OOC - Genre!
Jul. 16th, 2003 07:45 amOOC: I have a genre!
Well, a subsubsubgenre, at least. I'd be surprised if it gets as big as animutation, say.
Sythyry isn't the first fictional journal, not even the first
fictional LiveJournal. I'm not aware of many others that are set in
the authors' original worlds and intended as literature
for a broad audience:
cowboy_r's long-completed project of Tails
of the City is the only one I can think of.
But that was last month. Now there are
jareth_atian
and, as of this morning,
bartolomi. Welcome to both!
I am far from mighty at English Lit. (My mother is an English professor -- and yes, I was named after Shakespeare, and didn't choose the name "Bard" myself like a good little pagan and/or gamer -- so I generally avoided English courses.)
But I'm beginning to see some subsubsubgenre conventions, already.
Both
bartolomi and I start out by actually getting
the physical journal, from a relative who is a maker of magical
devices. The journal exists within the journal. I imagine that the
right Magisters of LitCrit could probably have a field day with that
-- but of course the characters seem to take it as a fairly routine
matter.
Schools are also popular: college, in particular. Actually
byackley has for the last year or two (or more?) been
producing a nifty webcomic set in a magic academy, Spellshocked, and I am a
card-carrying member of Academics Anonymous, so it probably comes
naturally. In any case, I don't see much of Hogwarts in either
Spellshocked or Sythyry.
Next comes ... genre identity disorder, maybe, when I start consciously breaking the conventions of the form?
no subject
Date: 2003-07-16 07:30 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-07-16 08:10 am (UTC)(And I'm giving myself undue credit there -- the World Tree setting is a RPG, but
If there are others, I'd love to see 'em!
no subject
Date: 2003-07-16 10:11 am (UTC)-Alexandra
no subject
Date: 2003-07-16 04:06 pm (UTC)