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		<lang class="3" colour="#000000" orgstyle="SEGMENT NAME new" style="Headline1"  font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Bold" size="12">ESSAY </lang>
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		<lang class="3" colour="#000000" orgstyle="HEAD new" style="Headline2"  font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Bold" size="50">When fanfiction swapped out fans for publishing deals </lang>
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	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BY NAME LINE new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Bold" size="8">ARSHI IBSAN RADIFAH
</lang>
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<p style=".Bodylaser" ul="0" ol="0"  orgstyle="BODY new">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">It sounds flippant to put it that way but, the </lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Italic" size="9">Aeneid</lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">, at its core, really is a continuation fic—picking up where Homer’s Trojan War ended and following Aeneas, a minor character in the canon, as he stumbles through an entirely new narrative along with original characters and incredibly expanded lore. Cut to a few centuries later, an earnest Virgil fan decides to take it one step further by adding himself into the story, and effectively writing what might be history’s first self-insert fic: Dante Alighieri’s </lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Italic" size="9">Divine Comedy</lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">.
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser" ul="0" ol="0"  orgstyle="BODY new">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">But we don’t think of Virgil or Dante when we think of fanfiction. Instead, their works are “derivative” or “revisions”. Why?
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser" ul="0" ol="0"  orgstyle="BODY new">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">Because for as long we have been alive, stories have been told and retold and passed along without much concern for originality because, copyright as we understand it today, was not how it always used to be. But once intellectual property became something that could be owned by a person or a corporation, that line between “derivative work” and “fanfiction” changed as well. If Virgil were to borrow from Homer today, it would not be without legal consequences.
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser" ul="0" ol="0"  orgstyle="BODY new">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">So, how does fanfiction manage to operate within that grey area? 
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser" ul="0" ol="0"  orgstyle="BODY new">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">Fanfiction, as it exists today, mostly does so because of the unspoken argument that you cannot profit from it. You can write as many</lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Italic" size="9"> Harry Potter </lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">spinoffs as you please, pick up where </lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Italic" size="9">Sherlock Holmes</lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9"> left off, fix-it-fic the ending of your favorite franchise—but it only exists in this online space where the reward is typically nothing more than adoration from other fans. Or at least, that used to be the rule.
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser" ul="0" ol="0"  orgstyle="BODY new">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">Before it became a pipeline to publishing deals, fanfiction lived quietly within the margins of the internet—forum entries, Wattpad and fanfiction.net, tumblr blogs, AO3. It was not the industry it is today. What is currently often referred to as a genre, started out so many degrees outside these usual circuits of value that it felt more like a </lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Italic" size="9">place </lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">we all went to together. You knew people only by their online handles. Feedback was hits, bookmarks and kudos, and recognition (if it came at all) was from quiet obsession; not royalties or six-digit Netflix deals.
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser" ul="0" ol="0"  orgstyle="BODY new">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">One of the most formative pieces of literature I’ve encountered came from an old, culturally defunct website, LiveJournal, titled—</lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Italic" size="9">The Heart Rate of a Mouse</lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">, or colloquially THROAM (throw-am): a 1970s AU slashfic about Brendon Urie and Ryan Ross of Panic At The Disco, with a rotating cast of early-2000s emo heartthrobs—and even a brief, glittering cameo from a glittery-eyeshadowed David Bowie himself. 
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser" ul="0" ol="0"  orgstyle="BODY new">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">What I remember most is the sheer scale of it—just this endless scrolling that never seemed to stop. First published in 2009, the fic ran over half a million words across three volumes, written by someone who was probably as old as I was when I found it at 16. And it didn’t make sense to me. How could something this expansive, this </lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Italic" size="9">good </lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">just exist on a website like this? For free? With no real expectation of anything beyond people reading it?
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser" ul="0" ol="0"  orgstyle="BODY new">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">Between the fan-made art, merch, and a small stint in self-published copies for sale by the author, none of it translated into what we’d recognise as a career. The author stayed a username (beggarsnotes) and the fic to this day only exists archived on the internet. But over the past decade, many stories that begin on similar platforms have been reworked into traditionally published novels, some even snapped up by major houses for film and television deals. This trajectory is now consistent enough to be a formula that promises good output: a fanfic gains a cult following, the names and the plot gets filed off, and what once circulated (free of cost) among fans is repackaged as new IP. The success of </lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Italic" size="9">Fifty Shades of Grey</lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">—originally a </lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Italic" size="9">Twilight </lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">fanfiction—effectively opened the floodgates for this model, and the examples have only multiplied. In one decade, publishers and studios have switched to actively scouting this for their platforms.
