Rant about fanfiction writing

thelightningstreak:

greenappleeyes:

I was just informed by my brother (who thinks he’s a better writer than anyone else because he has some fancy degree in writing) that fanfiction “doesn’t count” as “real writing” because you aren’t using your own “ideas.”

He doesn’t know that I write fanfiction. He probably wouldn’t have admitted his opinion if her did. But it has pretty much solidified that I will never tell anyone I know in person what I write.

I’ve already been told by several family members that my obsession with a “stupid tv show” is ridiculous and that I’m “too old” to fangirl.

Sigh. /rant

In Defense of Fanfiction

I am a professional writer and editor in real life. I have a double degree in English and writing and am currently in school once more to obtain a master’s degree. If your brother’s fancy writing degree was worth anything at all, he should be able to admit that the vast majority of all literature is in fact fanfiction of someone else’s story and its elements. In other words, no one’s idea is, by definition, original.

Let’s take a look at just a few examples to support my theory that some of the most important or well-known pieces of literature ever created qualify as fanfiction:

Ancient/Old Literature

·        Around 2000 BCE: The Epic of Gilgamesh was inspired as a fanfiction of a historical King of Uruk, mixed with Mesopotamian mythology. The story includes the character Utnapishtim, who lives through a world-wide flood by building a ship per the instructions of the god Enki and ultimately landing on a mountain in the Middle East, similar to Noah’s story from the Bible (dates for the book of Genesis vary anywhere from 1400 BCE to 800 BCE). Many historians suggest that the story of Noah was directly inspired by Gilgamesh’s story of Utnapishtim. Other historians suggest the two were simply inspired by a similar source. Either way, there’s too many startling overlaps to classify Utnapishtim and Noah as only a coincidence.

·        20-ish BCE: The Roman author Virgil wrote The Aeneid, which is a direct sequel to the previously created epic The Iliad attributed to Greek bard Homer. Virgil was also known for writing pastoral poems based off and inspired by the work of the great poet Theocritus (280 BCE). As a fun addition, Theocritus himself was known for rewriting the cyclops villain (Polyphemus) of Homer’s Odyssey into a love-sick idiot in his work, Idyll XI.

Medieval Era (500-1500-ish CE)

·        700-1000: The Alphabet of ben Sirach was an anonymous Hebrew collection of satires that included a parody of the biblical Genesis story of Adam and Eve. The story gave Adam a totally different wife by the name of Lilith, the character of which was inspired by Babylonian mythology. The whole of the collection is additionally wrapped in a fictional account of telling the stories to the historical figure of the Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar—another real person fanfiction of a celebrity from that time.

·        Around 1000: The world’s first novel, The Tale of Genji by Lady Murasaki Shikibu, inspired the massive outpouring of Japanese Noh theater plays involving characters from the novel, such as Aoi no Ue (Lady Aoi), which has been attributed to a few people (Zeami Motokiyo and Inuo). This play appropriates the Lady Aoi from Shikibu’s psychological novel to explore her death and is only one example of the available fanfictions of the novel.

·        1308-1320: Dante’s Divine Comedy (known most famously for the Inferno) is a literal OC self-insertion of the Italian Dante Alighieri himself into the hell, purgatory and heaven from Catholic / biblical texts. Its format is in an epic, in an attempt to outdo the Aeneid and Iliad before it. It also includes an insertion of a ghostly Virgil, who copied the Iliad to write the Aeneid. Furthermore, Dante’s work includes insertions of real historical people that Dante didn’t like. It’s possibly the most self-indulgent fanfiction ever created while also being named one of the greatest poems in literature.

·        1392: Geoffrey Chaucer (known as the father of English literature) wrote a  famous collection called The Canterbury Tales. The collection takes its basic format and inspiration from Italian author Giovanni Boccaccio’s The Decameron (written in 1351). It’s suggested that some of the tales Chaucer uses actually originated from Boccaccio’s work.

Renaissance Era (1550-1660-ish CE)

·        1590: English poet Edmund Spenser borrowed the legend of Arthur of the Round Table in his epic poem, The Faerie Queene. In it, Arthur is pretty love-sick over the fairy queen.

