Citations:Trekwriter

Noun: "(fandom slang, dated) a person who writes Star Trek fan fiction"

 * 1984, Folklore Women's Communication, Issues 32-34, unnumbered page:
 * Fran Hitchcock, in a fanzine debate with Paula Smith (Archives 7), pointed out that while Treklit can be seen as a training ground for writers with professional aspirations, most Trekwriters do it for the love of it.
 * 1992, Edith Cantor, quoted in Camille Bacon-Smith, Enterprising Women: Television Fandom and the Creation of Popular Myth, page 96:
 * So have many other Trekwriters—in fact I would propose that just as every dog is allowed one bite, so every Trekwriter should be allowed one Mary Sue.

Noun: TV critics who write about Star Trek?

 * 2000, Tara Brabazon, Ladies Who Lunge: Celebrating Difficult Women, page 130:
 * It is so unusual to have a woman as the lead actor in a non-comic series that televisual descriptions were lacking. Steven Eramo described Janeway as 'Trek's First Lady'. This is an inaccurate description: after all, who is her husband/president? The notion of a woman possessing autonomous power was almost too much for Trekwriters. This one character blew apart the accepted role of women in science fiction, television drama and everyday life.