Writing my current chapterfic, Children of Mars, is becoming a didactic exercise. The writing itself is as much a pleasure as ever, and has even gained a sense of catharsis, but when it comes time to post, I want to just save it to my computer and never let one more idiot reader anywhere near it. Now I know not all of you dear readers are idiots, and one of the things I like best about writing fanfiction is the social framework and critique of fandom (yeah, I write for the comments, such a bad girl) and I have never felt this way about posting a fic before. Before I have always written about able-bodied characters.
My writing Snape with a disability along with werewolfism is part protest at the way characters with disabilities were portrayed in the books I read as a child and part personal expression of myself as a writer with disabilities. We don’t have the same disability, in the story Snape uses crutches, whereas I’m oxygen dependent and have an immune disease, but we share a certain status as people with disabilities, or (good God) disabled people. It’s wonderful, and freeing, and it makes me feel so much better after bad days.
But once I post, it seems like so many of the reviews I receive are “teachable moments” and that’s not so wonderful.
Some of you have been saying you can’t wrap your heads around Snape as disabled. That isn’t because of anything inherent in either Snape as a character or disability, but in cultural narratives that paint people with disabilities as either weak, or more insidiously as plucky, happy symbols of Good, like the damsel in distress in action movies, not a character so much as an object. Snape will never be a tragic, passive, stoic cripple (a word that I see a lot in reviews and makes me throw up a little in my mouth each time). He will never be helpless. He is and always will be a snarky git. So many of the reviews talk about how horrible all of the other characters are to him. Well, he’s horrible to them. Besides which if anyone, even Lily, especially Lily, were suddenly to treat him like a helpless incompetent child who can’t protect himself or do a thing on his own, he would hex them all into oblivion. When people do that to me, I wish I could.
When I was a kid, books about people with disabilities seemed to end one of two ways. Either the pure, good, tragic cripple died, or the pure, good, tragic cripple was cured. Okay, there were also villains whose disabilities were a symbolic sign of their inner corruption, but I’m not even going to touch that one. Such endings are incredibly disheartening for me, growing up, because I didn’t want to die, and I was never going to be miraculously cured. I had to carve out a happy ending of my own that included my disability. For those of you who keep saying you want Snape’s leg repaired at the end, you are tapping into that same disenfranchising cultural narrative. Stop it. Stop it now. Don’t make me get out my squirt bottle of wrathful smiting. Whatever ending I write (and I will spoil this, if nothing else) Snape and his disability will be around at the end, along with their happy ending.
One thing I didn’t mention about the perfect tragic cripple trope is that they are always portrayed as lacking any sort of sexuality at all. They neither have sexual feelings or are appropriate objects of desire for other characters. What. The. Hell. Okay, okay, there is one type of character with disabilities allowed to lust, the disabled villain. Of course their sexuality is always portrayed as deviant, and threatening, and further sign of their evil. Now, no one has sent me a comment with this bit of fail in it, as Snape hasn’t done any more than engage in some canon unrequited Lily love, but I’m waiting, When the situation calls for them, I’ll get these too. I have no doubt.
All of this makes me feel even more queasy as I write this, and I get no catharsis or enjoyment from it. It shouldn’t be my job, but because I will continue writing characters with disabilities, not just in fic but in original works as well, I have put myself in the position of teaching by example, so for my own peace of mind, I must also teach directly. I’m sure those characters will get similar sorts of reviews, sometimes, if I’m lucky, from reviewers and writers I respect. When I send my stories out into the world, the knowledge that people will read my characters differently because of their disabilities will always be there.
Snape is not tragic. He is not a poor crippled boy to be protected and treated nicely by the noble heroes. He is the hero. He will fight against and work with his disability, but ultimately, he will do it on his own, like all of us must do at the end of the day.
I’m sure I didn’t cover everything in this post, and a lot of you will be rolling your eyes going “yes, we know all this” and this is really basic realize people with disabilities are people stuff, but I keep getting comments where I have to reiterate this. All of you dear readers who do know all this, thank you, and no fear all, I’m still writing Children of Mars and other fanfics.
