The future of fandom
Jan. 30th, 2023 06:21 pmThe final
snowflake_challenge is to opine on the future of fandom, which is a good thing to think about.
snowflake_challenge presents this question in the context of the recent chaos on Twitter, the emergence of new platforms and the resulting 'in flux' feeling of current fandom, and honestly I feel I don't really have much to say about that. I enjoy reading and thinking about debates over online platforms and the wider nature of fandom and so on, but as far as my own fandom life goes I'm quite happy doing my own thing in my tiny fandoms on Dreamwidth, blissfully isolated from the upheavals of megafandoms and commercial social media sites.
I don't think Dreamwidth itself is ever likely to become more of a centre for fandom than it is, though some people will migrate here as other sites collapse. This way of doing fandom isn't a popular one these days, and that's fine; I only hope that the people who are currently in fandom on Twitter and Discord and so on and are unsatisfied with it, and who might be more suited to the slow, text-based, active-interaction-requiring (rather than having likes, reblogs etc.) style of Dreamwidth, manage to find their way here—like I did!
How about some not-too-serious predictions for my own fandom, then? The future of Flight of the Heron/D. K. Broster/wider Jacobites in Classic Fiction fandom...
So that's it for the Snowflake Challenge! It's been great fun, if slightly hectic—an opportunity to reflect on and post about things I wouldn't otherwise have written about but that are relevant and interesting to fandom life in general—and I'm very glad I took part. :)
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![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
I don't think Dreamwidth itself is ever likely to become more of a centre for fandom than it is, though some people will migrate here as other sites collapse. This way of doing fandom isn't a popular one these days, and that's fine; I only hope that the people who are currently in fandom on Twitter and Discord and so on and are unsatisfied with it, and who might be more suited to the slow, text-based, active-interaction-requiring (rather than having likes, reblogs etc.) style of Dreamwidth, manage to find their way here—like I did!
How about some not-too-serious predictions for my own fandom, then? The future of Flight of the Heron/D. K. Broster/wider Jacobites in Classic Fiction fandom...
- One thing FotH fandom hasn't done very much of yet is really wacky changed-/different-setting AUs: different historical setting, genderswaps, m/m marriage exists and now Keith and Ewen have to get married/pretend to be married for reasons, someone is secretly a vampire, non-obvious crossovers. I think we'll start branching out more into these; without going into specifics, I know several people have ideas like this already, and this is a good thing.
- I think at some point we'll rediscover "Mr Rowl" as we have The Wounded Name, and it will result in some really interesting Raoul/Barrington slash fic—a much more fraught and potentially dramatic pairing than Aymar/Laurent and, in some ways, Ewen/Keith.
- More Kidnapped fic will be written, and it will be very good.
- The subtextually-lesbian Jacobite novel of my dreams totally exists and we will discover it! (Or write it, perhaps? either as a genderswap fic or as an original work).
So that's it for the Snowflake Challenge! It's been great fun, if slightly hectic—an opportunity to reflect on and post about things I wouldn't otherwise have written about but that are relevant and interesting to fandom life in general—and I'm very glad I took part. :)