My very first fandom was X-files. Well, we know how that show ended. ::sigh:: But last night a friend I met through that fandom came into NYC and she and another X-phile friend and I went out to dinner. I can now officially say that I really have discussed Wittgenstein over drinks. (Even if it was only briefly and only one of us really knew Wittgenstein and it wasn't me and I'm probably misspelling it.)
Here's the thing we were wondering about.
Chris is now in Buffy fandom, and I do LOTR and HP. Back in XF we spent a lot of our time defending Mulder against everyone who claimed he was a jerk, not to mention useless and totally incompetant without Scully. Both of us said the next time we were in a fandom we'd have to go for the character everybody liked. So here I am in LOTR and I sometimes find myself defending Frodo from folks who think he's useless and incompetant without Sam (who should really have been the ringbearer, you know!). I've never been called upon to defend Merry, Sam or Pippin, only Frodo seems to draw the occasional hatred. And of course he's my favorite character.
And then I somehow manage to look into the HP universe and out of all the dozens of characters I pick Draco Malfoy as a favorite. Chris, meanwhile, ended up being a fan of Spike. I don't watch Buffy at all but I know enough to know this has basically led her into the exact same place we're always at: arguing for the redemption (or in Draco's case the saving) of a character many many people want to see burn in hell. (She didn't know who Draco was at first, having only seen the first movie, but once she identified him as "the little blonde kid" she said, "Go you!!") She showed me a tape of the scene where Spike tells Buffy he's got his soul back and I have to say I think he'd be the character I went for on that show as well. (Great scene btw that made me wonder what I missed by not watching Buffy.)
So why is that? Why do we always go for the character that seems to need the most defending? Seriously, I don't think I just think they are the ones that draw the most bashing because I'm more sensitive about them. Because I tend to defend any character that gets too bashed and don't remember having to run to the aid of other characters as much as these, who are also my favorites. Scully got a lot of criticism towards the end of XF but for years it was just Mulder bashed all over the place. LOTR doesn't generate a lot of hate but honestly, if anyone it's usually Frodo who gets dissed. (People who dislike Sam seem to just say they can't stand him and leave it at that while Frodo is accused of being objectively horrible.) Draco and Spike are criticized for obvious reasons but it's not always as objective as people claim it to be.
Mulder, Frodo, Draco and Spike are very different characters in a lot of ways. But they still all seem to draw a guilty verdict from a lot of people who like characters judged good or bad--and whatever they are now can't ever ever change. Because people never change. And their motivations don't matter. If you think they matter you're just a fangirl of the actor or even worse a ::gasp!:: moral relativist. (As it happens I am a moral relativist but not in the way that term is commonly misused to mean a person who doesn't believe in right or wrong.)
I have no idea why I always seem to end up with these characters, the ones that draw the disapproving eye of conservative types who pass judgment. (Note: I realize there are plenty of regular people who just don't like these characters for valid reasons--I don't mean to imply that *not* liking them means you're too judgemental.) I guess maybe I just like the characters who live in the grey areas who have at least one foot in darkness. Or that seem to be in pain and pain usually implies darkness. Characters that are in pain and aren't dark are more the stuff of Lifetime Movies.
Here's the thing we were wondering about.
Chris is now in Buffy fandom, and I do LOTR and HP. Back in XF we spent a lot of our time defending Mulder against everyone who claimed he was a jerk, not to mention useless and totally incompetant without Scully. Both of us said the next time we were in a fandom we'd have to go for the character everybody liked. So here I am in LOTR and I sometimes find myself defending Frodo from folks who think he's useless and incompetant without Sam (who should really have been the ringbearer, you know!). I've never been called upon to defend Merry, Sam or Pippin, only Frodo seems to draw the occasional hatred. And of course he's my favorite character.
And then I somehow manage to look into the HP universe and out of all the dozens of characters I pick Draco Malfoy as a favorite. Chris, meanwhile, ended up being a fan of Spike. I don't watch Buffy at all but I know enough to know this has basically led her into the exact same place we're always at: arguing for the redemption (or in Draco's case the saving) of a character many many people want to see burn in hell. (She didn't know who Draco was at first, having only seen the first movie, but once she identified him as "the little blonde kid" she said, "Go you!!") She showed me a tape of the scene where Spike tells Buffy he's got his soul back and I have to say I think he'd be the character I went for on that show as well. (Great scene btw that made me wonder what I missed by not watching Buffy.)
