I threw out a little theory on Fandom!Secrets that had to do with something I've been thinking about lately...I hesitate to say it because it’s a simple answer for a complicated thing done by many different people, but I still wonder if there's not a strain of this in fandom.

The secret expressed annoyance at how "complete and utter moron has become acceptable for characterization in fandom for Captain Kirk." And it reminded me of similar things coming up for other characters. I sometimes notice something similar in Bat-fandom too. Sometimes I wonder if it's a nerd thing.

It feels sometimes like the jock/nerd conflict has become a really overriding obsession. It's definitely more obvious in movies and TV. I can't count the number of times I've run up against comments about how people are "you're just like the mean girls in high school" and "I've always been the outsider and not one of the cool kids." And that's maybe fandom being wanky but I've seen it projected onto canons as well.

Basically, it sometimes seem to work like this: If you've got two characters and one of them has more qualities that map more closely onto the "nerd" stereotype, that's the character more people will identify with, and sometimes he'll then be characterized more like the fan. Then in subtle or not so subtle ways, he'll be seen as superior. A character with more in common with the jock stereotype--even in small ways--might not be disliked, but he'll be inferior in the way all those cool people in high school and athletes are supposed to be. I don't know if it's as simple as believing that if you have gifts like athletic ability, classic good looks or social success they must be paid for by a lack of brain power and imagination and even sometimes compassion. Or maybe it's that anybody who'd be more interested in that sort of thing must be not as smart or not as interesting?

I don't think it's that simple and I'm not sure it's always about people mapping their own personality onto the character. I wonder if there's also just a preference for obsessive characters. Like, a lot of fandom is obsessive in a colloquial sense. I've said before one of the things I always think is cool about the Dick/Tim relationship in the Batbooks is that they were both created as self-insert characters for comic readers, but from different generations. Tim is more into computers, silently followed Batman and Robin around, collects information and souvenirs, and excels at the analysis part of the job. Dick, created in 1940, has a specialized background as a circus performer and other than that is more well-rounded: he's a bright student at school, and at detective studies, likes hanging out with friends and has a room full of trophies.

I've definitely seen that nudged into "won the genetic lottery for physical talent so can’t keep up with the brain stuff." Likewise his relative well-roundedness, lack of darkness and mental stability often almost seem to be taken as...not weaknesses, but not really strengths either. It’s like you can’t really be superior if you also fit in with the cool people. Or it's like it's not intelligence unless it comes in these extreme swerves from obsession into cluelessness. Like either you're the person who knows everything except for stuff you've decided isn't important, or you're the person who has very little specialized knowledge at all. (Unless it's brought out for a joke about the strange reason you know it.) (I should also note here that I understand these things being weaknesses *for a character*--like you just aren't as interested in an even-keeled character as you are in an obsessive one. But here I'm talking about judging the character objectively inferior, not just less appealing to a particular reader.)

It's frustrating because the Enterprise and the Bat-family are all made up of brilliant people. They just have different strengths. And they work together and learn from each other. They’re not ranked in terms of talent and ability. They’re united through a common purpose, around which they’re all completely different and equal. Their talents overlap enough that they can take over for one that’s missing. They can cover another person’s strength, it’s just not the same as having them all fire on all cylinders. And all their strengths are important. Being the most talented leader isn’t less valuable than the most talented engineer. Sherlock Holmes is awesome. But if he teams up with James Bond, James Bond doesn’t become Watson because he doesn’t have Holmes’ talents.

In fact, as I mentioned recently, it’s like that ep of Leverage where team members are isolated in situations that don’t lend to their strength. But since they’ve become a team they’re even stronger, even if they’re not together. But the two in trouble save themselves by asking, “What would [absent team member] do?” This is what competency porn is, people! The more competence there is, the better the porn!
ext_1310: (i've got second sight)

From: [identity profile] musesfool.livejournal.com


Heh, according to this paradigm, you would think in SPN that Sam's geekery (at least as alleged by Dean, who is clearly just as geeky, if in different directions) and his brilliance (getting into Stanford with the kind of patchy transcripts he must have had) would lead to him being more loved by fandom, but sadly, not so much, especially not these days. *pets poor Sam*

The writers, otoh, clearly play up dumb!Dean way more often than they should (on the third hand, they write both boys as dumb as a box of hair so often it's a wonder the world hasn't actually ended already).
ext_6866: (Hmmmm..)

From: [identity profile] sistermagpie.livejournal.com


That is really interesting. Oselle reminded me of that too. And though Sam isn't the more popular (*pets poor Sam with you*) you do still see the "dumb Dean" vs. "Smart, geeky Sam" coming out there, even in the show like you said.

I wonder if part of Sam's problem is that he's not genius enough to be the nerd character. Like, if he was more difficult, more Sheldon-like (from BBT) and less socially capable in his dealings with people--and Dean--he'd be that character. I know I have read plenty of individuals who sort of lost interest in the show because it didn't go more that way. They seemed to think it was going to be more of Sam the very powerful but different dealing with his gifts that set him apart, and when it turned into what they considered the Dean Show they felt that wasn't what they signed up for and it was less interesting.
ext_1310: (at the crossroads)

From: [identity profile] musesfool.livejournal.com


Yeah, Sam is clearly too empathetic to be Sheldon-like, and he's gotten good at appearing to fit in instead of choosing to stand out. His social skills are much more in evidence than Dean's in certain situations. (And it's not like I don't think Dean knows how to behave most of the time - after all, Sam had to learn social skills from somewhere - so much as he just chooses not to as part of his own self-image).
(deleted comment)
ext_1310: (i won't let you fall apart)

From: [identity profile] musesfool.livejournal.com


Dean-as-Sam's-mom is one of my favorite things about him - it's completely unexpected and gives the character a lot of interesting layers.
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