lomonaaeren: (Default)
[personal profile] lomonaaeren
I'm talking about squicks specific to Harry/Draco fic here (like a certain type of characterization), rather than to squicks that could apply across the board (like bad grammar or spelling).



1) Reading a fic in which the author portrays "bottom" as meaning "weak." Just ugh. So the minute Harry and Draco get into bed, even if the one bottoming has been strong, argumentative, complex, and equal to the other up until that point, now he must start crying and being scared of penetration and doing whatever the one topping tells him to do even if he's uncomfortable with it? I know there's a power dynamics to sexual relationships, but stripping it down to power and only power bores and disgustes me. In extreme cases where the one on the bottom is also very feminized, I think there's more than a hint of misogyny. Women can never be powerful unless they're the ones penetrating men? The penis is almighty? Please.

I don't mind stories where, say, Draco finds more pleasure in bottoming, or where Harry or Draco has a psychological quirk that inclines them to one or the other. Even there, though, I want it to fit in with previously established characterization. If Harry and Draco are perfect equals out of the bedroom and then suddenly have a D/s relationship inside it with no prior hint of that, simply because the author assumes the bottom is less powerful and under the control of the top, I'm clicking the back button.

2) This one is more nebulous. I can't really call it "one flawed character, one perfect character" because I've seen stories where both Harry and Draco were flawed that still hit this squick for me. Maybe I'll call it "one character hopelessly mistaken, the other always right." In any case, what happens is that the author sets one character on a pedestal and makes the other one into a hopeless mess as he chases the idolized one, dragging him relentlessly through past mistakes, making him apologize for the most minor things, cursing him with awkwardness at tasks he can do perfectly well, and treating mistakes as deadly and unforgivable until he's groveled and pleaded. It seems to happen more often that Draco is the perfect one, and Harry is the one who has to do something to "deserve" him, but I suspect that's not true and it's simply that I've run into more stories that do it; I've seen it the other way around, too, and it squicks me just as hard. Now, in canon they've both made mistakes, but saying that Harry must apologize and grovel and never be good enough for the author's perfect, beautiful, snarky, witty Draco because he used Sectumsempra on him, while it's just fine that Draco almost killed Harry's best friend (if you want to limit it to events in the same book), strikes me as deeply silly. The excuse I've seen offered is "Well, Draco didn't mean to kill Ron, he was trying to kill Dumbledore!" And Harry didn't know what that spell did; it's not like he lingered down the corridor rubbing his hands together, cackling gleefully, and imagining Draco all over blood. If you're going to focus heavily on the canon mistakes that will keep Harry and Draco from an easy relationship with each other, why in the world is it limited to one side?

I suspect that, in the end, this squick is largely the same as the other for me: I want to see Harry and Draco have an equal relationship, and the author weakening one or idolizing one prevents that from happening.



What are your H/D squicks?

Date: 2008-06-05 08:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kestrelsparhawk.livejournal.com
LOL! It always botthers me when Draco is referred to as the "blonde," because that is one of the few words in our language we took directly from the French, and is only supposed to be used for blonde women. "The blond" would be right; or better yet, "the blond man."

For me, I agree with lomonaaren that it shows a failure of writing imagination. It's not a major annoyance, but it's like using a weak word when there are strong words about, because it doesn't ADD anything 95% of the time. Is it important, or relevant, that Draco is blond or Slytherin? It could be. For example, if a lot of people from other houses are bashing Slytherins, writing "the former Slytherin finally spoke up..." or whatever. See? It's relevant to the plot, and to his character. Same thing if Harry's making blonde jokes -- you can see "the blond stiffened, and turned to glare." Otherwise, there's always names, pronouns, which don't jar as much.

I'd feel the same way about the "taller one" or "the green-eyed boy" or any descriptive phrase substituting for "Draco" or "Harry." My default is that it just doesn't have to be there.

But then, there's a WHOLE LOT in writing which doesn't have to be there which I can't help noticing. The worst ones are the ones I missed in my own story! None of us produces the perfect work.

Date: 2008-06-14 10:12 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
The best: "The emerald green eyes" followed the gorgeous slytherin...

Emerald green eyes... Even if they are that color... It's just so horrible to read ^^"

May 2025

S M T W T F S
     1 23
45 67 8910
1112131415 1617
181920 21222324
25262728293031

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated May. 22nd, 2025 04:55 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios