thalassophobe

1.5M ratings
277k ratings

See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna

The first chapter of the WIP I’ve been thinking about for soooo long is finally up!!!!!! This is the prologue to a Narlily canon-compliant fic, well mostly canon compliant if you accept the fact that Lily and the Marauders had a successful rock band for a while lol…

Pinned Post my fic my fic writing narlily lilycissa lily evans narcissa black narcissa black malfoy harry potter hp hp fanfic my hp fic my writing femslash hp femslash lily x narcissa narcissa x lily band fic harry James potter is actually a prominent character marauders era marauders first war with voldemort post canon canon compliant marauders era wip fic: edge of seventeen
saintsenara

Anonymous asked:

Senara, as a resident serious adult with a good grasp on the UK political and cultural landscape, AND the Harry Potter fandom, may I ask:

What impact does the fandom actually have on policies that impact transgender people?

I want to be the best ally I can be to trans folk, and I have seen discussions advocating that the Harry Potter franchise falling into oblivion is the only real way to de-platform JK Rowling.

I don’t entirely disagree - but I also suspect that the fandom as we know on Tumblr and Discord could be a much less influential bubble than it thinks itself to be, and not the main target audience for new movies, shows, and merchandising.

Is simply not consuming products from the franchise enough, or is engaging in extremely niche discussions on a cloudless micro-blogging platform still fanning the fire of Harry Potter, and giving ammunition to JKR to continue on her rampage of infantilising those who challenge her and targeting trans rights?

I don’t want to be naive or wilfully ignorant about my participation in this culture. But I want to know if blogging about Snupin smut and reading fanfiction on free independent platforms still trickles down to making JKR’s voice louder.

I also sometimes think that Harry Potter achieved the status of undeniable cultural staple, and oblivion is simply not an option - much like Alice in Wonderland and Peter Pan. I can force myself to forget and never engage with it again, but is it at all realistic in a global scale?

Is there an erroneous assumption that most of us on tumblr and discord are on team “fuck JKR, read fanfcition and pirate the books”? Or are offline elder millennials buying HP merch and reading the books to their kids carrying the franchise on their backs?

Or none of this matters, because HP is already part of the popular imagination, and it’s the tragedy of our times that big corporations will inevitably milk it forever?

Hope this is not too much of an awkward question, I really appreciate your insights

saintsenara answered:

the way that the fandom impacts trans rights is by earning jkr money.

jkr’s public transphobia - her comments on twitter etc. - absolutely contributes to recruiting others to the anti-trans cause, and that shouldn’t be downplayed.

but being loud and wrong on social media isn’t the same as having political or legal authority - jkr doesn’t have this, and she doesn’t deserve people thinking she does.

how she causes material harm to trans people in the uk [which then hurts all trans people, because other places may choose to follow suit] is because she donates colossal sums of money to legal cases which challenge trans people’s rights. it’s not just yesterday’s judgement from the uk supreme court - in which the plaintiff was an anti-trans group she’s on the record as having donated £70,000 to - she does it all the time.

she can donate this money because it’s loose change for her. she makes millions every year.

and it doesn’t come from mid-tier detective fiction, does it?

so, yes, here is the first truth - if she doesn’t earn any money from you, you’re not contributing to the overarching way her anti-trans crusade has an impact, and that matters.

but there is also a second truth - that you need to go beyond that.

several things need to be borne in mind:

jkr is one of the most visible - if not the single most visible - transphobes in the world. but she’s not the only one.

the tendency to make her the figurehead of a transphobic movement, and to assume that disengaging with harry potter without doing anything else is enough may be comforting. but it’s also wrong.

indeed, a lot of the people who have the greatest power to harm trans rights are nowhere near as visible as jkr - politicians, lawyers, journalists, academics, doctors, and so on. the supreme court did not reach its judgement because of jkr. the assault on trans rights which will unfold from the judgement will not happen because of her.

i’m not saying this to deny jkr’s influence or to imply that she’s not dangerous.

i’m saying it because i think it’s important to remember that she has a vested interest in you feeling tiny and hopeless in the face of her money - in you thinking that she’s the head of a movement and that movement is winning.

instead, the uk terf movement is fragmented and riddled with internecine beef. plenty of its factions don’t actually like jkr - and she doesn’t like plenty of them.

it can be fought, and it can be fought at the grassroots while she’s in her mouldy tower being a bigot on twitter.

it’s worth being absolutely clear that yesterday’s supreme court ruling was not - in and of itself - new legislation. the uk supreme court does not have the power to make new laws. only parliament can do that.

it was a “clarification” - which is to say that it was an interpretation - of existing legislation. it - by itself - doesn’t compel an institution or organisation to change anything. and it is, therefore, an interpretation which can be pushed back against.

