Neil:
But what if the parent promised the kid that s/he could read the zines
once
parent had finished reading them, or even ordered a batch of zines specifically for the kid - only to snatch them away from eager young hands on the grounds that they were unsuitable? ....&c &c
I just consider this all so hopelessly unlikely as to be a spurious reason for the ghettoisation (is that a word?) of non-gen fanfic -- at least in B7 where the show isn't actively being shown much (on mainstream channels at least).
The question is, what do their parents think? Rightly or wrongly, they
are
the final arbiters in deciding what their children should and should not
be
allowed to read.
I guess we should stand aside and let the Lyst parents speak. Parenting is *not* in my skill set.
But I would say that genzines are sanitised precisely because they are differentiated from adult zines. There is a lot of *potential content* that might find its way into 'gen' fic but doesn't, because gen has come to mean U or PG rated (Horizon accepts zine
submissions
on the basis of their being precisely that). The separation of sex and non-sex has effectively straitjacketed gen into this sanitised corner.
Indeed. Actually I think that's why ttba got an awful lot of submissions. There's certainly a demand from writers for mixed zines, even if there isn't from readers (which remains to be seen -- my first print run has all now disappeared, but then I had an awful lot of tribs).
There are good reasons, I think, to keep adult and non-adult apart. Some people, though probably not many, only want to read adult. A larger
number
want to avoid adult. If you put the two in one zine, you are at the very least losing readers who want the non-adult but won't touch the zine
because
it has adult content. The publisher loses sales, while some readers lose out on stories that they might otherwise have really enjoyed.
I only want to read adult. I just interpret that as adult, not *adult*, if you see what I mean. There's a lot of people in the world just like me in this regard, but I'm not sure whether or not they are also B7 fans.
I think it remains viable to segregate adult from non-adult fiction on the basis of sexual content, but I think there is also a case for
distinguishing
between non-adult suitable for young readers and non-adult slanted
towards,
ahem, 'mature' readers. The latter is not very common, though.
I'd say most of ttba fell into the latter section, but not quite all, I guess.
It's a standard component of shop-floor argot, applied indiscriminately to anything and everything (or everyone), so commonplace that any kind of pejorative meaning can only be construed from context.
I think I've only heard the word spoken once. (And that was in a deliberate attempt to offend / embarrass me.) But then shop-floor to me means shortcut between one lab and another, or between one office and another.
Tavia
Tavia wrote:
There's certainly a demand from writers for mixed zines, even if there isn't from readers (which remains to be seen -- my first print run has all now disappeared, but then I had an awful lot of tribs).
You've sold out the first print run? Fab news!
But don't let this dissuade anyone on this Lyst from demanding another print run so that they can get their own copy.
Neil/Tavia:
It's a standard component of shop-floor argot, applied indiscriminately to anything and everything (or everyone), so commonplace that any kind of pejorative meaning can only be construed from context.
I think I've only heard the word spoken once. (And that was in a deliberate attempt to offend / embarrass me.)
I went through a period of using it as my preferred swear word (I think there was some good feminist reason but it's all a bit hazy now). It still works well as the best 'just stubbed my toe' expletive, but more generally these days I prefer the whimsy of 'arse' or 'pants'. Stephen Fry has had a dangerous effect on an entire generation.
Una
Una McCormack wrote:
I went through a period of using it as my preferred swear word (I think there was some good feminist reason but it's all a bit hazy now). It still works well as the best 'just stubbed my toe' expletive, but more generally these days I prefer the whimsy of 'arse' or 'pants'. Stephen Fry has had a dangerous effect on an entire generation.
Mine (for a while) was "bugger" because of Northey in Nancy Mitford's "Don't Tell Alfred" and her description of the lobsters making their way to freedom. I think that I didn't know what it meant in literal terms then but I do remember my Mum advising caution when I used it.
ObB7: And why oh why didn't the Beeb cast Jackie Pearce as the Bolter in the recent remake of "Love In A Cold Climate/ Pursuit of Love"? (Although why they had to remake it anyway, I really do not know.)
Kat W
Kat wrote:
Una McCormack wrote:
I went through a period of using it as my preferred swear word (I think there was some good feminist reason but it's all a bit hazy now). It still works well as the best 'just stubbed my toe' expletive, but more generally these days I prefer the whimsy of 'arse' or 'pants'. Stephen Fry has had a dangerous effect on an entire generation.
Mine (for a while) was "bugger" because of Northey in Nancy Mitford's "Don't Tell Alfred" and her description of the lobsters making their way to freedom. I think that I didn't know what it meant in literal terms then but I do remember my Mum advising caution when I used it.
'Bugger' was my father's swear word of choice, lovingly handed on to me - pretty much my only heirloom ;)
ObB7: And why oh why didn't the Beeb cast Jackie Pearce as the Bolter in the recent remake of "Love In A Cold Climate/ Pursuit of Love"?
Oh my, wouldn't that have been *fabulous*! (Tho' Frances Barber was excellent.)
(Although why they had to remake it anyway, I really do not know.)
Is there another version?!? Tell!
Una
----- Original Message ----- From: Una McCormack una@qresearch.org.uk To: blakes7@lists.lysator.liu.se Sent: Wednesday, March 07, 2001 8:02 PM Subject: Re: [B7L] impressionable kiddies and mixed zines
Kat wrote:
Mine (for a while) was "bugger" because of Northey in Nancy Mitford's "Don't Tell Alfred" and her description of the lobsters making their way to freedom. I think that I didn't know what it meant in literal terms then but I do remember my Mum advising caution when I used it.
'Bugger' was my father's swear word of choice, lovingly handed on to me -
pretty
much my only heirloom ;)
Heh. My parents let me read/view pretty much indiscriminately as a child (although, ObPorn, they did keep an eye on what I was up to and occasionally offered rather firm literary advice)-- which led to me reading "The Restaurant At the End of the Universe" aged ten, and picking up the expression "asshole"-- which I assumed was a simple insult along the lines of "moron" or "git." Imagine my surprise at the reaction I got when I innocently used the word at Girl Guides one day...
ObB7: the Girl Guides are IMO a fascist organisation, anyway.
Fiona
The Posthumous Memoirs of Secretary Rontane Available for public perusal at http://nyder.r67.net
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