Subject: [Sidles down from the ceiling]
Author:
Posted on: 2019-10-02 16:40:00 UTC

((Hawkelf references are awesome. Don't deny me this.))

Ummm, and I think your point has brought me back to the point I'd wandered away from: the PPC isn't concerned with what people are watching(/reading/listening to); it's concerned with what people are writing fanfic of.

So: what is the history of fanfic? Wikipedia tells me that it really took off with Star Trek in the '60s, starting as early as 1967 (with the delightfully-named Spockanalia). But it also tells me that there's a citation as far back as 1939, and that it referred to amateur scifi.

So yes, there's actually more likely to be a Scifi PPC than a Noir PPC. But you know me - I need more information.

Vice provides an article about fanfic in the early days of the Web. It talks about Usenet fanfic communities in the... well, it doesn't actually specify, probably the early '90s? So it looks like that would have been the context of our current PPC. A previous incarnation, from the '60s to the '90s, would have been the Fanzine PPC. It would have focussed strongly on Star Trek, and I assume on the rest of the TV/Movie Scifi worlds. This appears to be when slash took on a major role.

Before that? Tech Times expands on the Wikipedia entry slightly; it suggests that fan science fiction meant any old story in a fan magazine, some of which were 'bringing in some famous characters'. It also talks about injecting fiction into purportedly factual accounts of fan activities, which I certainly know nothing about.

Before that? The Guardian ran an article a few years back which mentions Jane Austen fanfic from 1913, and Sherlock Holmes self-inserts from the 1920s. Fanlore described J.M. Barrie writing Holmes pastiches in 1891. So I think we've got those incarnations locked in.

Fanlore also points out that Louisa May Alcott's Little Women has its protagonists set up a fanfic club of Dickens, which is a hilarious fact. That was written in 1868 and set in the early 1860s, with the subject of the fanfic dating some 30 years earlier. It does seem that fanfic of 19th century fiction was prevalent throughout the 19th and early 20th centuries, though whether we can divide that up any further I'm really not sure.

Going back further? Apparently Daniel Defoe sometimes complained that his work was being 'kidnapped', which suggests an early 18th century iteration. Beyond that... well, one of those links told me that someone wrote an unauthorised sequel to Don Quixote before the original was even finished. ^_^ Shakespeare was obviously a fanficcer. And of course the Romans delighted in making new spins on old tales.

hS

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