Entry tags:
More Science!
So first! Apparently the poll numbers about most slashers being queer struck a chord with people. (yay!)
As a result I have acquired numbers for several more polls now, with no effort on my part!
http://pop-tarts.livejournal.com/156748.html
2003-03-01
Popslash
318 participants
"Do you self-identify as queer?"
Yes: 199
No: 119
Percent self-identified as queer: 62.6%
http://jmtorres.livejournal.com/629858.html
2005-02-27
mostly ones fan's circle (or possibly walruses)
276 participants
129 straight or mostly straight
162 some variety of not straight
Percent self-identified as queer: 55.6%
(Rough numbers because @$#%^%@$#, my computer just crashed and WHERE IS MY GIANT LONG SAVED DRAFT THAT WAS ALMOST READY TO POST? WHERE IS IT, DW? NOT HERE!)
http://skuf.insanejournal.com/99393.html
http://skuf.dreamwidth.org/17406.html
User's circle, in parallel on two journals.
2009-09-04
Do you self-identify as a 100% heterosexual woman?
IJ: yes:2, no:23
DW: yes:1, no:20
Since a no here includes both a)people who identify as not heterosexual and b)people who identify as not women (and people who identify as neither), the numbers don't quite fit with the other polls, but they do, I think, fit the trend.
Also, I was given numbers for a poll recently taken in a locked community that is at least peripherally associated with slash fandom. I'm not re-posting until we get (hopefully pending) permission from the mods to break flock, but as it is somewhat contradictory to my thesis, I'll say it came out slightly less than half queer.
I have this niggling feeling that there was another link someone gave me, but I can't find it now, so if it was you, sorry! I didn't leave it out on purpose!
Also! I have been corresponding in email with Anne Kustritz (
theorynut, she who wrote the 2003 paper that Wikipedia cites. She wrote that paper while working on her Master's, has since gotten her doctorate, and wishes it to be known that I was far kinder to her 2003 paper than she is to it. Her doctoral dissertation was titled "Productive (Cyber) Public Space: Slash Fan Fiction's Multiple Imaginary," and it used an actual, rigorous ethnographic survey to argue, among other things, that, er, THE MAJORITY OF SLASHERS IDENTIFY AS QUEER.
The diss isn't published (yet), or freely downloadable, but you can read some of the front matter of the dissertation. She was also kind enough to send me both a full copy of her dissertation and the numbers for the two polls cited in the 2003 paper, and give me permission to post about it all! And I had a wonderful write-up, but then my stupid computer crashed and DW didn't save the draft and it is far too late to write it up again coherently! I will try to do justice to it soon, but I cannot guarantee it, because there's this job-type-thingy I am starting tomorrow afternoon at short notice, and I will probably not be online much as a result.
(Which also means that I will probably be very, very slow at both modding and answering comments for awhile: be warned. But have fun without me!)
Here is the short, short version of what she gave me: the DMEB poll was only about gender, not sexuality. (apparently this was necessary because in 2003 some people in the establishment were of the opinion that most slashers were gay men using female pseuds. Imagine the discussion we'd be having now if *that* was in Wikipedia instead!) The 1999 poll was indeed Master/Apprentice, and it was a kinsey scale poll:
0 -- 28.9 %
1 -- 24.5 %
2 -- 21.9 %
3 -- 16 %
4 -- 4.8 %
5 -- 1.88 %
6 -- 2.04 %
I'm too dead to re-run the numbers, but from memory the average Kinsey number was 1.5-something, and it's about 70% not-entirely-straight and 45% not-mostly straight. This is what the "most slashers are heterosexual women" quote is, essentially, based on: 45% of M/A members in 1999 identifying as at least a Kinsey 2.
Kustritz's survey for her doctorate was, by contrast, a REALLY EXCELLENT SURVEY, all. As was the analysis she did of it! It was properly designed and stuff, and it had slashers from several dozen different, widely dispersed communities in it, and I am very sad that it was not linked on metafandom the week after she defended it. (our higher education system: why you so bad at sharing your learnings?) Really rough numbers from memory, which were from surveys done in mid-to-late 2004: approx. 150 participants.
39.33 percent: unequivocally straight
21.35 percent: unambiguous bisexuality
6.74 percent: gay or lesbian
12.36 percent: bisexuality with trans and/or fluid qualifiers
14.61 percent: "heterosexual, but”
5.62 percent: other
So by my methods, that's approx. 51% straight or mostly straight, 49% queer, or too close to call. I want to point out - which was also one of her points - that another way to break it down would be ~1/3 straight, ~1/3 lgb, and ~1/3 "none of the above". I think that's... really important. And most of the other polls that asked the right questions got similar ratios when cut along those lines.