this has already started - there’s an excellent summary of objections to the judgement, which also provides a rebuttal to the crowing many terfs are doing about how trans rights are being rolled back by pointing out all the ways in which they will not be surrendered:

sadly, this is behind a paywall. it’s summarised here, in an article from the same writer, a practising barrister who is a specialist in employment and discrimination law:

and all of us can do things which enable that pushback to continue, above all, in making clear to our mps that they only have our votes if they - at a bare minimum - continue to defend trans rights.

find their contact details here:

if you have an mp who is clear that they support restrictions on trans rights, then actively oppose them - call for them to be reselected at the next election [sadly a while away…], canvas for an opponent etc.

support institutions which continue to defend trans rights. the supreme court judgement doesn’t force places to, for example, ban trans women from entering women’s toilets [parliament could pass legislation which does, but that doesn’t exist yet, and that’s why you need to contact your mp], but plenty will be frightened into doing so. be loud about how you value and will continue to use businesses and services which don’t bend to transphobic pressure.

donate to trans charities. lots are circulating, but here are some specifically northern irish options, which tend to otherwise get overlooked:

boost stories about the impact of transphobic legislation. it’s crucial that you don’t underestimate how little the average person knows about this [and about jkr’s role in it in particular] - and this is something which helps anti-trans messaging sound more reasonable. but we can reach them first.

what you do with harry potter as a thing beyond this is always going to be subjective. i’ve set out more on my personal approach before - here - and, of course, you may do what you want.

but - since you’ve asked - i think two things are true:

on the one hand, harry potter is a juggernaut. the tumblr subsection of the fandom could disappear tonight and the impact would be minimal - harry potter is probably one of the most mainstream cultural products in the world.

and that’s how it makes jkr money - branded merchandise, the theme parks, the studio tour, royalties from streaming, and so on.

fandom doesn’t require you to engage with any of these. and i do think it’s acceptable to understand a commitment not to give jkr money as a viable and sincerely significant harm-reduction strategy.

however.

on the other hand, the vitality of the fandom plays a role in making harry potter marketable. this is undeniable.

and this is the case for all areas of the fandom - i see a lot of cope [“jkr would hate my queer otp!”], but people can get sucked into liking harry potter through anything. having a non-canon take on things, or writing dead dove, or whatever doesn’t prevent that.

but it’s especially the case for areas of the fandom which are prominent in pop-culture independently of jkr.

i don’t just mean the marauders subfandom here - i think we can all stand to grapple with this implication, and i think there’s a tendency from people in less prominent fandom subsections to think that they don’t have to, which exists at the other end of a spectrum from the tendency from people in the marauders subfandom to assume that their lax approach to canon absolves them from any connection to jkr.

this is a difficult circle to square because it’s something which gives jkr visibility indirectly. there’s no way, for example, that she’s in contact with e.g. artists whose songs go viral in marauders tiktoks, whose youtube comments are then flooded with “can’t believe i’m thinking about harry potter’s dead dad 😭”. and she doesn’t earn money from it.

fanfiction and fanart also lives in this indirect space.

jkr doesn’t gain any money from it - and that is important. it’s also a medium which may engage with the subject matter of the series critically - through taking issue with how she writes about gender, for example - and this is important as well.

but she doesn’t gain nothing from it either.

my personal view is that the only way to remain in fandom is two-fold:

as discussed, make sure you’re actually doing something in defence of trans people in your real life…

and make sure that your indirect contribution to jkr’s nonsense never becomes a direct one.

that is to say, don’t spend any money.

and - and this is the important thing - actually mean that.

i think that a very important thing to do if you want to stay in the fandom is to work on building yourself a mental defence against the fear of missing out.

by which i mean… in the circles in which i move, people seem - at the moment - to universally agree that they won’t be watching the new television adaptation.

but i find it very striking - and very concerning - that lots of people seem to be taking the view that doing this will be easy, because the tv show won’t be any good.

i strongly - strongly - advise you to prepare yourselves for the opposite. expect that the show will be absolutely outstanding. deal with your disappointment in missing out in advance. and do not engage with it, no matter what it tries to tempt you with.

we are about to see an unprecedented level of fan service. every single complaint people made about the film series will be addressed. it’s going to make sure that ron is written book-accurately. it’s going to give romione or hinny or whatever as it “should have been” in the films. it’s going to whip out some really big name casting [cillian murphy has had months to shut down the rumour that he’s voldemort… and if it comes to pass, his casting will bring a legion of peaky blinders fans on board. do not be one of them.]. i would bet my house that it’s going to make wolfstar canon.

and it’s going to do this because it knows that’s how people who have committed to not watching it will waver - that, when faced with “i’ve got the chance to see x done properly” or “god, i love y in everything else they’re in”, people will go “lol, no ethical consumption under capitalism” and consume anyway.

