Citations:babyfic

Noun: "(uncountable, fandom slang) such fan fiction collectively"

 * 2003, Robin Silbergleid, "'The Truth We Both Know': Readerly Desire and Heteronarrative in The X-Files", Studies in Popular Culture, Volume 25, Issue 3, April 2003, page 61:
 * Whereas fan fiction has been understood to be primarily about sex and subversive readings — as Jenkins' work on female fans and "slash" suggests — babyfic on the other hand, demonstrates the need to contain and work through the extreme possibilities of the canon.
 * 2003, Robin Silbergleid, "'The Truth We Both Know': Readerly Desire and Heteronarrative in The X-Files", Studies in Popular Culture, Volume 25, Issue 3, April 2003, page 61:
 * Whereas fan fiction has been understood to be primarily about sex and subversive readings — as Jenkins' work on female fans and "slash" suggests — babyfic on the other hand, demonstrates the need to contain and work through the extreme possibilities of the canon.
 * 2003, Robin Silbergleid, "'The Truth We Both Know': Readerly Desire and Heteronarrative in The X-Files", Studies in Popular Culture, Volume 25, Issue 3, April 2003, page 61:
 * Whereas fan fiction has been understood to be primarily about sex and subversive readings — as Jenkins' work on female fans and "slash" suggests — babyfic on the other hand, demonstrates the need to contain and work through the extreme possibilities of the canon.
 * 2003, Robin Silbergleid, "'The Truth We Both Know': Readerly Desire and Heteronarrative in The X-Files", Studies in Popular Culture, Volume 25, Issue 3, April 2003, page 61:
 * Whereas fan fiction has been understood to be primarily about sex and subversive readings — as Jenkins' work on female fans and "slash" suggests — babyfic on the other hand, demonstrates the need to contain and work through the extreme possibilities of the canon.
 * 2003, Robin Silbergleid, "'The Truth We Both Know': Readerly Desire and Heteronarrative in The X-Files", Studies in Popular Culture, Volume 25, Issue 3, April 2003, page 61:
 * Whereas fan fiction has been understood to be primarily about sex and subversive readings — as Jenkins' work on female fans and "slash" suggests — babyfic on the other hand, demonstrates the need to contain and work through the extreme possibilities of the canon.
 * 2003, Robin Silbergleid, "'The Truth We Both Know': Readerly Desire and Heteronarrative in The X-Files", Studies in Popular Culture, Volume 25, Issue 3, April 2003, page 61:
 * Whereas fan fiction has been understood to be primarily about sex and subversive readings — as Jenkins' work on female fans and "slash" suggests — babyfic on the other hand, demonstrates the need to contain and work through the extreme possibilities of the canon.
 * Whereas fan fiction has been understood to be primarily about sex and subversive readings — as Jenkins' work on female fans and "slash" suggests — babyfic on the other hand, demonstrates the need to contain and work through the extreme possibilities of the canon.