My writing Snape with a disability along with werewolfism is part protest at the way characters with disabilities were portrayed in the books I read as a child and part personal expression of myself as a writer with disabilities. We don’t have the same disability, in the story Snape uses crutches, whereas I’m oxygen dependent and have an immune disease, but we share a certain status as people with disabilities, or (good God) disabled people. It’s wonderful, and freeing, and it makes me feel so much better after bad days.
But once I post, it seems like so many of the reviews I receive are “teachable moments” and that’s not so wonderful.
Some of you have been saying you can’t wrap your heads around Snape as disabled. That isn’t because of anything inherent in either Snape as a character or disability, but in cultural narratives that paint people with disabilities as either weak, or more insidiously as plucky, happy symbols of Good, like the damsel in distress in action movies, not a character so much as an object. Snape will never be a tragic, passive, stoic cripple (a word that I see a lot in reviews and makes me throw up a little in my mouth each time). He will never be helpless. He is and always will be a snarky git. So many of the reviews talk about how horrible all of the other characters are to him. Well, he’s horrible to them. Besides which if anyone, even Lily, especially Lily, were suddenly to treat him like a helpless incompetent child who can’t protect himself or do a thing on his own, he would hex them all into oblivion. When people do that to me, I wish I could.
When I was a kid, books about people with disabilities seemed to end one of two ways. Either the pure, good, tragic cripple died, or the pure, good, tragic cripple was cured. Okay, there were also villains whose disabilities were a symbolic sign of their inner corruption, but I’m not even going to touch that one. Such endings are incredibly disheartening for me, growing up, because I didn’t want to die, and I was never going to be miraculously cured. I had to carve out a happy ending of my own that included my disability. For those of you who keep saying you want Snape’s leg repaired at the end, you are tapping into that same disenfranchising cultural narrative. Stop it. Stop it now. Don’t make me get out my squirt bottle of wrathful smiting. Whatever ending I write (and I will spoil this, if nothing else) Snape and his disability will be around at the end, along with their happy ending.
One thing I didn’t mention about the perfect tragic cripple trope is that they are always portrayed as lacking any sort of sexuality at all. They neither have sexual feelings or are appropriate objects of desire for other characters. What. The. Hell. Okay, okay, there is one type of character with disabilities allowed to lust, the disabled villain. Of course their sexuality is always portrayed as deviant, and threatening, and further sign of their evil. Now, no one has sent me a comment with this bit of fail in it, as Snape hasn’t done any more than engage in some canon unrequited Lily love, but I’m waiting, When the situation calls for them, I’ll get these too. I have no doubt.
All of this makes me feel even more queasy as I write this, and I get no catharsis or enjoyment from it. It shouldn’t be my job, but because I will continue writing characters with disabilities, not just in fic but in original works as well, I have put myself in the position of teaching by example, so for my own peace of mind, I must also teach directly. I’m sure those characters will get similar sorts of reviews, sometimes, if I’m lucky, from reviewers and writers I respect. When I send my stories out into the world, the knowledge that people will read my characters differently because of their disabilities will always be there.
Snape is not tragic. He is not a poor crippled boy to be protected and treated nicely by the noble heroes. He is the hero. He will fight against and work with his disability, but ultimately, he will do it on his own, like all of us must do at the end of the day.
I’m sure I didn’t cover everything in this post, and a lot of you will be rolling your eyes going “yes, we know all this” and this is really basic realize people with disabilities are people stuff, but I keep getting comments where I have to reiterate this. All of you dear readers who do know all this, thank you, and no fear all, I’m still writing Children of Mars and other fanfics.
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Date: 2009-09-09 06:08 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-09-09 06:12 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-09-09 06:14 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-09-09 06:22 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-09-09 08:18 pm (UTC)First, re: sex & disabilities -- I immediately thought of the movie "Monkey Shines". That is the only case I know where someone who had no use of their legs (or no legs? cant remember) had sex in a movie.The protagonist, not a villain. It's a horror movie/thriller. I can't remember the ending, so I dunno if the dude was cured or not. But might be worth a look.
