brightknightie: Stonetree and Norma looking at a CRT monitor (Computer)
Amy ([personal profile] brightknightie) wrote2014-09-06 10:06 pm

Fannish Vocabulary Trivia

(aka What do you call a gen story that sets the stage for a future romance? Anything?)

Is "pre-slash" still a significant genre label, or has it been subsumed into the orientation-agnostic "UST" label? If "pre-slash" is still in wide, active use, did it ever develop a het-specific equivalent? The nuances would be wrong for a precisely mirror term, I realize, as "pre-slash" often applied when building realizations or admissions from subtext rather than text, and het rarely requires foundation-up construction from subtext, but the precise use of words always interests me, and I've seen "pre-relationship" popping up more, too. How similar and how different are all these terms in today's general expectations? Has the emphasis shifted in recent years? Is it still "pre-slash" when the slash is canon?

(I've been reading OuaT, mainly Mulan/Aurora and Hook/Emma, so the question is primarily f/f-inspired now, though past experience with the term was primarily m/m from the sidelines of assorted other fandoms. The term never had wide utility in FK.)

Just curious!
senmut: modern style black canary on right in front of modern style deathstroke (Default)

[personal profile] senmut 2014-09-07 02:51 pm (UTC)(link)
Is it an orientation-agnostic evolution from "pre-slash," needing no canonical validation, or does it presume a canonical relationship on the other side of the fanfiction?

My experience is that it requires nothing but authorial intent. But mileage varies, I suppose.

I'm interested in your experience that UST "doesn't have to" "admit emotional entanglement"!

DC Comic fandom was my playground for most of the years I was on Livejournal. There is a high percentage of non-emotional pairings over there (or people pretending not to have them) in the fic and art. So UST was commonly used on pairings based on "pretty/sexy" without necessarily needing to take them into "True Love" territory. (This may also have something to do with antagonistic pairings having a firm foot in the door.)