julesjones (
julesjones) wrote2007-02-09 05:24 pm
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litcritted
This should amuse at least two of you -- I have been cited in an academic blog that litcrits romance:
http://teachmetonight.blogspot.com/2007/02/women-writing-men-doing-men.html
In the comments they're discussing slash, including the question of why bisexual and lesbian women read m/m. I know some of you lot are better qualified to answer this than I am, so if anyone feels like wandering over there and giving them one of the many possible answers, or at least pointers to one of the meta groups that will talk to outsiders...
http://teachmetonight.blogspot.com/2007/02/women-writing-men-doing-men.html
In the comments they're discussing slash, including the question of why bisexual and lesbian women read m/m. I know some of you lot are better qualified to answer this than I am, so if anyone feels like wandering over there and giving them one of the many possible answers, or at least pointers to one of the meta groups that will talk to outsiders...
no subject
I think there were a couple of things feeding into this. One is that apparently in the US most people think "Jules" is a purely masculine name, and it wouldn't occur to them that it could be a woman, unlike in the UK where it's a common short form for the entire Julius/Julia-derived group of names, whether male or female. The other is that I first came to attention in pro erotic romance as part of "Jules Jones & Alex Woolgrave", and I'm pretty sure that there were a lot of women unfamiliar with slash fanfic who were fantasising about this gay male couple writing love stories together. (Scott & Scott are a real example of such.)
Yes, were I in the UK I'd be very tempted by that study day -- does it produce proceedings? And of course the reason I thought one or two people might be amused by me being litcritted is that the fanfic zine series I edited was cited in an academic study of fanfic, and someone else was contemplating citing me in an academic paper on sf this year, so the romance blog completes the genre trifecta...
no subject
Slash Study Day 1 didn't producce formal written proceedings but I think a fair amount of what was said is now webbed in various places. I should chase it up.