Anyway! That in no way does justice to the data, but it's what you're getting, because I sleep now and don't know when I'll be back.
As a result I have acquired numbers for several more polls now, with no effort on my part!
http://pop-tarts.livejournal.com/156748.html
2003-03-01
Popslash
318 participants
"Do you self-identify as queer?"
Yes: 199
No: 119
Percent self-identified as queer: 62.6%
http://jmtorres.livejournal.com/629858.html
2005-02-27
mostly ones fan's circle (or possibly walruses)
276 participants
129 straight or mostly straight
162 some variety of not straight
Percent self-identified as queer: 55.6%
(Rough numbers because @$#%^%@$#, my computer just crashed and WHERE IS MY GIANT LONG SAVED DRAFT THAT WAS ALMOST READY TO POST? WHERE IS IT, DW? NOT HERE!)
http://skuf.insanejournal.com/99393.html
http://skuf.dreamwidth.org/17406.html
User's circle, in parallel on two journals.
2009-09-04
Do you self-identify as a 100% heterosexual woman?
IJ: yes:2, no:23
DW: yes:1, no:20
Since a no here includes both a)people who identify as not heterosexual and b)people who identify as not women (and people who identify as neither), the numbers don't quite fit with the other polls, but they do, I think, fit the trend.
Also, I was given numbers for a poll recently taken in a locked community that is at least peripherally associated with slash fandom. I'm not re-posting until we get (hopefully pending) permission from the mods to break flock, but as it is somewhat contradictory to my thesis, I'll say it came out slightly less than half queer.
I have this niggling feeling that there was another link someone gave me, but I can't find it now, so if it was you, sorry! I didn't leave it out on purpose!
Also! I have been corresponding in email with Anne Kustritz (
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
The diss isn't published (yet), or freely downloadable, but you can read some of the front matter of the dissertation. She was also kind enough to send me both a full copy of her dissertation and the numbers for the two polls cited in the 2003 paper, and give me permission to post about it all! And I had a wonderful write-up, but then my stupid computer crashed and DW didn't save the draft and it is far too late to write it up again coherently! I will try to do justice to it soon, but I cannot guarantee it, because there's this job-type-thingy I am starting tomorrow afternoon at short notice, and I will probably not be online much as a result.
(Which also means that I will probably be very, very slow at both modding and answering comments for awhile: be warned. But have fun without me!)
Here is the short, short version of what she gave me: the DMEB poll was only about gender, not sexuality. (apparently this was necessary because in 2003 some people in the establishment were of the opinion that most slashers were gay men using female pseuds. Imagine the discussion we'd be having now if *that* was in Wikipedia instead!) The 1999 poll was indeed Master/Apprentice, and it was a kinsey scale poll:
0 -- 28.9 %
1 -- 24.5 %
2 -- 21.9 %
3 -- 16 %
4 -- 4.8 %
5 -- 1.88 %
6 -- 2.04 %
I'm too dead to re-run the numbers, but from memory the average Kinsey number was 1.5-something, and it's about 70% not-entirely-straight and 45% not-mostly straight. This is what the "most slashers are heterosexual women" quote is, essentially, based on: 45% of M/A members in 1999 identifying as at least a Kinsey 2.
Kustritz's survey for her doctorate was, by contrast, a REALLY EXCELLENT SURVEY, all. As was the analysis she did of it! It was properly designed and stuff, and it had slashers from several dozen different, widely dispersed communities in it, and I am very sad that it was not linked on metafandom the week after she defended it. (our higher education system: why you so bad at sharing your learnings?) Really rough numbers from memory, which were from surveys done in mid-to-late 2004: approx. 150 participants.
39.33 percent: unequivocally straight
21.35 percent: unambiguous bisexuality
6.74 percent: gay or lesbian
12.36 percent: bisexuality with trans and/or fluid qualifiers
14.61 percent: "heterosexual, but”
5.62 percent: other
So by my methods, that's approx. 51% straight or mostly straight, 49% queer, or too close to call. I want to point out - which was also one of her points - that another way to break it down would be ~1/3 straight, ~1/3 lgb, and ~1/3 "none of the above". I think that's... really important. And most of the other polls that asked the right questions got similar ratios when cut along those lines.
Anyway! That in no way does justice to the data, but it's what you're getting, because I sleep now and don't know when I'll be back.
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Good luck with the job thing. Yay numbers.
Thank you so much for this post.
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This may be true of men in fandom as well, but the examples I can think of are bisexual women who are in monogamous relationships with men. . .
