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jeanne-morningstar
@jeanne-morningstar

One of the reasons I don't interact as much with comics fandom is that there's this real undercurrent of resentment toward not being in control of the stories and characters that matter to them, which can spill out in some very nasty ways. Like the recent thing where some comics stan twitter guy made a fake account to accuse a writer they didn't like of sexual harassment. And there are a lot of real problems with how superhero comics are now and how many characters are handled, but the way this plays out a lot of the time is like people yelling at servers instead of dealing with systems of capitalist exploitation. I can't say I've never felt that kind of frustration, but I'm happy in the end to be working on the margins in my own space.


jeanne-morningstar
@jeanne-morningstar

AND FURTHERMORE, a thing I really hate about comics stan culture is that people want their faves to be perfect and never flawed or wrong about anything. Like that's why I love Arthurian literature so much, you can be the world's greatest hero and still mess up or hurt people or be made a complete fool of, that's just life.



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in reply to @jeanne-morningstar's post:

wow i never heard of that twitter thing. what was it about?
i agree with the post overall though. it's a troubling intersection of copyright law and the dynamics of art under capitalism where it really shouldn't matter if a character has a run where they're written poorly; but because of how much emphasis editorial puts on Canon and the Timeline and this and that, a bad run can't just be ignored like you would a bad fanfic, it becomes a part of the character's history moving forward. anyway this is just more of my usual Comics Should Be Public Domain propaganda