So why is that? Why do we always go for the character that seems to need the most defending? Seriously, I don't think I just think they are the ones that draw the most bashing because I'm more sensitive about them. Because I tend to defend any character that gets too bashed and don't remember having to run to the aid of other characters as much as these, who are also my favorites. Scully got a lot of criticism towards the end of XF but for years it was just Mulder bashed all over the place. LOTR doesn't generate a lot of hate but honestly, if anyone it's usually Frodo who gets dissed. (People who dislike Sam seem to just say they can't stand him and leave it at that while Frodo is accused of being objectively horrible.) Draco and Spike are criticized for obvious reasons but it's not always as objective as people claim it to be.
Mulder, Frodo, Draco and Spike are very different characters in a lot of ways. But they still all seem to draw a guilty verdict from a lot of people who like characters judged good or bad--and whatever they are now can't ever ever change. Because people never change. And their motivations don't matter. If you think they matter you're just a fangirl of the actor or even worse a ::gasp!:: moral relativist. (As it happens I am a moral relativist but not in the way that term is commonly misused to mean a person who doesn't believe in right or wrong.)
I have no idea why I always seem to end up with these characters, the ones that draw the disapproving eye of conservative types who pass judgment. (Note: I realize there are plenty of regular people who just don't like these characters for valid reasons--I don't mean to imply that *not* liking them means you're too judgemental.) I guess maybe I just like the characters who live in the grey areas who have at least one foot in darkness. Or that seem to be in pain and pain usually implies darkness. Characters that are in pain and aren't dark are more the stuff of Lifetime Movies.
From:
Late reply (and long)
Now, in regards to the other stuff. First, as you don't watch Buffy this might not make the most sense to you, but, well, Spike attempted to rape Buffy. The scene from Seeing Red in season six is enough to make you feel ill. A lot of the Spike sympathetizers jumped ship at that point. Personally, I prefered Spike as 'dark' because he was an interesting character then insomuch as he was undeniably a bad guy, he killed puppies and babies and liked it, and then he was this man (or unman) who was so completely, utterly, undeniably in love with his, well, creator (Drusilla). Spike is a character who's obsessed with love which is what ultimately leads him into getting his own soul restored but he's also a horrendously bad judge of character (Drusilla essentially treated him as a lapdog, while she was more interested in Angel and destroying the world, which is -- non-ironically -- exactly how Buffy treats Spike in relation to slaying and her 'real' friends/lovers). So, I find Spike an interesting and complex character myself but he didn't do bad things without motivation in my opinion. The Buffy-writers are making a point, yes, that having a soul does not automatically make you a good person, but it's well within Spike's entire character to do the things he did. So, I find myself debating both sides of the Spike characterisation, against those that make him 'evil' and against those who make him 'good'. He's neither.
Now, Draco doesn't interest me in the same way. I don't think he's done anything that needs to be redeemed. What he needs to be smacked (figuratively) into realising that idolizing his father as he does is a path that's going to get him into much more trouble than it's worth. [Though I agree with your other post that Draco is attracted to power and that, given the examples he has of power: his parents, Snape, Dumbledore, Harry; his parents (especially Lucius just given that Lucius is male and Draco is also therefore making the want-to-be-him desire more attainable in Draco's mind) are the best choice for idolization from his particular point-of-view. However, I do defend him in the same way, because he's neither good nor bad at this point in any recognizable way. He does bad things on occasion for reasons that are perfectly justifiable.
[continued]
From:
Re: Late reply (and long)
Which is why this (as posted by
Wow, that was a large digression. The point however is that I tend to do the opposite, instead of defending the 'bad' guy I, well, almost villianize the 'good' and in that I find myself defending my favourite characters (such as Willow who I predicted for years before it happened was on a downspiral of self-indulgence on Buffy and Harry, Snape (you also apparently don't read Snape fic but a quick-run down of fanon!Snape: snarky bastard who really should have been in Ravenclaw were it not for his father/Lucius/the world's bad influence, and all he did was make potions for Voldemort [Man, if you think *Draco* fans make excuses for his behaviour just look at Snape list]), and Remus (Remus is actually a rather dark character in my opinion, who works very hard to make himself appear as harmless as possible despite, or because of, the fact that he -- as is shown -- can be very manipulative and effective when necessary. However, in fanon, he's often characterised by his surface behaviour: sweet and polite and a victim of the world et al) for that exact reason. People want to see the characters in black and white and most of them, even inside their basic character constructs, just aren't.
- Andrea (wow, this is long. and rambling. sorry.)