peruvianskys said:
Comparing the creation of mythologies or folk tales, which happened through culture-wide retellings and reworkings based off traditional stories passed down through time, to taking the characters and world of one specific person to remake as a continuation of that work is completely different.
Of course it is different, but what made the situations different? Why is it that for so long, organically developing stories were the centerpiece of culture, and used even by the greatest professionals of the time like Shakespeare, while nowadays anything similar can only be found in stuff like creepypasta and fanfiction?
It all comes down to legality, and the clean, artificial line that separates a publishable "new IP" from the "taking of a pre-existing IP", which will end up rewarding those who make up new character names, and punish those who don't, rather than the true contents of creativity and innovation.
50 Shades of Grey is the source material of a "New IP", and an "universe", because E. L. James crapped out the name "Christian Grey", and search-and-replaced every instance of "Edward Cullen" with it.
Big publishers are doing the same, even if we won't catch them uploading early, clearly-fanfiction draft versions: Once a decade, they put together a glorious "new universe" wih clearly derivative "inspirations", just to have something new to exploit for another decade.
When you are hailing the New IP makers as worthy of special defense, and the "fanfiction writers" as derivative (no matter how many creative changes they made compared to their source), just because you can catch old character and location names in the latter, you are overrating the shallowest element of creativity, and perpetuating the presence of overglorified "original authors".
peruvianskys said:
Are you telling me you really don't see the difference between one author doing her own interpretation of a traditional narrative, and one author just lifting the characters, setting, and style of another wholesale for the purpose of continuing that narrative?
Of course I see the difference. The latter is more of "continuation fic", while the former is maybe a "fix fic", or an "AU fic".
Your idea of "fanfiction's purpose", is quite narrow. Continuations are surely a thing, but so are retellings of a pre-existing story, maybe with an extra character or a "what if" premise, Crossovers that use two universes to form a third one, Elsewhere fics that take the universe but add entirely new locations, characers, and plots, etc.
As I'm writing this, I have three other tabs open. One is Stolen Ice, a Frozen fanfic where Anna is a master thief and Elsa is a hacker, and they grew up not knowing each other then fell in love. Another is Harry Potter and the Natural 20, that's protagonist is an original character D&D munchkin, who upsets the plot from the beginning of Philosopher's stone, meta-humor ensues. The third is Marissa and the Wizards, about a homeless brazilian girl being enrolled in a Brazilian wizarding school (in the Harry Potter universe).
peruvianskys said:
I don't want to criminalize fanfiction, but I do want to encourage a community that values the creation of new worlds and new characters as well as one that respects the author's ownership of a product.
I'm cool with that, as long as by ownership you mean the selling rights of the actual text that they wrote, rather than the censorship right over which of their own texts other writers are allowed to publish.
The latter I find an extremely disgusting practice of our system, and not just because I believe that it doesn't work, and it stiffles true, old-fashioned, organic creativity in favor of franchise-exploitation.
Even if it would work, that would be an extremely weak excuse for franchise rights. To protect authors and the public from the dangers of freely publishing whatever works they want, and call it other writers' "ownership", is the most blatant cultural censorship that somehow passed in the free world.
Even if I'm wrong about franchise rights fostering unoriginal sequels, and without them,
even more Spiderman sequels should be made than now, that should be up to the publishers' and the audiences freedom of expression, not something that governments should regulate away.
peruvianskys said:
Again, probably the worst thing about us is that, as a community, we don't seem to care about the "formalities of proper literature". Are you really telling me that the writing you see in most sci-fi and fantasy novels is bogged down by being too good?
"Properness" is not goodness, it's regulation, and creative concessions, and stuffed shirt commercialized public appropriateness.
Where everything must fit into a genre, and an universe carefully curated "canon", and a corporate owned "franchise", for maximum merchandizeability.
No room for any wildness, freedom, or self-expression.
No room for "All right, this time the french philosopher Voltaire is travelling to the magical land of Equestria to analyze political systems, and fight with a mule-goddess." No room for "All right, this time Elsa and Anna are lesbian modern criminals". No room for "What if the Harry Potter universe has been interacted by with a character running on D&D logic?".
No room for giving the chance that either of these can be good, as long as they are shoved to the corner of the Internet where legally unpublishable works go, and even the informal audience insists that they are "inherently" less original than the "New IP" dreck of publisher-owned AAA/blockbuster culture.