tonnaree, I agree, it would have done the whole idea of shipping more justice to take a look at different kinds of ships (but as has been pointed out this kind of article doesn't allow for much space, so... maybe they should have gone with a whole different topic there).
And looking at this...
REReader wrote:
The Times correctly states that shippers generally (using Sherlock as an example) take a relationship in a piece of fiction and push it farther, or take it in a different direction, than is overtly depicted in the show.
...it seems to me the idea wasn't to give an accurate idea of what shipping quite often really means. Because it doesn't just mean that you take a coulpe that isn't really a romantic couple in a tv show and turn it into one. This happens, of course, but it would have been nice to also state that fans very often also create romantic worlds that aren't "completely imagined" at all!
Let me just mention two examples: The Doctor/Rose Tyler in "Doctor Who", Jack Harkness/Ianto Jones in "Torchwood". They are romantically attached on screen as much as they are in the fanfic world, the latter even more so than the former.
So it seems to me such ships were consciously ignored by the author in order to show shippers in a certain light.
Last edited by SolarSystem (March 5, 2015 12:38 pm)