AO3 News

Post Header

April 28-30, Organization for Transformative Works Membership Drive

The Organization for Transformative Works's April membership drive is over and we are delighted to say that we are finishing with a total of US$252,343.98 raised, far exceeding our goal of US$50,000. These donations came from 7852 people in 71 countries: thank you to every single one of them, as well as to all of you who posted and shared the news about the drive!

We are particularly pleased that 6450 of donors chose to take up or renew OTW membership with their donation. The OTW would not exist without its users all around the world, and your continued support for us is our absolute pride and joy! We are so glad to know that our ongoing mission to support, protect, and provide access to the history of fanworks and fan culture continues to resonate with the people that matter most of all: the fans themselves.

If you were intending to donate or join and haven't yet done so, don't worry! The OTW accepts donations all year round and you can always choose to become a member with a donation of US$10 or more. Memberships run for one calendar year from the date of your donation, so if you donate now you'll be able to vote in the 2023 OTW Board elections, which will take place in August. And our exclusive thank-you gifts are available whenever you donate!


The Organization for Transformative Works is the non-profit parent organization of multiple projects including Archive of Our Own, Fanlore, Open Doors, Transformative Works and Cultures, and OTW Legal Advocacy. We are a fan run, entirely donor-supported organization staffed by volunteers. Find out more about us on our website.

Comment

Post Header

April 28-30, Organization for Transformative Works Membership Drive

It’s that time of year again – time for the biannual OTW membership drive! Ever since it was founded in 2007, the Organization for Transformative Works has relied on the support of fans like you. This support comes in the form of volunteer hours as well as the incredible generosity of our donors and our members. Find out more about how your donations have contributed to our work this year by checking out our budget post and, if you’re able to, click through to donate today.

We’re excited to have a great new slate of donor thank-you gifts this year including a travel tumbler showcasing the OTW project logos and a sticker set featuring the AO3 work symbols so that you can properly label your friends, pets, and household items. Of course, our wildly popular trope cards are still available, as are a number of other exciting gifts.

A clear plastic tumbler with a red plastic lid, red insulating strip around the top, and a red plastic straw. The logos for AO3, OTW Legal, Fanlore, and Transformative Works and Cultures are printed in red around the body of the tumbler. A sheet of small square stickers showing the icons used on AO3 to indicate a work's rating, relationship category, content warnings status, and completion status.

These thank-you gifts start at US$40; you can also set up a recurring donation and save towards the gift of your choice. Instructions on how to set this up will be included in your donation receipt. Those of you in the U.S. might also be able to double your contribution via employer matching: contact your HR department to find out if this is an option for you.

It’s also worth remembering that a donation of US$10 or more will allow you to become a member of the OTW. OTW members receive a special social media icon and, more importantly, the right to vote for the Board of Directors — the OTW’s governing board. You have until June 30, 2023 to become a member if you would like to vote in this year’s election, which will be held in August.

While we hope that many of you will take this opportunity to donate and join the OTW, we're grateful for the support of all members of this community, in all its many forms! Whether you create, share, comment on or kudos fanworks on AO3; edit Fanlore; read Transformative Works and Cultures; or spread information from OTW Legal, you all help shape the OTW and its projects every day. We are grateful for your time, energy, and engagement!


The Organization for Transformative Works is the non-profit parent organization of multiple projects including Archive of Our Own, Fanlore, Open Doors, Transformative Works and Cultures, and OTW Legal Advocacy. We are a fan run, entirely donor-supported organization staffed by volunteers. Find out more about us on our website.

Comment

Post Header

Our October Membership Drive has ended, and we could not be more grateful for your generosity. We are glad to announce that thanks to 7683 donors in 78 countries, we have raised a total of US$276,467.69! We're particularly pleased that 6147 of you chose to begin or renew your OTW membership with your donation.

Although the membership drive has ended for now, we do accept donations year-round. You can become a voting member at any time of the year—you just have to join by June 30 at 23:59 UTC to be eligible to vote in our annual OTW Board of Directors elections in August.

