mememememe
Nov. 13th, 2005 01:18 pmOkay, got a computer again. Missed qualifying for Yuletide--damn it. Guess it wasn't meant to be.
Snicked from
cesperanza: Five formative slash texts, before I even knew what it was
1. Frodo/Sam. I read the "comforted him with his arms and body" bit over and over again. I never quite understood what the squishy, squirmy thrill in my stomach was.
2. Luke/Han. Blanketfic on Hoth? OMGduh.
3. Legolas/Gimli. So doing it. I never wanted to know, but they so totally were.
4. Will/Bran. I never liked that damn ending, not as an eleven-year-old, not now.
5. Odysseus/Athena. Okay, yes, I was a classics geek as a kid. And it does count as slash. Love That Dare Not Speak Its Name, beyotch!
Snicked from
1. Frodo/Sam. I read the "comforted him with his arms and body" bit over and over again. I never quite understood what the squishy, squirmy thrill in my stomach was.
2. Luke/Han. Blanketfic on Hoth? OMGduh.
3. Legolas/Gimli. So doing it. I never wanted to know, but they so totally were.
4. Will/Bran. I never liked that damn ending, not as an eleven-year-old, not now.
5. Odysseus/Athena. Okay, yes, I was a classics geek as a kid. And it does count as slash. Love That Dare Not Speak Its Name, beyotch!
no subject
Date: 2005-11-14 10:35 pm (UTC)*shakes head* I just don't think slash should be used to denote het. It's much too messy and confusing. Same as calling any old ficlet "drabble". Words shouldn't have multiple meanings.
no subject
Date: 2005-11-14 10:46 pm (UTC)At this point, yes slash means m/m. I'm just bonking around with all these things that don't have words for them. I'd be a lot happier if we could have stylistic groupings as well as biological ones. I'm not going to call Lily/James "slash", but I'm going to hang about moaning about how I don't have anything else to call it.
My use of slash in terms of this meme was tongue-in-cheek, because I'd seen it done on my flist.
no subject
Date: 2005-11-14 11:09 pm (UTC)And okay. :D I'm just trying to convert you utterly and absolutely to the conventional use of the word slash.