but there is a more ethical strand of harry potter consumption, and that’s consumption which does all it can to limit its impact to only benefitting jkr indirectly, and which takes that task seriously.

anti jkr jkr critical hp meta hp harry potter trans rights hp fandom commentary also very well said and has useful resources for real world activism which is what ultimately matters

i do also think it’s…weird that outside the HP fandom a lot of the conversation on here about this devastating UK supreme court ruling is like ‘this is about the HP fandom being immoral for interacting with the work of someone who funded the groups that had the court case. queer hp fans who criticize jkr don’t know what’s good for them’ instead of like. criticizing jkr the person, the entire matrix of transphobia of which she is a part, and the goddamn UK supreme court. but no it’s getting mad at other queer people on Tumblr! super productive activism.

fandom commentary hp fandom commentary anti jkr I don't normally do a lot of political commentary on this blog so it feels a little hypocritical to be posting this when jkr does something evil though I feel an ethical obligation to call it out here and i've been seeing this response all over which I do not think is a helpful one. the HP fandom deserves critique for its treatment of trans issues but writing us all off from a high horse while ignoring the real problems that created jkr is not helpful

thoughts on jkr

frankly there’s plenty of far better pieces out there, from people who are much more personally affected by her bullshit than I am, so to start off–listen to trans voices, now more than ever. I do want to make it clear that this blog is not a safe place for terfs, and to try and think through how to engage with HP ethically.

she’s wrong, and she is using her power terribly, and trans fans–and frankly all fans with any kind of commitment to ethics and also feminism–are right to feel betrayed.

i don’t blame people who leave and who have left the fandom over it. I am not going to, because this has been a space that I desperately needed, and because I find value in critiquing her work and taking her IP for my own and in fan work that genuinely attempts to transform that IP in ways she never intended. but we are all still giving her cultural capital, and we need to be careful to not give her financial capital. don’t buy anything. and when engaging with her work be careful, be critical, remember that parts of the text replicate her biases, and that fanwork by itself is not activism.

i also think the fandom needs to get better at addressing her transphobia. and also to get rid of the terfs, because this space does by its nature attract them. trans women ARE women no matter what the UK supreme court says, and trans men ARE men. anyone who doesn’t want to hear that can fuck off.

there’s also people who use jkr’s transphobia as a weapon in like ship wars and stuff. that needs to stop. headcanons are not real world activism. there is value, in my opinion (note that I am not trans) in headcanoning and writing her characters as trans, trying to reclaim (or, let’s be real, steal!) that intellectual property in a genuinely transformative way, but the existence of trans headcanons does not absolve the fandom of being transphobic and you should not be saying ‘oh I headcanon said character as trans x person doesn’t therefore they are transphobic’ or writing said headcanon’d trans characters in transphobic ways. it diminishes real issues. people need to stop tagging every single post they make with 'fuck jkr’ when it’s just their marauders headcanons–there’s a reason I don’t use that tag for my posts criticizing her, it’ll get drowned in all of the randomly tagged stuff it has nothing to do with.

we should also stop having the damn arguments about whether depicting certain characters as particularly feminine or masculine is canon or not…don’t police characters’ gender expression. especially not in this fandom.

anti jkr jkr critical hp harry potter hp meta my hp meta hp fandom commentary
artemisia-black
artemisia-black

Trans women are women, and Trans men are men. 

We have to start by being honest. Being in Harry Potter fandom sustains the visibility of the IP. That’s just the truth. Even if you’re not spending money. Even if you’re just reading fic, or making playlists. You are still part of the reason WB thinks this franchise has cultural power.  We think we’re just vibing in fandom, but they’re watching (and there’s this odd sense that this is somehow an underground movement). The WB marketing execs measure every post, and what they see is market potential. That’s why the official WB TikTok teases Wolfstar (and teasing is the operative word because in places where openly queer relationships are illegal they need to have plausible deniability so they can still flog merch there),  they know there’s a market here, and they want to tap into it.

I say all this as someone who came back to fandom during the pandemic while I was looking in the abyss of my soul via EMDR, and who escaped to the HP universe during some of the worst years of my life. I’ve made friends here, and this space has been so nourishing for me. 

But none of that changes the truth: this is a morally grey space, and pretending it’s not is intellectually dishonest.

Just to add nuance, being here doesn’t make you evil (it doesn’t mean you support JKR’s views), but it does mean you need to hold that discomfort. And that work goes way beyond having “fuck JKR” in your bio or writing x character a wearing  eyeliner (your shipping opinions are not activism and your reimagined canon isn’t a shield). 

Because if you’re still here (and I include myself in this) you need to ask yourself: what am I doing in real life? Not to "offset" the guilt, not as performative atonement, but as a reflection of the values you claim to hold . Are you standing up for trans people in your personal life? Are you donating, sharing resources, pushing back in your workplace or your family? In the UK are you lobbying your MP to challenge the high court decision? There’s a myriad of real-life things you can be doing. 