While our Development and Membership team is hard at work mailing out your gifts, we want to take a moment to say thanks. We wouldn't be here without your support in its myriad forms: your financial contributions, Fanlore articles, Transformative Works and Cultures citations, comments and kudos on AO3, and fanworks both old and new. It means the world to us and we are incredibly grateful! Thank you so much for your participation in this drive, and for making the OTW what it is today.

Comment

Post Header

It’s that time of year again: the Organization for Transformative Works is holding our October Membership Drive, and we would appreciate your support! The OTW and all our projects are 100% volunteer-run and funded by your donations. Every dollar raised goes into maintaining our servers, supporting our work, and furthering our mission of protecting and advocating for fanworks and fan culture. Check out our most recent budget post for more information on how our funds are spent.

In addition to supporting our work, donations above a certain amount are also eligible for some neat OTW thank-you gifts! You can find the full range of what's available at our donations page but we'll pick out some highlights here.

AO3 pin design: a red circle decorated with the AO3 logo and the words '13 years' in cursive font. The logo and the word 'years' are white and the number 13 is gold.

  • The Archive of Our Own is now thirteen years old - old enough to get its own account on AO3! To celebrate that, we have new 13th Anniversary pins available.
  • You may also have noticed our celebrations last month when the OTW as a whole turned fifteen. We also have 15th Anniversary magnets to celebrate this occasion! These are bundled together with stickers celebrating both anniversaries. All the anniversary items are limited edition, so if you like the look of them, make sure to get yours while they're here!
  • We also want to mention the fandom trope playing cards, which debuted in April and have proven very popular with our donors. Each card contains unique word art depicting the kinds of fannish terms and tropes that can be found in AO3 tags. This item is still available to those donating US$100 or more.

Sticker designs showing the AO3 and OTW logos wearing party hats

If you are interested in the thank-you gifts but aren't able to make a donation of this size all at once, don't worry! We've got you. You can set up a recurring donation for a smaller amount, and fill out the form in your donation receipt to let our Development and Membership team know which gift you'd like to save up for. They'll set it aside and will send it out to you once your cumulative total reaches the level needed for your chosen gift.

The other major benefit of donating to the Organization for Transformative Works is that any donation of US$10 or above makes you eligible to vote in next year's elections for the Board of Directors that oversees the OTW's activities. You can read more about our electoral process at the OTW elections website. If you would like to vote in the next election in August 2023, you can become a member today by making a single donation of US$10 or more and selecting "become a member" on the donation form. Membership will last for one calendar year from the date of your qualifying donation.

If you aren't able to donate to the OTW this time around, that's absolutely okay! And if you happen to have a moment to spare, we'd appreciate your help in sharing news of this membership drive with others. As always, we are so grateful for everything you do to support the OTW and its many projects. Thank you for being part of our community!

Comment

Post Header

OTW Elections News

It's almost election time! Being a member of the Organization for Transformative Works (OTW) means being able to vote for its Board of Directors. This helps affect how projects such as the Archive of Our Own, Fanlore, and Transformative Works and Cultures are run now and going forward. This year, our election for the Board of Directors will be held from August 12 to August 15. (Access the full Elections Timeline for 2022).

In order to vote, you need to be a member of the OTW by midnight UTC on June 30, 2022 (What time is that for me?). That means that you have to have made a donation of US$10 or more between July 1, 2021 and June 30, 2022, AND have chosen the "membership" option. If you're unsure whether this applies to a donation you've made, please contact our Development & Membership team.

If you participate in this voter registration drive, you will receive a specially designed icon, only available during this drive. Thank you for your support of the OTW! Register to vote and donate today!

Comment

Post Header

We at the Organization for Transformative Works are excited to introduce an additional way to support us: we're now one of the charities you can select when purchasing a Humble Bundle or through the Humble Store!

Humble Bundle lets you pay what you want for a selection of games, books, comics, and software, while the Humble Store acts as a hub for users to purchase games for multiple platforms. In both cases, you can select an amount to go to the OTW in support of its projects. Content availability may vary depending on your country, but there's an incredible selection to chose from! When you use the Humble Store to purchase games, or buy a Humble Bundle, select the Organization for Transformative Works as your charity of choice at checkout, and we will receive a portion of the proceeds. As always, your privacy is guaranteed!