·        1597: English playwright Shakespeare borrowed various mythologies and historical figures and mixed them together. Not even his most popular play, Romeo and Juliet, was original. He took the idea from a poem written by Arthur Brooke in 1562, called, “The Tragicall Hystorye of Romeus and Iuliet.” Even more interesting, Brooke had taken his idea from the 1554 Giulietta e Romeo by Italian author Matteo Bandello. (Shakespeare repeatedly sourced other people’s ideas or historical existence for his plays.)

Enlightenment Era (1660-1789)

·        1667: English poet John Milton wrote Paradise Lost, a fanfiction epic of the biblical story in the book of Genesis about the fall of creation and humankind into imperfection.

·        1712: English poet Alexander Pope wrote a mock-heroic epic called the Rape of the Lock to make fun of all the serious epic writers before him, borrowing such images as the way epic warriors put on armor and connecting it to the way rich people put on rich clothing and jewelry. He used other standard epic elements as repeated throughout The Iliad, Aeneid, and so forth.

·        1759: French writer and inventor, Voltaire, wrote a satire Candide. It borrowed various elements from Tales from a Thousand and One Arabian Nights, a collection of Middle Eastern folktales from the Islamic Golden Age.

Romantic Era (1789-1850)

·        1819: In Don Juan, English poet Lord Byron took the pre-dated legend of Don Juan, which was about a man who seduced a lot of women, and reversed the original plot so that Don Juan ended up seduced by a lot of women.

·        1820: English poet John Keats wrote a poem as a retelling of the Greek mythological creature called Lamia, which was a half-woman and half-monster (description varies depending on the Greek source). A lot of his works borrowed heavily from Greek mythology and literature, and he idolized the English Renaissance poet Edmund Spenser, to a point where his first work was called, “Imitation of Spenser” (1814). In it, he borrowed various images from Spenser’s epic, The Faerie Queene.

·        1843: English writer Charles Dickens wrote A Christmas Carol, based off the various stories compiled in the 1841 and 1842 The Lowell Offering, a publication magazine written by a group of intellectual but mostly anonymous women. He borrowed the certain pieces of plot, language, and descriptions for Scrooge’s ghostly encounters from the stories “A Visit from Hope” (anonymous), “Happiness” (anonymous), and “Memory and Hope” (by someone named Ellen). A Christmas Carol is additionally littered with biblical allusions all over the place.

·        1844: French writer Alexander Dumas borrowed The Three Musketeers, as well as many of the story’s side-characters, from The Memoirs of Monsieur d'Artagnan by French author Gatien de Courtilz de Sandras. He didn’t even change the names or who the villain, the Cardinal, was.

·        1845: American author Edgar Allan Poe wrote The Thousand and Second Tale of Scheherazade, in which he has the mythical Scheherazade from the Tales from a Thousand and One Arabian Nights telling another story about the legendary Sinbad the Sailor.  

·        1861: Hungarian author Imre Madach wrote The Tragedy of Man, which reverses the biblical moral principles of God and Satan: In this story, God is the violent and evil ruler, and Satan is the jaded/trickster victim just trying to open humanity’s eyes to the truth.  

Modern Era (1900ish-1950s)

·        1922: Irish novelist James Joyce wrote his stream-of-consciousness novel Ulysses, which was based off of Homer’s Odyssey, to a point where he took the characters and simply renamed them, as well as aligned the structure of his book to the various episodes in Homer’s work.

·        1930: The Nancy Drew series was created under the penname Carolyn Keene, who did not exist. Instead, an American man named Edward Stratemeyer would write three pages of a story, then send it to one of several ghostwriters who wanted to write Nancy Drew. The ghostwriter would take the story and expand it. The anonymous group of ghostwriters all writing about the same character still exists today. Each individual ghostwriter has made changes to Nancy’s personality, looks, and age, as well as the type of plots said character engages in.

·        1937: English writer JRR Tolkien wrote The Hobbit and then Lord of the Rings in the 1950s. He borrowed the names of characters and places after those seen in the Icelandic sagas Poetic Edda and Prose Edda by Snorri Sturluson. Tolkien admitted he based the physical appearance of Gandalf off of the Norse god Odin. He modeled the character of Aragorn directly after Beowulf, from the old English epic (700-1000 BCE) Beowulf. Aragorn himself even paraphrases the Anglo-Saxon poem, “The Wanderer,” as an example of a verse created by his people of Rohan. Another fun fact is that Tolkien specifically borrowed the phrase “my precious,” from a Middle English poem called Pearl. Additionally, Tolkien was a big fan of romantic prose/poetry writer William Morris and wanted to write like him, so he borrowed a lot of phrases, aesthetics, and even names from such works like the 1888 The House of the Wolfings by Morris, including the place called “Mirkwood.” Of curious note is that Morris’s work was massively influenced by Virgil’s Aeneid.