You don’t have to leave fandom. But you don’t get to pretend it’s harmless, either.

hp anti jkr jkr critical also well said harry potter
omgkatsudonplease
reference
riddlesmoon
messrsrarchives

okay big talk time. in light of the UK Supreme Court ruling, i'm seeing a lot of posts about fandom spaces. i woke up to see a tiktok that says "if you write fanfic, there's blood on your hands too",,, so let's talk about it.

because there is no refuting that fandom spaces keep JKR relevant. there is no refuting that by producing any kind of media based on this franchise, we are engaging with her and we are keeping her universe relevant. we cannot deny that.

we often see people turn around and say "jkr would hateee what we write!" and that's true. that's so very true, but it isn't enough. your headcanons and your stories and your art Are Not Enough. particularly over on tiktok: if you post HP content over on that platform, you are promoting JKR. my existence in this space as a trans man is NOT an act of protest. everything else i do is, so what do we do about that?

we NEED to be talking about these things. about jkr, about her money, about her actions, about the bigotry in the source material, and if you are not in a position where you can have those conversations, then you need to be listening. because engagement with jkr is infact life of death.

and we carry that guilt. we do, of course we do. if you are somebody who hasn't yet been able to let go of this series like me, then we carry that guilt. even more so if you are a member of any of the communities that jkr has harmed - the guilt is heavy.

but,,, let me make one thing clear: this is not your guilt.

if you are not profiting her. directly, then you are carrying guilt that is not yours to carry. that guilt is hers to bear, and the lives we are about to lose are on her conscious. we have been forced, time and time again, to carry the weight of her bigotry.

but,,, we're carrying it. and i think there's a certain amount of guilt that makes us better. i think there's a certain amount of guilt that makes us more conscious human beings, and that makes us more receptive to these discussions.

you can use that guilt, you really can. you can talk. you can listen. you can educate. you can step away if the guilt gets too much. you can use that guilt for something good.

do NOT push it away. whilst it isn't ours to carry, we are not in a position where we can throw that guilt away and wash our hands of it - we are here, we are engaging, we have to accept that. if we simply pretend as though we are not, then all we do is cause harm.

because fandom spaces can do a lot of good, especially for those that jkr has harmed. fandom spaces can do so much good, but only if we are conscious of the ways in which we are engaging, and we are willing to sit and have these difficult conversations.

if i were not in the position i am in now, i would leave. i would leave this fandom space and at this point? i am in fact urging those of you are able to, to go. for your own sakes and the sakes of everyone around you.

but as someone who has been having conversations about JKR for ages? i am in no position to step back. i'm in no position to turn away and give up. not when there are so many people who benefit from these discussions and who benefit from safe spaces.

and the reason it's a safe space? it's because I Talk. because i Have These Discussions. and no matter how much i do, i am still promoting her when i go on to post a headcanon or update my fics. i am still promoting her when i engage in this space.

and there's still guilt.

don't chuck that guilt aside, let it fuel you in making safe spaces safe again.

there is absolutely no refuting that by being in this space we are causing harm. so if you are not in a position to leave this space, here's some things you can do to make it easier for everyone both in and out of it:

  • Listen. if you are not in a position to talk about JKR, then actively listen. actively listen, understand, process, and adapt.
  • Merchandise: stop posting your merch, secondhand or not. you know that you get comments asking "where did you get this!?", stop posting it. makes that small adjustment for wider good
  • Keep educated: on the bigotry in the books so that you aren't perpetuating it, on jkr's actions, on politics. keep educated as much as you can to make sure that you are not unwillingly causing harm in what you are doing
  • Block: block those who are going to the studios, who are posting merch, who are talking about the reboot, who are doing ANYTHING to support her. if you see a video? comment on it. the continued relevance of people in this space who have supported a bigot is Immense. do not allow for complacency - bigotry is bigotry no matter how many views it gets you.

and above all, hold that guilt. hold it. feel it. utilise it.

and if you are in a position where you can leave this space? then i encourage you to do so. i encourage you to Move On, and find new ventures. i encourage you to do that if you can. and if you can't, then i'll still be here to guide you through it all and keep having these difficult talks.

anti jkr jkr critical hp hp fandom commentary very well said
juniperpyre
safesoundxswift

all these arguments about the new harry potter casting but all i can think is that every person involved in the series has willingly signed up to work with such an outspoken transphobe

safesoundxswift

reblogging again in light of the uk ruling that trans women are not ‘real’ women. jkr has been the most high profile supporter of the campaigners who took this case to court. the money she earns from the harry potter franchise goes directly to harming trans rights

anti jkr do not buy her merch ffs do not give her money