(Donations the OTW receives as a result of Humble Bundle or Humble Store purchases will not make you a member of the OTW. If you wish to become a member, please donate via this form.)

Thank you so much for your support!


The Organization for Transformative Works is the non-profit parent organization of multiple projects including Archive of Our Own, Fanlore, Open Doors, Transformative Works and Cultures, and OTW Legal Advocacy. We are a fan run, entirely donor-supported organization staffed by volunteers. Find out more about us on our website.

Comment

Post Header

Published:
2017-09-28 15:48:04 UTC
Tags:

Choose Books, Buy Books, Support the OTW

The Organization for Transformative Works is celebrating its 10th anniversary because thousands of fans have supported it through donations over the years. And while direct donations are the most helpful form of support (which can be made at any time of the year) there are other ways to help. You can:

  • check with your workplace to see if they'll do corporate matching of donations
  • if you use Amazon in the U.S. for purchases, sign up to Amazon Smile and select the OTW as your charity of choice.

(There are even automatic redirect apps you can install on Chrome or Firefox so you won't have to remember to sign in to Smile).

But probably the most fun way is to purchase one or both books whose royalties support the OTW! Below, three of the OTW's founding members -- Kristina Busse, Karen Hellekson, and Francesca Coppa -- from our Transformative Works & Cultures committee discuss the books they edited: The Fanfiction Reader: Folk Tales for the Digital Age and The Fan Fiction Studies Reader.

What do you see as the unique appeal of the book you worked on?

Kristina: A big problem for any young discipline is the lack of shared knowledge. In early fan studies essays -- all the way into the mid-2000s -- everyone had to explain terms and describe the community, often at the expense of more in depth and differentiated arguments. Karen and I envisioned our 2006 collection Fan Fiction and Fan Communities in the Age of the Internet as a way to move forward the conversation by starting from a shared place: our introduction offered a definitional framework and theoretical context, and Francesca's "A Short History of Fandom" narrated a version of our fannish history that most of us contributing to the issue recognized as our own.

Likewise, Transformative Works and Cultures asks our contributors to build upon existing fan studies research that is assumed to be shared and known. At the same time, many of the essays that build this foundation and are regularly cited are difficult to find. In The Fan Fiction Studies Reader, we collected in one place some of the most often referenced essays and scholars. We framed these texts with extensive essays to explain their place in fan studies' history while also pointing toward more current research that expands upon these earlier works.

Francesca: The Fanfiction Reader literally is a unique book -- it's the first collection of fanfiction stories published AS fanfiction (that is, not filed off like 50 Shades of Gray or written about works in the public domain, like fic in the Jane Austen-verse.) It's OUR sort of fanfiction: fanfiction of currently active franchises like Star Wars, Doctor Who, MCU, etc.

It's also very much an OTW project in that it furthers two aspects of the mission that have been part of OTW's agenda from the start: strengthening our legal rights around fanfiction by exercising the muscle of fair use -- the book argues that the stories within it are transformative works, and so legal to professionally publish in this particular context -- and helping to legitimize fanfiction as an art form in terms of making it easier to study (because the book is first and foremost intended for classroom use.) Bonus agenda: the book will hopefully keep random students from trolling the internet looking for fanfic because they were assigned to do so and possibly bothering or othering fans (as happened in the Berkeley case not too long ago.) It also gives instructors a series of teachable stories to use in classroom assignments.

Kristina and Karen's book The Fan Fiction Studies Readercollects essays from over the last forty years that have been important to fan studies and the study of fanfic in particular -- never again will people have to start with "What is fan fiction?" like nobody's ever written about fanfiction before. In fact, there's an amazing body of work out there, and in this reader we collect some of the most important pieces in one place, essays by people like Joanna Russ, Henry Jenkins, Constance Penley...

Karen: Francesca is right: The Fan Fiction Studies Reader brings together, in one place, many of the texts foundational to fan studies. Editing this book was so much fun: we couldn't get everything we wanted (because EXPENSIVE and LENGTH), but we got enough to create a book that fan studies acafans (and not just fan fiction acafans, despite the book's title) can use in classes. The essays in the book can be shuffled around to create any number of organizational structures. Any class that uses this book plus Francesca's book would have the synergy of the theoretical and the primary.