·        1938: African-American author Richard Wright wrote a collection of stories called Uncle Tom’s Children, with an obvious borrowing of the title from Uncle Tom’s Cabin, written by Harriet Beecher Stowe in 1852.

·        1930s-present: DC and Marvel comics mostly just updated the mythological gods and goddesses for a modern era, appropriating their names, special relics, and abilities for their heroes, and then mixing them with some modern-day cover identifies. As an example, Wonder Woman was originally a nod to the Greek goddess Diana, a nod to the female Amazon warriors, and a redesigned image of Rosie the Riveter. As another example, the Flash is a reproduction of the Greek god Hermes, his winged helmet further clarifying the connection. Even the name Superman was not entirely original. 1938 Illustrator of Superman, Joe Shuster, took the name “Superman” from the German “Ubermensh,” a term coined by the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche. As a final example, sometimes the appropriation from mythology is incredibly obvious, as in the case of Thor.

·        1949: English author George Orwell reviewed a book called We by Russian author Yevgeny Zamyatin. He wrote a rave review on it and declared that he would try to write something similar, which ultimately became 1984, sharing many similar plot points and concepts while bringing the story of We into a more realistic environment. The novel We also inspired Ayn Rand’s Anthem and Kurt Vonnegut’s Player Piano, for which Vonnegut admitted he also borrowed concepts from Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World.

·        1950s:The Chronicles of Narnia by British author C.S. Lewis was based on biblical stories conveyed through various mythological elements as well.

Postmodern Era (1950s-Present, debatably)

·        1977: African-American author, Toni Morrison, wrote a critically acclaimed novel called Song of Solomon, which took its title name, as well as the names of several characters and plot points, from the Bible.

·        1988: British-Indian author Salman Rushdie’s The Satanic Verses was inspired by the life of the Islamic prophet Muhammed. Its title is a direct reference to controversial verses once placed in the Quran but then removed. These highly controversial and sensitive connections to Islamic and Old Testament personalities of Gabriel and Satan resulted in the banning of Rushdie’s book from several regions.  

·        1997-2007: The Harry Potter series by British author JK Rowling borrows heavily from historical alchemy, including the age-old legend of the philosopher’s stone and the 1652 book Culpeper’s Complete Herbal, which was about the medicinal and occult properties of plants, which helped her build how magic was used in her stories. Rowling also admits the 1652 book inspired many of the character’s names. She appropriates several historical figures as well for her own purposes (as a sort of real-person fanfiction), including references to alchemists Nicolas Flammel and Paracelsus. She even admits to, while writing Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, dreaming about Flammel showing her how to make a philosopher’s stone.

·        2003: American author Dan Brown’s The Da Vinci Code and its twisting conspiracies are based almost entirely on the books of Margaret Starbird, most of which were written between 1993 and 2003.

·        2009:  Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, by American author Seth Grahame-Smith, is a rehashing of Jane Austen’s 1813 Pride and Prejudice. But with zombies.

·        2015: American writer of critically acclaimed The Outsiders, S.E. Hinton, claims that she has posted anonymous fanfictions of her own novel, as well as at least four Supernatural fanfics, being a huge fan of the show and of the paranormal.

As a professionally educated and trained writer and editor myself, I had to study the intertextualities of several of the pieces I mentioned above. But this is not an exhaustive world list by any means and is missing some other fantastic and influential writers—I’ve included only what has come to my mind in a short time. Plots and characters and ideas have been largely passed around throughout the history of literature. Without fanfiction, a solid portion of well-known literature would not exist.   

In fact, many authors and even inventors will say that there is no such thing as an original idea. Certain pieces get touted as creative because they combine previously suggested elements in a different or thought-provoking way. (Don’t even get me started on how science fiction is a driving force behind many scientific advancements today!)

If you’re writing fanfiction, then you’re participating in a tradition that spans millennia. There is no piece of literature created in some “original” vacuum. That is precisely why literary critics, and those who have professionally studied fiction in an academic setting, use the word “intertextuality” to describe how works of fiction are ultimately interrelated in some way or another.

