Harassment and abuse in fandom
I've started a couple of posts on the discussions and revelations of abuse and harassment that consumed my Twitter feed for most of last week (and composed even more of them in my head), but now that things are slowing down it feels less crucial to say anything, if it ever even was necessary for me to wade in. I guess more and more now I'm thinking about fandom history, and how it gets slowly lost over time. For just one example, I have many friends, now, who either weren't yet in fandom during Racefail or were in different corners of it, and so they don't remember watching it unfold in real time and didn't live through the active fallout from it. This thread by clairewillett, in particular, served as a wake-up call to me. And it's a pattern not just with large-scale events like Racefail, but these waves of abuse accusations that come out every so often, and how often it seems like we see a name multiple times with no consequences. How do does a community impose lasting consequences when that community's memory is in a constant state of flux? And how do we provide space for people to get better and change, while prioritizing the safety and comfort of the people who they hurt? (Because if that's the choice we have to make, I'm definitely picking the latter.)
I want to say right now that I'm not interested in litigating the veracity of any of the charges, past or current. I don't know most of these folks and, in most cases, I don't have a vested interest in whether any specific creator's career is preserved. That's not what I care about, here. What I want is a climate where survivors feel supported in coming forward, and a culture where we understand why someone might choose not to do so. And I want a world where abuse and harassment have consequences. And I want a world where marginalized people feel welcome in fandom communities. Sometimes I feel like we're taking steps to create that world, and sometimes I despair of it being a world we'll ever see. But I have to believe that we're getting there, that every painful bandage we rip off will allow the wound beneath to heal a little more.
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I have only followed the current issues in pro SFF a little, and also am watching from very afar the debate over how to make the OTW and the archive more inclusive.
But so much of these discussions happen on Twitter now that I miss most of it. I am actually back to relying on phonecalls for some of my fandom news!!!!!
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It's so, so true.
If I see a good summary I will definitely share it! Not quite up for writing one myself :) If you have specific questions, though, I'll do my best to answer them to the best of my knowledge.
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I don't know any good answers, and I don't know any non-defamatory answers (non-slanderous, non-litigious, whatever), people do keep trying and I hold onto that sometimes, if nothing else.
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I'm not going to complain that Fandom Wank didn't have its problems, but sometimes I really miss Fandom Wank.
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I want the world you describe. I don't know whether we can get there outside of a subcommunity-by-subcommunity basis, except perhaps in cases involving people using their legal name. My best guess is that we're going to see more fandom activities taking place in closed communities with explicit codes of conduct and the ability to ban members.
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Yeah, that's also a thing, *for sure*. One of the most salient tweets I saw on this whole situation was from
I totally can see that, and even understand why it's been happening, but it makes me a little sad, too.
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I'm currently in "debate whether certain books I own but haven't read go straight to donation pile" mode. Some of them are signed. and since the money was spent years ago, what now? do I read them and then donate and just not buy in the future? Do I discard the entire everything? sell some of the things? I don't know, and the ethics of media are hard.