(And of course this happens in the offline world as well - bisexuality tends to be erased, because someone's "real" sexuality is assumed to be defined by whoever her/his current partner is. If you're in a relationship with someone of the opposite sex, you're straight (and any prior same-sex experience is assumed to be "experimenting") and if you're in a relationship with someone of the same sex, you're gay (and any prior opposite-sex experience is assumed to be reluctance to come out of the closet or confusion.)
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/nods nods
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But the post is, again, excellent - yay for corresponding with someone who has real data! And, yes, it really frustrates me that the academic world has so few meeting points with the public. ARGH. Yanno, I'm gonna see to what extent I'm allowed to blog my research progress this semester. Hmm.
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Here is the short, short version of what she gave me: the DMEB poll was only about gender, not sexuality. (apparently this was necessary because in 2003 some people in the establishment were of the opinion that most slashers were gay men using female pseuds.
I'm still a bit puzzled as to why one would survey a mostly-het-writing community to say something about slashers' genders. I mean, did anyone think gay men were writing Mary Sue het where Darth Maul falls in love with an Earth girl or gets his own lady Sith apprentice or whatever? (I'm also a little baffled by the "female pseuds" thing--so many fannish pseuds in any community are neither male nor female nor name-like. I mean, mine is a city in Wales. My previous pseud was a bird.)
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Thanks for crunching these numbers. This is hugely important.
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These posts make me so happy. I love seeing the demographics all shiny like this.
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Also, if one does a Web search on sockii.com/ma, the Master and Apprentice archive shows right up. :) It doesn't appear to have the original survey on it any more, though - and anyway, you posted the results here.
Thank you for doing all this hard work. This was fascinating to read.
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Seen on Metafandom
(Anonymous) 2010-01-19 08:16 am (UTC)(link)Boyd, Kelly Simca. 2001. "One index finger on the mouse scroll bar and the other on my clit": Slash writers' views on pornography, censorship, feminism and risk. PhD diss., Simon Fraser University. http://ir.lib.sfu.ca/handle/1892/8734
I still haven't seen any sampling that would be considered random in that someone chose random samples from archived slash fanfic and then contacted the authors to invite them to participate in a survey. And then do similar samples with gen and het fanfic.
The poll responses seem to be from "insiders" who are already self-selected and/or have probably discouraged people who don't fit their norm. So far the only hypothesis I would hazard is that LiveJournal slash fanfic writers seem to be about evenly divided between "queer" and "heterosexual". Maybe people who answer the polls are just extroverts. Maybe other people are just "it's none of your business" and don't answer.
countess_baltar from LJ (Bachelor of Science (statistics, information systems, calculus, etc.), Master's Degree, and another piece of paper that is considered the equivalent of a PhD.)
Re: Seen on Metafandom
(Anonymous) - 2010-01-20 10:27 (UTC) - ExpandRe: Seen on Metafandom
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This is really interesting. Thanks for compiling this.
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It seems to me that one of the problems with recognizing queer slashers is the way slash fans and their sexuality are being associated. I think many people have the idea that slash is written and read for the titillation of it, that it is solely a form of pornography.
In my experience people who identify as slashers share a lot of similarities in their fannish behavior as those who don't. What drives people into fandom, het, gen, or slash, is often a search for something that isn't present in the text. While there will always be a portion of any group that is solely looking for a smuttier angle on their favorite source, I believe that portion is much smaller than many people imagine.
The point is, many people who don't necessarily get off on two men having sex identify as slashers because they're looking for an alternative source of queerness that isn't present in the text. Much of Western media is preoccupied with hetero-normative white male leads surrounded by other hetero-normative white males. When the vast majority of main characters we are given to relate to are straight white men often with few women in the background (especially in older sources), is it any surprise that queer women of all shades turned to pairing them up? Isn't that just another way of supplementing their needs that aren't getting met by the source?
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(Anonymous) 2010-01-29 07:59 am (UTC)(link)Thought I'd add this to the conversation:
In early 2008 I surveyed a fairly diverse cross-section fans for my MA thesis. The survey had 7,748 participants in total. Within these results, 3214 individuals opted to answer (and not skip) the question, "What sexuality do you identify as?"
The results were:
Heterosexual 68%
Homosexual 4%
Bisexual 23%
Asexual 3%
None of the Above 2%
While the majority of participants did identify as straight, the numbers of bisexual fans seems quite significant, particularly when viewed next to the 4% identifying as homosexual. Also, if those numbers are combined, the number of people identifying as something other than heterosexual, while not the majority, is still quite high.
(Happy to answer any questions, if you have them: kem82@georgetown.edu. My plan has always been to post all the survey results online, but sadly, life has been creating some large and distracting obstacles.)
quick correction
(Anonymous) - 2010-01-29 08:14 (UTC) - Expand