What part of the book do you find yourself most often quoting to others?

Karen: The introduction. I get excited about each of the sections we created within the book, with its particular focus and with its particular scholars (and headnotes for each section link the essays together to show why each selection is important in the field of fan studies, and how awesome is it that it is a field!), but the intro really lays it all out and shows the big picture. I just lent the book to a friend of mine who is completely new to fan fiction and fan studies, and I told him to read the intro. It should answer the basic question "what is fan fiction [or any fan text], and why is it important?," but it should also provide a background to fans who are coming at it from the other end: they are embedded in the fan world, but they want to know how academic discourse deals, and fan fic meta deal, with the field.

Francesca: I've been excerpting passages from the book on my Tumblr and I'm kind of shocked, but one of them has gotten something like 20,000+ likes/reblogs. It's this bit here, from the introduction to Brancher's great Lord of the Rings fic, "They Say of the Elves":

While many people think fanfiction is about inserting sex into texts (like Tolkien’s) where it doesn’t belong, Brancher sees it differently: “I was desperate to read about sex that included great friendship; I was repurposing Tolkien’s text in order to do that. It wasn’t that friendship needed to be sexualized, it was that erotica needed to be … friendship-ized.” Many fanfiction writers write about sex in conjunction with beloved texts and characters not because they think those texts are incomplete, but because they’re looking for stories where sex is profound and meaningful. This is part of what makes fan fiction different from pornography: unlike pornography, fanfic features characters we already care deeply about, and who tend to already have long-standing and complex relationships with each other. It’s a genre of sexual subjectification: the very opposite of objectification. It’s benefits with friendship.

This passage has obviously struck a chord, and it's because I think fans agree that -- even at our most "porny," certainly at our most explicit and masturbatory -- we are still relating to the characters in the story as fully-rounded human subjects. Not for nothing is the worst insult in fandom that a story is about "any two guys" (ATG) -- even in a PWP, where the story is nothing but sex, we bring our past history of and with character to bear; we're choosing to read a story about THAT person as opposed to any other John or Jane.

Do you think the books are of most interest to fans or non-fans?

Karen: Nonfans, I think. We compiled the volume with both audiences in mind, but we published with Iowa University Press, which markets to an academic audience. It's not like you'll see this book available for purchase at a science fiction or media con! The structure of the book is designed to help academics create a fan studies type of class. It provides a useful theoretical background, with foundational texts that will never, ever go awry. Fans who are particularly interested in meta, as well as fans who are pursuing MAs or PhDs and who are looking for a fan studies project, will find this book essential.

And I have to admit that part of it was me and Kristina reviewing submissions to the fan studies/media studies journal we coedit, Transformative Works and Cultures. Now when we say rhetorically of authors, "Why haven't you read X and Y?," there's no excuse: it's all in a single handy volume.

Francesca: I say it in the acknowledgments: The Fanfiction Reader is not for fandom per se, because fandom doesn’t need a reader: fandom has all the fic in the world and all the meta besides! But I think the book is a useful introduction to our sort of fandom for new audiences and especially for students. More and more people are discovering fandom through school, and so fans should have some say in how we're presented there.

What would you recommend to instructors thinking of using your books in the classroom?

Karen: I would recommend that they take the "fan fiction" part as a metaphor. Really "fan fiction" could be replaced with "fan art" or "fan manips" or "fan GIFs" or "fan Tumblrs" or "fan Twitter feeds," or whatever. Although it would go very well with Francesca's volume, the wide, wide Internet might provide useful, current primary-source examples that both support and challenge the book's themes and organization. And that's what we want: we want people to say, "Well, but what about THIS?" Indeed! Yes! What about it? Instructors could use our book to organize a class about fan studies and fan artifacts; but they could also use it to challenge the foundational ideas that we lay out. And we say, BRING IT.