Therefore, fanfiction is the legacy of literature. If Virgil, Dante, Shakespeare, Voltaire, Keats, Poe, Dickens, Tolkien, and Brown can write fanfiction about and expand other people’s works, you can too. So the next time someone tells you to stop writing fanfiction, or tells you that it’s not a valid form of art, tell them that they obviously have never read the most important historical works of fiction, or even many popular modern stories, which are all rehashed fanfiction stories, borrowing characters and names and setting and even syntax. 

Rant written for @greenappleeyes and everyone else unfairly shamed for writing fanfiction. Content was retrieved from my own class notes, as well as publically available online interviews and articles. 

(via dark3rainbow)

fanfiction

corinthian1234:

The inheritance games

Xander Hawthorne is just a rich Leo Valdez who has not realized his love of machinery. Change my mind

Know you're not alone (I'm gonna make this place your home)

buddieonao3:

by

Buck has nightmares but Eddie being around makes it better. Cue bedsharing and a slow transition from friends to lovers that if they’re honest, started long before the scope of this fic.

With couch metaphors, a poker date, and Eddie’s coming out process. Plus lil secret relationship at the end, as a treat.

Words: 16734, Chapters: 1/1, Language: English

mikereads:

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I just saw the newest bts photo of Ryan and this was the first thought that came to mind. They are wearing the same shirt. I repeat Buck and Eddie are wearing the same shirt, the share clothes.

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joaquin knows sth he wouldn't bait us would he idk anymore buddie buck x eddie evan buckey eddie diaz 911 fox 911 on fox i want to believe it might happen this time but i've been burned too many times before that now it's hard to trust again if it does happen in 6x17 i will be going mute the next day

wasting my time when it was always you

buddieonao3:

by

He is attracted to Eddie, he has been ever since his accident and he wasn’t before. Or maybe he just didn’t notice it ? Eddie’s always been handsome, the first thing Buck saw was his six-pack and yes he was jealous and bitter and angry but he was also a tiny bit turned on.

“Do I have something on my face ?” Eddie asks him, confused when he finally notices Buck’s creepy staring. He shakes himself out of his thoughts and pretends to get something off Eddie’s cheek, relishing the small contact with his skin.

“You had an eyelash.” Buck explains in a faint voice as Eddie’s eyes fall to his lips and the tension grows thicker before he leans back and everything just goes back to normal, like it never happened just like the other day on his couch.

***
Buck’s confused, Chimney’s dramatic, first dates with strangers suck and Buck finally realizes he has a couch.

Words: 4456, Chapters: 1/1, Language: English

deancaspinefest:
“Everywhere | Mature | 30,000
Author: Tragidean // LoversAntiquities
Artist: Sidewinder
Sam pulls Dean off the rebar. Dean wakes up, and Castiel is still gone. Nearly six months after Castiel’s death, Dean finds himself staring down...

deancaspinefest:

Everywhere  |  Mature  |  30,000

Author: Tragidean // LoversAntiquities

Artist: Sidewinder

Sam pulls Dean off the rebar. Dean wakes up, and Castiel is still gone. Nearly six months after Castiel’s death, Dean finds himself staring down the barrel of addiction in a futile effort to relieve the pain from an injury that refuses to heal. Though, after a hunt gone wrong and one last bad decision, Dean finds himself nearly Baker Acted in Florida, forced into a recovery he doesn’t want to face and memories he can no longer bury.

Halfway across the country, Castiel finds himself along the Oregon coast, seven months after Jack sent him back to Earth. When he embarks on what was meant to be a journey to discover both himself and Dean’s past, a dream sends him careening back into Dean’s path, to face a world he never wanted to imagine. While Dean comes to terms with his grief, Castiel scours the country, searching for any sign of him.

What he finds is Dean living out his retirement inside of a rehabilitation facility—and what Dean finds is the love of his life, brought back to him.

Link to fic  |  Link to art

Pairings: Dean/Cas

Warnings: None

Tags: Hurt/Comfort, Rehabilitation, Getting Back Together

fandom:
“ShipsIf it’s not canon, at least there’s always fanfic.
• Byler
Will Byers & Mike Wheeler, Stranger Things
• Steddie
Steve Harrington & Eddie Munson, Stranger Things
• Destiel -2
Dean Winchester & Castiel, Supernatural
•...

fandom:

Ships

If it’s not canon, at least there’s always fanfic.

