Life after television
Mar. 1st, 2008 01:50 pmI’m knackered, but I’m fairly certain it’s the good “I’ve been busy” kind of knackered, rather than the “woe, existence saps the very soul from my being” kind of knackered. Having said that, there comes a point for every introvert where she has to nail the door shut and seal herself into her chamber of solitude for recharging. Particularly if said introvert intends to be able to speak in something other than grunts at Eastercon in a fortnight.
On Monday, I went to the Slash Fiction Study Day at De Montfort. ( Read more... )
This is the last slash fiction study day that will be running at De Montfort, and conversation naturally turned to: what next? I wonder whether Redemption might be a suitable occasion to run something similar; probably on a smaller scale, perhaps a morning of papers and discussion. What do regular Redemption attendees think? Would this be something you think you might enjoy participating in and/or attending? Would the more academic format of ‘giving a paper’ sit with the more open style of Redemption panels? Would you want to maintain a focus on slash (which helpfully gives the papers an organizing principle) or include discussions of fanworks more generally?
And, finally, I shall remark in passing upon various portents of doom: I slept blissfully through Wednesday’s earthquake (although the news headlines the following day were classic: “BRITAIN’S CHIMNEYPOTS SHAKEN!”) Meanwhile, what looked like a deathly reek seeping from Mordor that hung over the Fens as we drove to Leicester on Monday turned out to be a a fire in a cabbage factory. And Gale Force Winds Have Broken Our Telly! – the satellite dish fell over during the night. Truly, civilization has collapsed. Or it would have, if t’internet had gone with it.
Finally finally, Abigail Nussbaum has finished her series of excellent essays on Deep Space Nine, and has collected links to them in this post. Hmm, the DVD player isn't bust... I may just watch some DS9...
On Monday, I went to the Slash Fiction Study Day at De Montfort. ( Read more... )
This is the last slash fiction study day that will be running at De Montfort, and conversation naturally turned to: what next? I wonder whether Redemption might be a suitable occasion to run something similar; probably on a smaller scale, perhaps a morning of papers and discussion. What do regular Redemption attendees think? Would this be something you think you might enjoy participating in and/or attending? Would the more academic format of ‘giving a paper’ sit with the more open style of Redemption panels? Would you want to maintain a focus on slash (which helpfully gives the papers an organizing principle) or include discussions of fanworks more generally?
And, finally, I shall remark in passing upon various portents of doom: I slept blissfully through Wednesday’s earthquake (although the news headlines the following day were classic: “BRITAIN’S CHIMNEYPOTS SHAKEN!”) Meanwhile, what looked like a deathly reek seeping from Mordor that hung over the Fens as we drove to Leicester on Monday turned out to be a a fire in a cabbage factory. And Gale Force Winds Have Broken Our Telly! – the satellite dish fell over during the night. Truly, civilization has collapsed. Or it would have, if t’internet had gone with it.
Finally finally, Abigail Nussbaum has finished her series of excellent essays on Deep Space Nine, and has collected links to them in this post. Hmm, the DVD player isn't bust... I may just watch some DS9...