lirazel: Wei Wuxian and Lan Wangji from The Untamed ([tv] 畢生知己)
lirazel ([personal profile] lirazel) wrote2023-09-22 12:26 pm

Fannish Friday: degrees of AU-ish-ness

This is probably going to be only relevant to those of us who tend to love genre fandoms of the speculative fiction or historical variety, but I want to talk about mundane AU fanfiction--where you take a historical, fantasy, or scifi fandom and plop the characters down in a contemporary setting. You know--the superheroes are now all working at a coffee shop or the royal court is now a high school, that kind of thing.

I am just curious about how people feel about them and what you feel their relationship to canon is.


When I first get into a fandom, I have ZERO interest in reading these kinds of stories. I am there for the fic that explores the world of the text--missing scenes, post-canon, fix-it fics, and especially canon divergence. I will pass mundane AUs by.

Once I've been in the fandom for a long time and read a lot of fic, I sometimes can enjoy mundane AUs. This happened to me with Infinite (where a mundane AU is literally anything where they're not idols) and with The Untamed fandoms. I read quite a bit of Untamed mundane AUs to this day.

And yet...I don't really feel like they're fanfic in the same way that more canon-observant fics are. There are some that do a marvelous job of adapting all the beats of canon--the character dynamics, the plot points--to a different setting. Those are rare and masterful, and I'm impressed by them. But the rest are just...the characters being written about have the character's faces and some of their personality traits, but that's about it.

Obviously, this is all a spectrum. But there are some that venture so far from canon that I feel like I'm reading an original work of fiction. And I can enjoy some of those, even love them, but I don't love them as fanfiction, I love them as original fiction.

It's interesting to think about how far it has to diverge from canon to not be fanfiction to me. I was reading a Wangxian fic this week that had the same kind of mundane AU plot I'd read before, but this one immediately went to the "this is not fanfiction" realm for me because Wei Wuxian was a lot older than Lan Wangji, and that changed the dynamic between them enough that I didn't even think they were the same characters anymore. I really liked the fic! It was well written and I liked the characters being written about. But I kept going, "This is not actually Wangxian fic."

So for me the spectrum goes:


canon-adherent (either a missing scene or pre- or post-canon fic)
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| A
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pivot moment divergence (where just one or two things change, and we explore what repercussions that has)
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| B
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complete plot divergence (where we're still in the same world and operating by the rules of canon, but the plot is completely different than canon)
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| C
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setting tweaks (say, you add daemons or the characters are suddenly royalty or they have some kind of magical powers they don't have in canon, but it's still loosely recognizable as the same world
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| D
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setting-change AUs (where we're in a completely different setting but you're still trying to translate as much of canon as possible, trying to hit the same beats and get the characterization and relationships just right
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| E
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setting and plot change AUs (where the characters are clearly inspired by their canon personalities, but they're operating under such different conditions that the relationship is becoming tenuous
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| F
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this isn't even fanfic anymore (you've crossed a line--probably a subjective one--wherein the reader is like, "Okay, this essentially has nothing to do with canon other than me picturing the same faces and bodies" but it may be a good enough story to stand on its own)
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| G



As a writer, I stay pretty firmly in the A and B areas about 90% of the time, though sometimes I will venture out into C and every once in a while I will do a full-on E re-write. But even when I completely change the setting, I never make them truly mundane where they're just normal people living contemporary lives; I write, like, a Star Trek AU or something dystopian/post-apocalyptic. I have zero desire to write about any character I love having a normal life if that's not the kind of fandom they originate in. I actually don't understand the appeal of E-G kinds of stories as a writer; I would just write original fic instead. But they are very popular so clearly other people feel differently.

As a reader, I stay with A-B and a little bit of C for most fandoms. It's only in fandoms where I've read a ton of fic that I'm willing to venture further out into the other letters.


What about y'all? What do you prefer to read or write? Or is my spectrum just completely wrong and not the way you think of fic at all?
rachelmanija: (Default)

[personal profile] rachelmanija 2023-09-23 01:59 am (UTC)(link)
I am almost never interested in mundane AUs of SFF canons. To me they're like, "Take this thing I enjoy, but make it more boring." I read SFF for a reason - I like the genre a lot. The only exception would be if the AU setting was something unusually interesting to me AND if it was really well-done. There's a great film noir AU of Saiyuki for instance. But it's usually not my thing.

On the other hand, canon-divergence is one of my favorite genres. And I often like "a different type of SFF setting" AUS, like fantasy instead of SF or vice versa. Part of the fun of those is seeing how non-realistic elements get translated between settings, like a dragon becoming a sentient spaceship or vice versa.