Subject: Novelty speaks
Author:
Posted on: 2010-07-22 16:22:00 UTC
(Just to keep up my one-post, now two-post, trend of pretentious titles.)
Before I say what I meant to say, I should get out of the way the fact that every time I see "we kill Sues", the only thing I can think of is the "movieplot" function of one of the IRC bots on a channel I frequent, which gives a movie plot like this: "He's an all-American sweet-toothed jungle king on the wrong side of the law. She's a cynical psychic femme fatale with her own daytime radio talk show. They fight crime." Just switch "They fight crime" for "They kill 'Sues".
I cannot speak to past issues, but I can talk about what the PPC is to me, and later speak from mostly ignorance about the variety of subject matters in PPC stories.
The reasons I liked the Original Series were not the killing of 'Sues, but the fact that Jay and Acacia picked up on the things I notice even in my daily life: punctuation errors, spelling mistakes, capitalization errors, the kinds of things that create new characters who have one line. The kinds of things that make My Immortal so much fun to read — funny as it is without this interpretation, it becomes even more surreal and bizarre if you interpret each misspelling of a character's name as a new character. Also there are constant references to characters doing things "4 Eva" or "4 eva" or "4eva", but no detail is ever given about the character of Eva. One has to wonder...
But I digress. The point is, the Original Series focused relatively little attention on the deaths of the 'Sues. In short, what I like about the PPC has nothing to do with killing 'Sues and everything to do with the rest of the content of the stories — the interactions between the Agents, the interactions between the Agents and canons, the adoption of spelling errors when appropriate, the travel sickness as the stories covered vast distances in a single word, etc. Not that I enjoy travel sickness, but you know what I mean.
In the grander scheme of things, speaking from ignorance, I think one of the problems is that 'Sues are just plain easier to spot and attack. If there's a female character joining the Fellowship, either in addition to or in place of one of the natural Nine, that sets alarm bells ringing. If a The Dark is Rising story stars a girl who isn't Jane, that does, too, even before she's revealed to be Bran's half-sister or Will's American cousin. It's much more difficult to spot bad slash if the structure of the story is decent, that is, if it's capitalized, spell-checked, etc. appropriately.
Coming from that perspective as a Star Wars fan, I think we should be wary of always taking the easy path — as everyone knows that's a surefire way to fall to the Dark Side.
As other people have mentioned, the PPC at its best is not about killing 'Sues, but about protecting and restoring canon. It's right there in the abbreviation: Protectors of the Plot Continuum. 'Sues are just one of many ways to do that, and I think other ways tend to get overlooked because they require a bit more consideration.
As far as non-fic related things, the reason I like wandering around TVTropes or reading OFUM — not having been here too long, I can't really speak for the PPC just yet — is that I like seeing that other people enjoy the things I enjoy, fandom-wise, and knowing that I'm not the only one who's read and loved, for example, Animorphs. With people in real life, I tend to get eye-rolls and "Oh, those were great when I was in elementary school". They're still great! I want to yell, but that would be awkward.
Final point: as far as espousing goodfic, the problem I see is that there isn't really a way for the PPC to do that, besides its primary endeavor of mocking badfic. The first thing that comes to mind as a solution would be having, like, a "featured goodfic" on the main page of the Wiki, but beyond that I don't know how much it's possible to do.
Hope someone found that comprehensible/interesting/useful.
Regards,
Lleu Llaw Gyffes