Captain Nemo: A Swap Story, or Why We Can’t Barter Our Way to a Better World

Captain Nemo: A Swap Story, or Why We Can’t Barter Our Way to a Better World

Ellen Kirkpatrick dives into the character of Captain Nemo, particularly Alan Moore and Kevin O’Neill’s gender-swapped version. She argues that story is the beating heart of social action, helping us to envision a just and equitable world. Yet it’s not enough to simply observe how mainstream stories shape or constrain our imagination of what is possible; we need to dig deeper into how they work. Method doesn’t always marry up with message. As Kristen Warner’s idea of “plastic representation” points out, mainstream media often privileges surface over meaningful substance. Such is often the case with "genderswap" stories like Janni Dakkar's journey into becoming the new Captain Nemo.

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How Omegaverse Came to Dominate Fanfiction, and Why That Might Not Be Such a Bad Thing

How Omegaverse Came to Dominate Fanfiction, and Why That Might Not Be Such a Bad Thing

Omegaverse may not be hitting the mainstream any time soon, but awareness of the trope is no longer limited to the few—or not so few—actively engaging in fanfiction communities. To quote one of my students, “it just recreates heteronormativity and misogyny, but more and worse.” This just begs the question: what makes omegaverse so popular, and should we be worried about it? In omegaverse, writers take us right to the worst parts of cis-hetero-patriarchy; they reject the world we live in in order to explore the complications of sex, gender, and sexuality more deeply. Then, like many dystopian science fiction writers do, they ask what if?

Header image attribution https://foto.wuestenigel.com/women-writing-on-paper/

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