And this post. I'd love to marry this post, too.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-22 11:02 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-22 11:07 am (UTC)Yes, exactly. For me, it's very difficult to separate sensual experience from reflection, and anyway, I don't *want* to. It's fun.
Granted, when it comes to fandom, I do my fair share of squeeing and flailing
And here's the thing, isn't all our fannish squee (largely) based on reflection too? Because you're actually typing up a post that says 'YAY I LOVE MY SHOW', and that requires some distancing too. *Expression* of pleasure is not the same as experiencing pleasure, and there some pleasure to be had in that act of expression as well.
And anyway, the thing is - I can accept a lot of things from Mundanes IRL. But I do hold fandom to a higher standard, and when fans let me down, it's sad.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-22 12:26 pm (UTC)Certainly there's a current dislike and distrust of academics. We're "too liberal," and the things we say can be dismissed because, as several people I know keep saying, "most academics have their heads so far up their asses they need cranial-rectal inversion surgery." Moreover, we talk about gender, and about social construction, and why things are the way they are -- and that opens up the possibility that ideas, beliefs, practices, and behaviors could (worse, *should*) change. That's threatening,particularly during a time in which, increasingly, people are clinging to unreflective forms of religious and political practice.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-22 12:41 pm (UTC)The recent appearance of anti-acafen posts on
I enjoy meta. I cherish exploration of theme, of character, of narration. I know inherently whether I like [a certain book, movie, or show] or not; the way I expand that base enjoyment is by figuring why I like it. Why does it work the way it works, -- or, alternatively, if something leaves me a little cold, what its creator(s) could have done differently to warm me up.
The thing I think anti-aca supports do not realize is that, for some, interacting with a story, discovering those hidden layers of depth and meaning and then later discussing them with others, is the way one "simply enjoys". That is, I think, the only way I know how to thouroughly enjoy a story. I wish an anti-aca support would share his/her way; I'm curious to learn new ways.
More than that, I think it's actually danger to continually porport the ideology that enjoyment of entertainment and critical analysis of a work of art are mutually exclusive. That one cannot apply one to the other, or that being entertained therefore makes something not worthy of (or somehow rude to do) analysis. I see that in real life and in fandom, and it makes me cringe everytime.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-22 01:01 pm (UTC)IOW BULLFUCKINGSHIT, M'DEAR
no subject
Date: 2008-10-22 03:11 pm (UTC)The Cult of Squee does take itself quite seriously. Capslockers too. Frivolity IS fun, but it's also easy. Sometimes you just want to exercise your brain.
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Date: 2008-10-22 03:27 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-22 03:56 pm (UTC)Analysis, in the definition of thinking over and talking about the foreshadowing and the themes and stuff... yes, that's fun. It's what I do, as naturally as breathing.
But I've also had the occasional sneer that I'm not analyzing the text from the "right perspective" - that as a mere B.A. in a non-literature field, I can't possibly understand the Deeper Meaning that the aca-fen see and enjoy. So I also understand the anti- backlash. I don't know Campbell's interpretation of The Hero - I just know when a story works for me, when I'm engaged and interested and happily trotting along with the writer whereever she may take me on this particular journey. That doesn't make me stupid and it doesn't make me a lesser fan, just that I'm approaching the text from a less-analytical standpoint.
Guh. Does that even make sense?
no subject
Date: 2008-10-22 04:10 pm (UTC)Hell, I do it all the time, though an academic I am not. I just like it.I can't understand either, why it has to be one or the other and not both.no subject
Date: 2008-10-22 10:20 pm (UTC)(1) I cannot for the life of me understand why anyone would *care* that I like to analyze fandom and fic. Am I, or any like-minded fan, forcing them to do the same? No. So...WTF is the big deal? Why must analysis be denounced so often? It's as if the mere prospect that some acafan out there *might* analyze something somehow CONTAMINATES ALL OF FANDOM OMG!
