Citations:Ichabbie

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English citations of Ichabbie

Proper noun: "(fandom slang) the ship of characters Ichabod Crane and Abbie Mills from the television series Sleepy Hollow"

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  • 2014, Angela Fazekas, "Queer And Unusual Space: White Supremacy In Slash Fanfiction", thesis submitted to Queen's University, page 120:
    He describes himself as a multishipper and proudly reblogged a post calling him the Captain of the Ichabbie ship.
  • 2014, Adrienne McIlvaine, "Must-Tweet TV: Changing Television, 140 Characters at a Time", BELLO, September 2014, page 49:
    Devoted fans of the supernatural Sleepy Hollow have made no secret of their desire to see the time-traveling Ichabod and no-nonsense Abbie pair up (#ichabbie), []
  • 2014, Laura Prudom, "'Sleepy Hollow' Season 2: Tom Mison on 'Ichabbie,' Jealousy and the Battle with War", The Niles Bugle, 2 October 2014, page 23:
    Much has been made of the sexual tension between "Ichabbie."
  • 2017, Evan Jeremy Johnson, "But The Crowd Was Not Satisfied: Blackface Minstrelsy And Lynching As Fandoms Of The Remediated Black Body", thesis submitted to the University of Texas at Dallas, page 78:
    Many fan blog posts argued that writers of Sleepy Hollow betrayed its Ichabbie shippers through their refusal to fully consummate the relationship.
  • 2017, Suzanne Scott, "The Powers That Squee: Orlando Jones and Intersectional Fan Studies", in Fandom, Second Edition: Identities and Communities in a Mediated World (eds. Jonathan Gray, Cornel Sandvoss, & C. Lee Harrington), page 398:
    Jones's repeated fannish references to “Ichabbie” (a portmanteau for those invested in the relationship of Sleepy Hollow's protagonists Ichabod Crane and Abbie Mills) led to some Sleepy Hollow fans dubbing Jones the “Captain” of the S.S. Ichabbie, a designation that concurrently reveals his acceptance into the fan community and his inevitable position of privilege within it.
  • 2020, Karen J. Tuthill-Jones, "Brains, Brawn, and Beguilement: Major Female Characters on FOX's Sleepy Hollow, in Cinematic Women, From Objecthood to Heroism: Essays on Female Gender (ed. Lisa V. Mazey), page 99:
    Fans who had enjoyed the dynamic of Abbie and Crane did not appreciate the re-introduction of Katrina, as she stifled their relationship in a number of ways, breaking up the Ichabbie dynamic for marital spats.