  1. Byler
    Will Byers & Mike Wheeler, Stranger Things
  2. Steddie
    Steve Harrington & Eddie Munson, Stranger Things
  3. Destiel -2
    Dean Winchester & Castiel, Supernatural
  4. Blackbonnet
    Blackbeard & Stede Bonnet, Our Flag Means Death
  5. Ronance
    Robin Buckley & Nancy Wheeler, Stranger Things
  6. Buddie +2
    Evan Buckley & Edmundo Diaz, 9-1-1
  7. Lumity -5
    Luz Noceda & Amity Blight, The Owl House
  8. Nandermo
    Nandor the Relentless & Guillermo de la Cruz, What We Do In The Shadows
  9. Geraskier +11
    Geralt of Rivia & Jaskier, The Witcher
  10. Piltover’s Finest
    Caitlyn Kiramman & Vi, Arcane
  11. Hannigram -1
    Hannibal Lecter & Will Graham, Hannibal
  12. Supercorp -5
    Kara Danvers & Lena Luthor, Supergirl
  13. Ladynoir +10
    Ladybug & Chat Noir, Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug & Cat Noir
  14. Huntlow
    Hunter & Willow Park, The Owl House
  15. Adrienette +15
    Adrien Agreste & Marinette Dupain-Cheng, Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug & Cat Noir
  16. Bakudeku -12
    Bakugou Katsuki & Midoriya Izuku, Boku no Hero Academia
  17. Wangxian -3
    Lan Wangji & Wei Wuxian, Mo Dao Zu Shi
  18. Ineffable Husbands +8
    Aziraphale & Crowley, Good Omens
  19. Symbrock +12
    Venom (symbiote) & Eddie Brock, the Marvel universe
  20. Dreamling
    Dream of the Endless & Hob Gadling, The Sandman
  21. Daemon x Rhaenyra
    Daemon Targaryen & Rhaenyra Targaryen, House of the Dragon
  22. Marichat +11
    Marinette Dupain-Cheng & Chat Noir, Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug & Cat Noir
  23. Tomgreg
    Tom Wambsgans & Greg Hirsch, Succession
  24. Wolfstar -3
    Remus Lupin & Sirius Black, the Harry Potter universe
  25. Patpran
    Pat & Pran, Bad Buddy
  26. Jayvik
    Jayce & Viktor, Arcane
  27. Kathony
    Kate Sharma & Anthony Bridgerton, Bridgerton
  28. Raeda +49
    Raine Whispers & Eda Clawthorne, The Owl House
  29. Merthur +7
    Merlin & Arthur Pendragon, Merlin
  30. Stucky -19
    Steve Rogers & Bucky Barnes, the Marvel universe
  31. Harringrove +37
    Steve Harrington & Billy Hargrove, Stranger Things
  32. Lumax
    Lucas Sinclair & Max Mayfield, Stranger Things
  33. Narumitsu +9
    Phoenix Wright & Miles Edgeworth, Ace Attorney
  34. Drarry -12
    Draco Malfoy & Harry Potter, the Harry Potter universe
  35. Imodna
    Imogen Temult & Laudna, Critical Role
  36. Jonmartin -18
    Jonathan Sims & Martin Blackwood, The Magnus Archives
  37. Twiyor
    Loid Forger & Yor Forger, SPY x FAMILY
  38. Catradora -29
    Catra & Adora, She-Ra and the Princesses of Power
  39. Elmax
    Eleven & Max Mayfield, Stranger Things
  40. Hualian +15
    Hua Cheng & Xie Lian, Tian Guan Ci Fu
  41. Percabeth +19
    Percy Jackson & Annabeth Chase, the Percy Jackson universe
  42. Cockles -15
    Misha Collins & Jensen Ackles, actors
  43. Jegulus
    James Potter & Regulus Black, the Harry Potter universe
  44. Superbat
    Superman & Batman, the DC Universe
  45. Villaneve
    Villanelle & Eve Polastri, Killing Eve
  46. Nick x Charlie
    Nick Nelson & Charlie Spring, Heartstopper
  47. Solangelo -6
    Will Solace & Nico di Angelo, the Percy Jackson universe
  48. Dreamnotfound -43
    Dreamwastaken & GeorgeNotFound, streamers
  49. Satosugu +41