(2) As much as some fen may complain, analysis isn't going away.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-23 02:08 am (UTC)I'm moderately new to fandom in general. One thing that immediately attracted me was its inherent inclusiveness. There's room for all types of fannish expression whether it be deep analysis or superficial squee or an amalgam of both. As many have already said, they're not mutually exclusive, but merely different manifestations of what I suspect brought most of us here in the first place -- deep fannish love.
Don't harsh the squee -- whatever form it might take.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-23 02:13 am (UTC)As many have already said, they're not mutually exclusive, but merely different manifestations of what I suspect brought most of us here in the first place -- deep fannish love.
Exactly.
here via <lj user="metafandom">
Date: 2008-10-23 02:31 am (UTC)Also, I'll never understand how anyone can say that English majors don't read for pleasure. What? Why on earth would they become Lit majors, if not because they have a passion for reading that goes beyond that of most other people? Just because some people like to find a deeper, more resonating meaning in their literature than Edward Cullen's sparkly vampire skin offers doesn't mean they dislike books or reading.
In other words, I agree with every word a thousand percent.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-23 02:34 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-23 02:38 am (UTC)You know, despite what I know are individual academic assholes in fandom, I really don't see roving gangs of vigilante academics thundering down on small fandom villages and insiting they "examine the work at the expense of simply enjoying the story."
Now, if somebody pays money and shows up in my class, yeah, we're going to analyze stuff. That is one thing college is for.
But I don't insist on people doing it in fandom, nor, despite all the ongoing claims of academics over analyzing fanfic, do I do it in my own journal (and any work I do in scholarship on fanfic is with full and informed permission of the writers who get copies of it).
So, um, well, WORD! And I'm friending you!
no subject
Date: 2008-10-23 02:45 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-23 02:47 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-23 02:48 am (UTC)I agree with you. I keep thinking that I must be missing some context in this "debate" or whatnot. I don't understand how my analytical nitpicking can possibly bother someone else to the point where they can't enjoy a show in their own fashion.
I'm analytical by nature. I love to pick apart my TV show of choice. But I know that not everybody's into that. So? They don't have to read my meta or reviews or whatnot. Each to their own.
Also, I'm not an academic. I dropped out of college (Though I'm going back just to get an undergrad degree). But I don't get this, almost, resentment of academia that goes around.
Like I said, I must be missing something.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-23 02:51 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-23 03:14 am (UTC)And then they got into massive "they think they're entitled to know" issues, but really, why would anybody NOT be entitled to know something? Do there exist in this world secrets that not just anybody can hear? These aren't state secrets or anything, they're life experiences, and most people asking aren't haters, they ask out of genuine curiosity. Even if the asker views the askee as strange, strange isn't necessarily bad, and besides, by finding out more they'll discover that this person isn't so irregular.
Besides, you can always say no. No one's forcing you to answer.
It occurs to me that this had very little to do with fandom ultimately, but anyway yeah. There's the view in areas of "us" vs "them", so I'd imagine that'd also play into it with fandom.
However, there *is* still a lot of ignorance about fandom. On a board I go to, someone posted part of a Max Payne review that mentions that no one has ever cried playing a video game. Which caused everyone on the board to go "wait, WHAT?" and it's not even a video game board.
I for one would rather answer questions all day long than have bald-faced ignorance like that go around.
Or moreover, the recent news story about Obama ads in video games...and every last one of the anchors made a comment about "if the gamers will get off their couches long enough to vote". And seriously, that's just hateful.
So yes, the more academia or WHOEVER can brush away that stuff, the better.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-23 03:14 am (UTC)To me, it looks a lot like the gen/het/slash wars, pairing wars, RPF versus FPF wars, canon purists versus those who adore AUs and so on. There are a lot of sensible people on all sides and a few loud people who want their preferences to be uniquely right and better than anybody else's. The absolutists (in either direction) often don't start a flare up, but they definitely pick it up and run with it.
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Date: 2008-10-23 03:16 am (UTC)Are you friends with Anne Rice? (sorry - I just can't let that wank die.)
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Date: 2008-10-23 03:29 am (UTC)