I was thinking about real person fic and it's associated ethical boundaries, and it suddenly struck me: I've been in RPF.
Back when I was in second year the then fresher Raven wrote a story called "Death Becomes Unisfa" which was a rambling disjointed description of everyone in unisfa dying in various wacky and unlikely ways (As I recall I dropped a giant turtle on someone's head.
col_ki maybe?) Everyone read it and I don't remember anyone being very offended on principle, though I think some didn't like the particulars (I mean, a giant turtle? Is that really me?)
I realise that being described as a crazed Terry Pratchett obsessed murderer is not actually the sort of thing people tend to find objectionable in RPF, but it's still an amusing thought.
EDIT: Yeah, yeah, OFC is the wrong term, I couldn't think of a better title. Also, having been reminded of other similar stories, I think it make s abig difference what the intent is behind the story. If you're deliberately setting out to offend people then you probably will...
Back when I was in second year the then fresher Raven wrote a story called "Death Becomes Unisfa" which was a rambling disjointed description of everyone in unisfa dying in various wacky and unlikely ways (As I recall I dropped a giant turtle on someone's head.
I realise that being described as a crazed Terry Pratchett obsessed murderer is not actually the sort of thing people tend to find objectionable in RPF, but it's still an amusing thought.
EDIT: Yeah, yeah, OFC is the wrong term, I couldn't think of a better title. Also, having been reminded of other similar stories, I think it make s abig difference what the intent is behind the story. If you're deliberately setting out to offend people then you probably will...
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She confiscated it, read it, understood she'd been ficced, squicked [in manner of death by fictional us] and wasn't amused. Do RPF ethical dillemas count if it's only circulated to audiences where it's going to embarrass the authors more than defame the "subjects"?
RPF isn't my cup of tea:too close to aspects of celebrity culture and occasionally stalker POV.
But this makes me consider that I'm over-reacting. If audience exposure's relevant to the offensiveness of RPF, then celebrity gossip in commercial media is more widely read [and therefore harmful to them], and there's truth in seeing some celebrities as already players of fictional roles [the Celebrity] to maintain a level of fame beyond their artistic merit.
Conclusion: Paris Hilton is really a RPF, but who's writing her?
no subject
Yes, they're just different dilemmas :)
If audience exposure's relevant to the offensiveness of RPF, then celebrity gossip in commercial media is more widely read [and therefore harmful to them], and there's truth in seeing some celebrities as already players of fictional roles [the Celebrity] to maintain a level of fame beyond their artistic merit.
That tends to be my attitude. I still find RPF squicky but I'm not sure it's unethical (and in a lot of cases it seems quite divorced from Celebrity Culture as a whole) Also they don't pretend to be true!
Conclusion: Paris Hilton is really a RPF, but who's writing her?
Perhaps she writes herself, escher-style.