And totally w/you on people w/disabilities being entitled to the same treatment as everyone else. The best fictional example of this I can think of is Prof X from the X-Men, and we know he had romantic liaisons, even if we never got to see them, and Barbara Gordon (once Batgirl, now paralyzed from waist down, apparently can still fight, at least well enough to take out three wanna be muggers, if not probably at the point where she wants to go hand to hand w/Killer Croc or somesuch). Dunno if you read comics, tho?
Anyway, now I might actually have to go back and try reading your fanfic novel. If I end up doing this, I shall hate you.
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Date: 2009-09-09 10:07 pm (UTC)According to Wikipedia, he does get repaired in the end, and ad that to the fact that it's horror, not much my cup of tea.
Babs rocks, always has *is thoroughly bummed about the cancellation of Birds of Prey even if the quality nosedived after Gail Simone left*, though sadly, she's another one who gets tagged with the "repair her" meme. I mean, the girl kicks ass in a wheelchair, and she got to romance Dick Grayson, I mean, yeah, I kinda like her, maybe a little. Of course, she's a subversion of a refrigerated woman (her refrigeration and her climbing out of that status becoming part of her tragic heroic backstory) so that just adds a whole new level of cool.
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Date: 2009-09-13 08:12 pm (UTC)Ever watch the American TV show House? The lead character is pure sex-on-a-cane (see my icon). Dr. House takes joy in a being a complete and utter ass, although he's portrayed as a complex character. The show also plays with the themes of "pity" and "compassion" and how it can be quite unwanted. (One of my favorite scenes is when House's best friend -- who is usually far too lenient with House -- gets back at him by sabotaging his cane. And House is very pleased.)
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Date: 2009-09-13 08:41 pm (UTC)We as people with disabilities need to remind ourselves that we don't have to be anyone's inspiration or teachable moment or exhibit A against ablism or whatever unless we choose to. There is no obligation!
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Date: 2009-09-13 09:22 pm (UTC)Of course they do, why expect anything less offensive?One thing you might like, if you are looking for more positive betrayals of disability, is the Japanese manga Fullmetal Alchemist. There are some utterly awesome disabled characters, and while they have Tragic Backstories a bit too often, they have lives and capabilities and sexuality. Might be worth checking out.
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Date: 2009-09-13 09:43 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-09-13 10:22 pm (UTC)Thanks for this.
You should really check out House. My icon is for illustration only, people dehumanizing other people when it comes to people with disabilities and/or disabled people, just proves how narrow minded we are as a culture when it comes to the body.
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Date: 2009-09-13 10:27 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-09-13 11:46 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-09-13 11:55 pm (UTC)</rant>
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Date: 2009-09-14 01:17 am (UTC)A fic I read which I felt did a good job of not falling into any of these traps is Finding Himself, a HP AU where Cedric doesn't die but is disabled by the confrontation with Voldemort (and then saves the day! And finds love! And has a cool pet raccoon!...and is maybe a teeny bit of a Gary Stu :) But he doesn't get better!)
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Date: 2009-09-14 01:28 am (UTC)Also, I saw all of Hugh Laurie's old acts in British comedy where his Shtick was playing a buffoon, so it's hard to find him sexy after that, lol.
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Date: 2009-09-14 01:52 am (UTC)Exactly! And the more the able bodied community tries to thrust the obligation on us, the more we need to remember that obligation isn't real.
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Date: 2009-09-14 02:39 am (UTC)I've had House suggested to me before, but between the way the show gets the medical stuff so horribly wrong and the way I keep waiting for Hugh Laurie to do something silly (sometimes watching loads of old British comedy is a bad thing, who knew) has prevented me from enjoying the show when I try to watch it.
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Date: 2009-09-14 02:42 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-09-14 02:55 am (UTC)(Here from metafandom, by the way.)
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Date: 2009-09-14 03:01 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-09-14 03:02 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-09-14 03:05 am (UTC)I"ll have to check it out. I've heard good things about it, but I've been waiting until my family gets a netflix account so I can fill it up with shows.
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Date: 2009-09-14 03:07 am (UTC)Maybe "upbeat" is the wrong word to use. Her friends wind up almost giving up entirely, and she doesn't, if that clarifies it.
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Date: 2009-09-14 03:38 am (UTC)Thanks, I'll have to check it out, and force down my Gary Stu warning system.