Women Arrested For Writing Slash Fanfics?

By: Aja Romano

Recent reports of crackdowns by Chinese officials on young female fans who write slash have sent waves of alarm throughout international fandom waters.

A new investigative report from Anhui TV claims that Chinese authorities have arrested at least 20 people for the crime of writing male/male fanfic—mostly polite, introverted young women in their 20s.

The increased attention to slash is part of a recently announced Internet "cleanup" by China's National Office Against ographic and Illegal Publications. It's apparently been tasked with deleting any kind of ographic online content.

The whitewashing reportedly includes all text, pictures, videos, and advertisements. It also seems to include slash fic—specifically male/male slash and its Japanese cultural counterpart, or Boys Love. In China, it all falls under the term "dan mei."

Slash is only one form of the many kinds of fanfiction on the Internet, and fanfiction in general is rarely more shocking than your average romance novel. But it seems some Chinese authorities have targeted slash and the young women who write it as a particularly appalling form of online ography.

The lengthy report followed male police in Zhengzhou in Henan province as they pursued and arrested 28-year-old Wong Chao Jun, the admin of the now-offline site Dan Mei Fiction Web (DMXSW.com), a popular fanfic archive. Even though the website's servers were housed in the U.S., where such content is perfectly legal, authorities arrested Chao Jun and closed the archive. Other popular fanfic archives, like jjwxc.net, stayed online but deleted all of their fanfiction categories.

The police officers also arrested young women who participated on the website, all the while expressing horror that the young women had fallen into such a shocking pastime. The report stated that most of the 20 fans who'd been arrested for writing fanfiction across the nation had been "introverted" women in their 20s. One young woman, Xiao Li, was described as being polite and "very obedient."

Another young woman broke down on camera, discussing how she fell into writing slash as though making up stories on the Internet is akin to buying a gateway drug.

Then again, in China, apparently it is. Last year, in its previous crackdown on the web, China boasted that it had killed 225 websites, 4,000 web channels, and 30,000 blogs. Members of the public are also encouraged to report any website they find that contains ographic or offensive content.

The police officers in the report expressed disgust at the activity of writing fanfiction; one stated that he believed writing and reading slash "promotes homouality," a comment that angered Chinese netizens. Offbeat China noted that many of China's slash fangirls have defiantly labeled themselves “rotten women (腐女)" in order to highlight the banality of what they do. On Weibo, 咖啡呆丶LM angrily responded:

This is not cleaning the cyberspace. This is pure discrimination. I may never see a rainbow flag fly above China in my life time.

Recently U.S. media had a field day with the non-news that Johnlockfanfiction is extremely popular in China. The international Sherlockfandom is used to coming under media scrutiny and even ridicule fromunexpected places. But the titillating shock value of straight women writing gay male romance has much more weighty implications in some parts of the world. In some countries, such as China and Australia, the legality of fanfiction is questionable, and male/male slash and nearly always receive a harsher response from authorities than its heteroual counterpart. In Canada, a manga fan was jailed for monthsin 2012 for transporting across the U.S. border before being released.

But despite the crackdown, it's unlikely that the popularity of slash fanfic in China will dwindle.

After all, even if the Chinese government could confiscate the laptop of every fangirl in the land, they'll have a far harder time eliminating the real source of slash fandom on the Internet: The simmering between the characters we all love.

 

 

Link to the source: http://www.dailydot.com/geek/in-china-20-people-women-arrested-for-writing-slash/

 

 

 

Well...I don't know what to say to this really. I get some people aren't cool with slash fanfiction but to actually ARREST people for writing it? Those who have no criminal history and totally innocent? That's out of line period. I feel bad for those women who got arrested that's just unfair and uncalled for no matter how you look at it. I can't think of anyone who would agree with this either -_- It's just so illogical and...so many other things. Have you guys heard about this?

 

(Copied this off of my RPR blog and re-blogged from Link)

Comments

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KaleidoscopeDreams
#1
Whut. Whut. Whut. What's wrong with writing same stories. There are so many unregistered writers out there writing and selling illegal works as well. Not like because their stories are straight then they have more right. This is just discrimination okay. :-(

((If Obama supports LGBT, you should too.))
TheTimeChaser #2
OMG I HAVEN'T CAUGHT YET. /nervous laugh/
dream_keeper88
#3
The question is if it is stated anywhere in their legislation that writing is forbidden. They can't go around arresting writers otherwise. And to think that such a law has been passed in their country... Though I am not that surprised. It might be a culture or a religion thing. I...heh... I am not in the position to say anything but I hope the citizens would do something about it...
fyehxn #4
omg ._. I'm scared.