Kristina Teaching fan studies and fan fiction is fundamentally different from reading and enjoying it -- or even from contributing to it. Whereas within fandom (and among fellow acafans) we can expect a certain fannish osmosis, our students may have very little shared fannish or academic background. That's where the editorial framework in both books become really important: we create context that allows students to situate and understand the stories and essays. In turn, the essays create a basis to understand more current research and the stories familiarize students with a range of fannish genres, modes, and tropes.

Francesca: Right, I agree with Kristina. I chose really big mainstream Western fandoms for The Fanfiction Reader because you can't count on students having the kind of shared experiences and ways of looking at texts that you get from being in fandom even for a short time: nowadays, I can't depend on students even having read the Harry Potter novels or seen Star Wars. So as with other literary studies, you have to understand that you're joining a community and a conversation that's been going on before you got there: The Fanfiction Reader is an attempt to open up just a few of the millions of doors that lead into that conversation. And some people will think, "Interesting!" and move on, and some people will want to walk through that door and join us in here.

What would you love to have people remember about the book?

Karen: A great thing about working in fan studies is that people spontaneously e-mail you with remarks like, "OMG I thought I was the only person who considered this stuff valuable! And you edited this book!" So I want people to remember that not only is fan engagement valuable, but it is constitutive of fandom -- fundamental, essential. Fans talking to each other = fandom. This book is part of that. By editing this book, we sought to make the conversation transparent and overt, so anyone can join in, be it outside academic or current fan, because it's all about engagement.

Kristina: The books are both selections, shaped by such random things as the length of the essays/stories and by our own interests and awareness. They are meant to whet the taste for more, to invite the reader to continue in directions that interest them. The books are a celebration of fan fiction and fan studies, a starting point. Just like engaging with any show, film, or book, the gaps are where things happen -- more stories, more discussion, more research -- a big collective work-in-progress!

Francesca: I want people to see that fanfiction is legal -- a transformative fair use that can be published and sold in certain contexts -- and also that it's an art.


You can purchase both books at most online booksellers, (or for an extra donation bump, through Amazon Smile!)

The Organization for Transformative Works is the non-profit parent organization of multiple projects including Archive of Our Own, Fanlore, Open Doors, Transformative Works and Cultures, and OTW Legal Advocacy. We are a fan run, entirely donor-supported organization staffed by volunteers. Find out more about us on our website.

Comment

Post Header

Published:
2014-11-23 18:47:02 UTC
Tags:

Amazon Smile banner showing the OTW as a donor recipient

As many fans are preparing to celebrate the end-of-year holiday season, the Organization for Transformative Works (OTW) would like to let U.S. supporters know that there is a simple way they can donate if they are making purchases through Amazon.

AmazonSmile is a program set up by Amazon that allows you to donate to a charitable organization every time you shop, at no cost to you. There are currently nearly one million organizations participating, and the OTW is one of them!

How to use AmazonSmile

Simply go to http://smile.amazon.com from the web browser on your computer or mobile device. The site has the same products and services as the usual Amazon domain, many of which will be marked “Eligible for AmazonSmile donation” on their product detail pages. (Recurring Subscribe-and-Save purchases and subscription renewals are not currently eligible.) The AmazonSmile Foundation will donate 0.5% of the purchase price from your eligible AmazonSmile purchases to the charity of your choice. Donations are made by the AmazonSmile Foundation, however, and will not be tax deductible by you.

If you have an existing Amazon.com account, all details will remain the same including your shopping cart, Wish List, wedding or baby registry. On your first visit to AmazonSmile you will be asked to select a charitable organization. Enter "The Organization For Transformative Works Inc" in the search field. That's it!

If you'd like to donate to more than one charity, you can always select the “Change your Charity” link in the “Your Account” page for different purchases. If you'd like to know more about AmazonSmile, visit their program details page.

 

Screenshot of a user's Amazon Smile page showing the OTW as the designated charity

What if I don't use Amazon U.S.?

At this time, AmazonSmile is only available to users of the U.S. site, and AmazonSmile is the only retail program through which we receive donations. If you have suggestions of other programs, please let us know!

However, you can donate directly to the OTW at any time of year through our donation page. We have answers to some frequently asked questions there, but if you have additional questions, please contact us.

Comment


Pages Navigation