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser" ul="0" ol="0"  orgstyle="BODY new">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Italic" size="9">After</lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">, which began as a One Direction fanfic, was spun into a full-fledged film franchise. </lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Italic" size="9">The Love Hypothesis</lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9"> started life as a Star Wars sequel trilogy “Reylo” fic. </lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Italic" size="9">The Mortal Instrument</lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">s was originally a Draco Malfoy “Dramione” trilogy by Cassandra Clare. </lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Italic" size="9">Heated Rivalry</lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">, the hockey romance on everyone’s roster this year reportedly began as a Steve Rogers/Bucky Barnes AU on AO3 before being pulled, reworked, and relaunched. </lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Italic" size="9">The Idea of You </lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">is another book-to-movie adaptation in this sage that carries the unmistakable DNA of Harry Styles fanfics. Even </lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Italic" size="9">Red, White &amp; Royal Blue</lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">, the glossy Amazon Prime production has a lot of conjecture surrounding its supposed origins back to a Jesse Eisenberg/Andrew Garfield fic inspired by </lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Italic" size="9">The Social Network</lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">.
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser" ul="0" ol="0"  orgstyle="BODY new">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">But of course, the caricature of pre-teen girls writing self-indulgent romances about boy bands, or the more convenient exhibit of </lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Italic" size="9">Fifty Shades of Grey</lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9"> as a kind of infallible proof that fanfiction is embarrassing, cringe, and not “real” literature is still a really popular idea, even though both parties know that it flattens the vast range of what fanfic really is. Because certain forms of excess, especially when it comes to young girls </lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Italic" size="9">liking </lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">something, has always been easy to dismiss, even when history is full of works that adapt this similar act of borrowing.
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser" ul="0" ol="0"  orgstyle="BODY new">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">In her 2018 essay, “The Bodies of the Girls Who Made Me”, Seanan McGuire points out this obvious double standard. Fanfiction has historically been a space far outnumbered by women and queer writers and part of it was to accommodate a specific lack of representation that was often left out in the original canon. The human desire to expand on narratives, to want to see themselves in a story has always existed. But when men engage in similar acts of transformation, it’s derivative, and a homage, but when women do it, it’s unoriginal and </lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Italic" size="9">just </lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">fanfiction. And there’s a particular kind of dismissal that attaches itself to that because the argument regarding lack of originality is just categorically untrue (I once came across a James Bond AU in which everyone worked at a grocery store, which, if anything, is excessively original).
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser" ul="0" ol="0"  orgstyle="BODY new">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">And that’s where I start to hesitate. Because there is something undeniably significant about good writers finding wider audiences and being taken seriously, being </lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Italic" size="9">paid</lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">—it would be disingenuous to ignore that.  But even as fanfiction is finally being taken seriously it still carries the weight of that same dismissal. It’s valuable, but only after it’s been reshaped and sanitised to be more palatable to a system that never quite respected it to begin with.
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser" ul="0" ol="0"  orgstyle="BODY new">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">I would love for some of my favorite writers from that era to reach the visibility they deserve. But I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t also a little relieved that a million-dollar company hasn’t ultimately managed to get its grubby hands on something like THROAM. Part of what made fanfiction so special was that shared intimacy of being able to exist in a space so obsessively and still be met with a similar enthusiasm, and in my own selfish way, I’m glad some of its best versions never left that place. And I’m not sure a Netflix exec would ever take the time to learn how to package the thrill of that experience without tainting all the important parts. 
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser" ul="0" ol="0"  orgstyle="BODY new">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Bold" size="9">Arshi Ibsan Radifah</lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Italic" size="9"> is a Literature major who loves unreliable narrators and Wes Anderson movie sets. If she had it her way she would have liked to play bass for a girl band in the 90s, but for now she’ll suffice by rewatching </lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" colour="#000000" orgstyle="BODY new" font="Blacker Pro Display" fontStyle="Regular" size="9">Empire Records.</lang>
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