    Gojo Satoru & Geto Suguru, Jujutsu Kaisen
  50. Thasmin
    Thirteenth Doctor & Yasmin Khan, Doctor Who
  51. Drukkari
    Druig & Makkari, Eternals
  52. Sasunaru +26
    Uchiha Sasuke & Uzumaki Naruto, Naruto
  53. Suselle
    Susie & Noelle, Deltarune
  54. Eddissy
    Eddie Munson & Chrissy Cunningham, Stranger Things
  55. Sterek -11
    Stiles Stilinski & Derek Hale, Teen Wolf
  56. Tarlos -18
    TK Strand & Carlos Reyes, 9-1-1: Lone Star
  57. Spirk +14
    Spock & James Kirk, Star Trek
  58. Fexi
    Fez & Lexi Howard, Euphoria
  59. Jopper
    Joyce Byers & Jim Hopper, Stranger Things
  60. Jikook -45
    Park Jimin & Jeon Jungkook, BTS
  61. Chenford +38
    Lucy Chen & Tim Bradford, The Rookie
  62. Sambucky -59
    Sam Wilson & Bucky Barnes, the Marvel universe
  63. Zukka -47
    Zuko & Sokka, Avatar: The Last Airbender
  64. Obikin +36
    Obi-Wan Kenobi & Anakin Skywalker, the Star Wars universe
  65. Ladrien +28
    Ladybug & Adrien Agreste, Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug & Cat Noir
  66. Dinluke -42
    Din Djarin & Luke Skywalker, The Star Wars universe
  67. Bumbleby -50
    Yang Xiao Long & Blake Belladonna, RWBY
  68. Shadowgast -33
    Caleb Widogast & Essek Thelyss, Critical Role
  69. Sonadow
    Sonic & Shadow, Sonic the Hedgehog
  70. MileApo
    Mile Phakphum & Apo Nattawin, Actors
  71. Klance -32
    Keith & Lance, Voltron: Legendary Defender
  72. Kanej -38
    Kaz Brekker & Inej Ghafa, Shadow and Bone
  73. Yennskier
    Yennefer of Vengerberg & Jaskier, The Witcher
  74. Sashannarcy
    Sasha Waybright, Anne Boonchuy & Marcy Wu, Amphibia
  75. Loustat
    Louis de Pointe du Lac & Lestat de Lioncourt, Interview with the Vampire
  76. Batcat
    Batman & Catwoman, The Batman
  77. Codywan +7
    Commander Cody & Obi-Wan Kenobi, Star Wars: The Clone Wars
  78. Jancy
    Jonathan Byers & Nancy Wheeler, Stranger Things
  79. Kiribaku -54
    Kirishima Eijirou & Bakugou Katsuki, Boku No Hero Academia
  80. Harlivy -11
    Harley Quinn & Poison Ivy, the DC Universe
  81. Kinn x Porsche
    Kinn Theerapanyakul & Porsche Kittisawasd, KinnPorsche
  82. Soukoku
    Nakahara Chuuya & Dazai Osamu, Bungou Stray Dogs
  83. Jargyle
    Argyle & Jonathan Byers, Stranger Things
  84. Korrasami -52
    Korra & Asami Sato, The Legend of Korra
  85. Stolitz
    Stolas & Blitzo, Helluva Boss
  86. Damianya
    Damian Desmond & Anya Forger, SPY x FAMILY
  87. Spideypool
    Spider-Man & Deadpool, the Marvel universe
  88. Dramione -43
    Draco Malfoy & Hermione Granger, the Harry Potter universe
  89. Zutara -61
    Zuko & Katara, Avatar: The Last Airbender
  90. Mileven
    Mike Wheeler & Eleven, Stranger Things
  91. Marcanne
    Marcy Wu & Anne Boonchuy, Amphibia
  92. Zelink -55
    Zelda & Link, The Legend of Zelda
  93. Sasharcy
    Sasha Waybright & Marcy Wu, Amphibia
  94. Griddlehark
    Gideon Nav & Harrowhark Nonagesimus, The Locked Tomb series
  95. Tomdaya
    Tom Holland & Zendaya, actors
  96. Johnlock -45
    John Watson & Sherlock Holmes, Sherlock
  97. Jily -9
    James Potter & Lily Evans, the Harry Potter series
  98. Calliette
    Calliope Burns & Juliette Fairmont, First Kill
  99. Malex -19
    Michael Guerin & Alex Manes, Roswell, New Mexico 
  100. Serirei
    Serizawa Katsuya & Reigen Arataka, Mob Psycho 100

