Subject: On Mary Sues
Author:
Posted on: 2011-12-08 22:18:00 UTC
Hello! Sorry if a lot of the boarders don't recognize me, I'm not the most active on the board itself, although I was a fixture in the IRC for a few months - although I've been absent from that lately as well. Leaving the IRC was catalyzed by some incompatible personalities, but it wasn't solely caused by it. I like the people of the PPC in general, and you guys helped me get into fanfic a bit (I'm even writing one now, although it is sadly neglected in favor of my art usually), but there are a few issues that I've noted with the PPC that made it hard to get enthusiastic about fully participating in.
Please don't just dismiss this as an outsider who didn't fit in trolling, even if it's unavoidable some people see it that way. Nothing I say here is meant to be spiteful, and there is no bitterness intended - this is a post of constructive criticism that I hope at least gives you guys some food for thought.
Here is my parting criticism of the PPC:
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(1) Inflexible Adherence to the 'Way Things Have Always Been'
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I'm I'm not the only one in the community that is bothered at the fact that so many rules are dictated by people who are no longer part of the community. The board continues to use highly dated, difficult to moderate and impossible to categorize technology that shows it's age everyday that the first page is dominated by permission requests and welcome threads, hounded by fears that the community will 'divide' with as simple a move as changing board technologies. Old standbys continue to see the PPC as just a small informal group of friends rather than a large, diverse group that will unavoidably divide. Lacking the ability to facilitate those natural tendencies just mean it stagnates and discourages new blood. The community seems to be fine with that, and some even actively encourage that viewpoint. The IRC channel is one of the most active PPC hubs, and it is barely granted any legitimacy by the 'core' community that exists on the board.
The PPC has also grown to a large number of departments whose missions cover a wide range of genres, canons, story types, characters, etc, but the Original Series is still required reading, even for people who have no interest in killing Mary Sues, and with only passing interest in Lord of the Rings. There is this paradoxical attitude in the PPC that you shouldn't work too hard to follow old continuity but you should definitely follow all this old continuity.
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(2) Ferocious defense of the term 'Mary Sue'
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This section could also just be section 1.1, as it is really just an aspect of that inflexible adherence I talk about above.
Lemme just link you something that actually prompted this post:
http://adventuresofcomicbookgirl.tumblr.com/post/13913540194/mary-sue-what-are-you-or-why-the-concept-of-sue-is
This is a wonderfully worded essay on why Mary Sue is a loaded, sexist term. I am well aware that there will be a big wave of defense to come rushing to using the term Mary Sue, a pattern I've seen with similar posts in the past that have been done with less effective execution, but this essay really sold me on it. All of the regular arguments PPCers use to defend the term Mary Sue - that they perpetuate negative stereotypes, that they are boring characters - these are all soundly defeated in this essay by pointing out that those traits can all be pointed out /individually/ and so there's no reason to use a gendered, ambiguous and loaded term to describe such characters.
The PPC has a huge wiki full of invented terms, gadgets characters... it is a very insular community with a large learning curve to participate in, so it really wouldn't be a big deal to come up with a new term to label the canon-warping monsters that center around PPC missions, save for the point argued above. It doesn't even have to be something fancy, something as generic as 'anomalies' would work.
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and finally (3) Elitism
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People should be familiar with the TvTropes debacle, where Laburnum and Tawaki posted many links on TvTropes with examples of characters or storylines from their missions. Several people in the IRC took it upon themselves to have these links removed because they were attracting the 'wrong' kind of people to the PPC. TvTropes disliked this and reverted all changes, arguing that Laburnum and Tawaki's characters are legitimate parts of the PPC canon and were using valid examples.
The obvious next step would be to put /more/ examples on TvTropes that gave a better general indication of what the PPC was about - an idea that was denied because we apparently don't think the people that browse TvTropes are /worthy/ of being PPCers, or alternatively that we just want to stay small and hidden. Both of these are very indicative of an arrogance in the PPC community, especially one that is supposed to stand for improving the writing community in general. If it turns down opportunities to grow larger and spread it's message to a wider audience, then is it really an organization to help people write, or is it just a small group of people that are maliciously picking on 13-year-olds' wish-fulfillment stories, and then putting their fingers in their ears when any criticism is levied at them for it?
It also highlights this paradoxical attitude of the PPC where it can't decide if it wants to be a unified, rigid canon or just a kind of loose collection of lighthearted writing exercises. Everything about the PPC seems to indicate the latter until somebody does something 'wrong.'
I will make a point to say I don't think anyone in the PPC is being mean on purpose, or willfully trying to exclude people, but that doesn't change the fact that I think unidentified elitism does exist in the PPC, and steps should be taken to recognize and address it.
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Now that that's out of the way, just wanted to say that I did enjoy my time here, so thanks for all the fun times. Even if you just eye-roll my post and go on with what your doing, I hope you have fun with it and good luck.
I bid you adieu.