merelydovely: a smiling white woman with glasses. her hair is pink and purple and seems to be partially feathers. (Default)
Tumblr helpfully directed me toward this wonderful article in the Paris Review stuffed with a visceral nostalgia for the heady early days of Wolfstar, back when we still believed JK Rowling understood her own characters as well as her readers did.

The summer of 2003 was the summer of noticing. It was the summer I sat alone for hours in my mother’s parked car, blasting Queen’s “The Show Must Go On” (track 17 on my favorite CD) and luxuriating in body-racking sobs of grief for Sirius Black, sorrow for Remus Lupin, and ecstatic rapture that I’d noticed. We took to the internet, those of us who had noticed, and compared notes. Often these notes took the form of fan fiction, which I read ravenously, hungry not so much for erotica as for the full novelistic experience Rowling had invited us to imagine—a boarding-school romance turned wartime tragedy, Maurice meets Atonement by way of Animorphs.

I'm a few years younger than the article's author, so it took me a little bit longer to get on the "close read" bandwagon, but this article struck a chord with me all the same. It really did feel, for a while, like Sirius/Lupin was where things were heading, and like we were all geniuses for seeing the signs.

is a close read its own reward? )

What's your immediate reaction to the article? Do you have any memory of those pre-Potterdammerüng days? What do you feel is gained by doing close reads of media that are unlikely to bear fruit?
merelydovely: a smiling white woman with glasses. her hair is pink and purple and seems to be partially feathers. (Default)
I'm really enjoying the responses to my post about the femslash gap, so this in-depth post by [personal profile] melannen about how to make discussion happen on your Dreamwidth posts caught my eye:

...if my specific goal is to host a discussion, I find it very useful to think of myself as a host. And as a host, I have duties - I have to make the space welcoming; I have to make sure people know that they're invited; I have to give people a reason to want to come; I have to remember that I'm in a position of responsibility for the guests who are in my space; I have to be ready to unobtrusively deal with messes...

She then goes on to lay out eleven points to keep in mind if you're trying to get folks talking. It's probably worth reading if you're having a bit of post-tumblr culture shock.

The one I found most interesting was the third one: Make your post broadly accessible, and require minimum context to contribute. The musings there about the difference between Tumblr and Dreamwidth were very insightful. As [personal profile] melannen points out, your posts aren't likely to be tumbled around the site until they reach all the people who can instantly and effortlessly relate; you'll get the best engagement if you pitch your posts to the reference base of your network, because that's as far as your post is going to reach, more or less.

And in the spirit of point number 2, everybody likes to be asked, I'll ask you: what internet haunt do you associate with the most interesting and lively discussion? I have fond memories of the forums attached to the webcomic Megatokyo, of all places...

Thanks very much to [personal profile] implicated2 for the tipoff; check out their post as well for more Dreamwidth advice!

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