The number in italics indicates how many spots a ship moved up or down from the previous year. The ones in bold weren’t on the list last year.

heywriters:

dipseysparkleflower:

iamthecutestofborg:

boldlygoing-nowhere:

iamthecutestofborg:

hey-marlie:

lunacorva:

physicsandfandoms:

breezeinmonochromenight:

star-linedsoul:

razzleberryjam:

ironwoman359:

chaos-in-the-making:

smugkoalas:

allthefandomss:

that-catholic-shinobi:

gahdamnpunk:

American Girl stories were the best tbh

Dude, read the books, she and her mom freed themselves in Book 1. We don’t disrespect American Girl in this house

Don’t you dare disrespect Addy, or any of my girls for that matter. American Girl used to be legit. Good stories, good dolls, good movies.

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Felicity’s story was set in the beginnings of the American Revolution, and addressed the conflict that she faced when her loved ones were split between patriots and loyalists. It also covered the effects of animal abuse, and forgiving those who are unforgivable.

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Samantha’s stories centered around the growth of industrial America, women’s suffrage, child abuse, and corruption in places of power. Also, it emphasises how dramatically adoption into a caring family can turn a life around.

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Kit’s story is one of my favorites. Her family is hit hard by the Great Depression, and they begin taking in boarders and raise chickens to help make ends meet. Her books include themes of poverty, police brutality, homelessness, prejudice, and the importance of unity in difficult times.

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Molly’s father, a doctor, is drafted during the Second World War. Throughout her story, friends of hers suffer the loss of their husbands, sons, and brothers overseas. Her mother leaves the traditional housewife position and works full-time to help with the war effort. They also take in an English refugee child, who learns to open up after a life of traumatic experience.

American Girl stories have always featured the very harsh realities of America through the years. But they’re always presented honestly, yet in ways that kids can understand. They just go to show that you don’t have to live in a perfect time to be a real American girl.

Dont you fucking dare disrespect the American Girls in my house. ESPECIALLY Addy!! That was my first REAL contact with the horrors of slavery, as I read about her father being whipped and sold and her mother escaping with her to freedom, but also how freedom was still a struggle.

A slave doll. Please. Read the books.

Don’t forget Kirsten, the Swedish immigrant who had to deal with balancing her own culture and learning the english language and customs of her classmates, or Kaya (full name Kaya'aton'my, or She Who Arranges Rocks) , the brave but careless girl from the Nez Perce tribe, or Josefina, the Mexican girl learning to be a healer.

And then there are the later dolls, that kids younger than me would have grown up with (I was just outgrowing American Girl as these came out), like Rebecca, the Jewish girl who dreams of becoming an actress in the budding film industry, or  Julie, who fights against her school’s gender policy surrounding sports in the 70s, or  Nanea, the Hawaiian girl whose father worked at Pearl Harbor.

These books, these characters, are fantastic pictures into life for girls in America throughout the years, they pull no punches with the horrors that these girls had to face in their different time periods, and in many cases I learned more history from these series than social studies at school. And that’s without even mentioning the “girl of the year” series where characters are created in the modern world to help girls deal with issues like friend problems, moving, or bullying. We do NOT disrespect American Girl in this house.

American Girl is probably going to be the only exposure young girls are going to get to history from a female perspective. This is actually kind of important considering that in history classes we dont really get that exposure. We dont hear about what women felt and endured during these time periods cause schools are too busy teaching us about what happened from the male perspective, which is not unimportant, but we need both. Girls need both.

These books were such a crucial part of my childhood and shaped my love of history, which still ensures today. These books can be a young girl’s first lessons in diversity and cultural awareness (hopefully burying that insensitive “we’re all Americans” tripe) and looking at history from more perspectives than just that taught in school. They also are an example of how women have ALWAYS been part of history, which some people would rather us not believe.

I think Kit and Kaya were the newest American Girls when I started “aging out” of the books, but hearing about some of these kinda makes me want to revisit them!

I wasn’t gonna say anything, but you know what?

Nah.

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OP (of the tweet thread) was either a actively trying to start shit or is just a huge fucking moron. Probably both.

I’d like to point out that the company that makes American Girl dolls actually doesn’t skimp when doing their research and they don’t make the dolls with the intent to be offensive in any way:

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And they departed from the norm in Kaya’s doll to fit her culture! The other dolls all show their teeth, and Kaya does not because that is considered rude in the Nez Perce culture!

It is absolutely true that these books covered the stuff in history that was absent from our history books. I still distinctly remember reading about Addy being forced to eat bugs she missed on tobacco plants, and that started me out from a different perspective and made it easier for me to know to reject the sanitized version of the slave trade we’re taught in school. And these books are targeted at ages 8+, which is a pretty critical time for developing your own thinking and morals.

Reblogging for general awesome

when i was in 3rd grade i was reading the Meet Addy book at school & a couple boys made fun of me for reading a “doll book” - my teacher overheard & started reading Meet Addy to the class after every recess. everyone became extremely invested & by the end of the year we had read the entire collection of Addy books & did a presentation on the civil war at the end of the year that we all presented to the class one by one.

i think back on this & realize that as third graders we were talking about how awful slavery was & because we were simply innocent kids without any societal or institutional influence yet, all of us could kept saying “why would you treat a HUMAN like that ?!” this one girl for her birthday invited all of us for her party & she got the Addy doll - every single one of us (boys included) held her & was in awe of this doll - it was such a touching experience.

i went back home about a year ago & ran into my third grade teacher in the grocery store. she said that year opened up a whole new teaching structure for her. she now reads american girl stories to her students starting day one of class every day to calm them down after recess & she’ll get through maybe four or five sets of books a year. she has the dolls in the room with packets on information from the doll’s time period that her students can “check out” to take home for weekends to care for them.

we oftentimes overlook how powerful toys can be in influencing young children & american girl honestly knew that kids could read intense moments in history & synthesize the issues to learn how to be a better person. my grandma bought me my first doll, molly, when i was only six & the dolls became a huge part of my childhood. when i turned 21 a couple years ago - we were living in minneapolis - she took me to have lunch for my birthday at the american doll place in the mall of america & bought me the Addy doll for my birthday. it was such a powerful moment i hasn’t expected.

i’ve since gotten rid of majority of my childhood toys, but i still have every single one of my dolls & all the books that i plan on gifting to my future children.

I’m white and my first real introduction to slavery and the underground railroad was Addy. She was a young girl like me I could connect to and care about her story. American Girl does a great job of making history relevant to kids.

Also American Girl sells all sorts of books unrelated to the dolls. The Care and Keeping of You books were super important as I started puberty and were the most comprehensive, non judgemental account of what was going to happen.

They also have “the smart girls guide” series which covers topics like crushes, worry, middle school, drama and gossip, sports, friendship, the digital world, communication, money, confidence, etc.

Oh I had those too and I loved them!

I want to say I think there was an American Girl Doll magazine series that came out, but don’t quote me on that. there were lots of helpful girl guides that used the American girls as examples for doing good or learning lessons or trying to understand why girls did what they did

I learned a lot of my core beliefs from these girls.

I remember being very invested in Molly, Addy, and Kaya. Mostly cuz I look like Molly, and the other two had a lot of information on two of my favorite time periods. But I owe a lot of my personality to these lovvely girls

I learned survival skills from some of these girls! From Kaya’s simple meals, to Molly’s Girl Scout training, to Kit learning how to stretch a nickel, to Addy bravely sneaking through a Confederate camp, and straight-up Kirsten surviving bear encounters and blizzards. Good. Books!!

…i need to read these again

(via heywriters)

can we talk about how eddie was the one with no issues this episode? he’s really overcome so much shit and he has a break, i’m so happy for eddie. like staying awake all night playing videogames, sometimes that’s self-care, in doing something silly and fun that you wanted to do

911 fox

nicholasnelsons:

if chris woke up and seen eddie gaming without him this boy would be LIVID eddie diaz ur on thin ice before your son yells at you get sleep girl

i am so proud of eddie for playing videogames on his own ???? only bc he wants to ??? bc he enjoys it ??? sksjdksj

911 fox eddie diaz


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