Citations:Stucky

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English citations of Stucky

Proper noun: "(fandom slang) the ship of characters Steve Rogers (Captain America) and Bucky Barnes from the Marvel Cinematic Universe"

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  • 2016, Arville Bylok-Collard, "Supanova 2016 At Melbourne Showgrounds", Beat Magazine, 20 April 2016, page 21:
    Artist Alley allows you to support local artists and fan artists — a friend told me it was a great opportunity to meet their favourite artist instagrammers and talk fan-theories, fan art and Stucky, Captain America and Bucky, fanfiction.
  • 2016, Brittani Howell, "#LeaveCapAlone", Connect Statesboro, 1 June - 14 June 2016, page 4:
    A lot of people ship Stucky, and they ship it hard.
  • 2016, Olivia Riley, "Queerness and Emotion in Fanfiction", thesis submitted to the University of Minnesota, page 10:
    The largest ships in the MCU are “Stucky” (Steve Rogers AKA Captain America and Bucky Barnes AKA the Winter Soldier) and “Stony” (Steve Rogers and Tony Stark AKA Iron Man).
  • 2017, Paul Booth, "Fandom in the Classroom", Uncanny Magazine, March/April 2017, page 149:
    What they haven't encountered is the history of fandom. Every year I see shocked expressions when I describe fandom as something older than Tumblr and bigger than Game of Thrones; when I demonstrate that slashfic started before Stucky (Steve/Bucky slash from Captain America fandom).
  • 2017, Francesca Coppa, "Hollywood of Our Own: Media Fandom as Female Artworld", in Women Do Genre in Film and Television (eds. Mary Harrod & Katarzyna Paszkiewicz), unnumbered pages:
    In her 'Domestic Stucky (feat. IKEA)' art project, Kurozawa Shiro decided to draw the characters Steve Rogers and Bucky Barnes into a spare IKEA catalogue she had lying around (Stucky is the portmanteau name for the Steve/Bucky pairing).
  • 2017, Jingyi Gu, "Celebrating and Discussing the Queerly Masculine: Hollywood Superheroes Reimagined in Fan Videos on Chinese Barrage Video Websites", thesis submitted to Georgetown University, page 15:
    It’s Definitely Not the Avengers” is a mash-up video of three superhero couples “of Resave” selects from the Marvel cinematic universe, i.e. Stucky (Captain America and Winter Soldier), Thorki (Thor and Loki), and Tony x Banner (Iron Man and Hulk).
  • 2018, Francesca Davis DiPiazza, Fandom: Fic Writers, Vidders, Gamers, Artists, and Cosplayers, page 28:
    The Captain America movies gave rise to Steve/Bucky, or Stucky.
  • 2018, Sarah Garcia, "The Queer Threat: Heterosexual Masculine Anxiety in Blockbusters", FEM Newsmagazine (University of California, Los Angeles), Spring 2018, page 12:
    Such thinking has produced popular ships like "Stucky," the pairing of Steve Rogers (Captain America) and Bucky Barnes (the Winter Soldier) in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
  • 2018, Danielle S. Girard, "Cultural Reinforcement: Queerbaiting and the Fan Art Segment", in Queerbaiting and Fandom: Teasing Fans Through Homoerotic Possibilities (ed. Joseph Brennan), pages 169:
    Queerbaiting as an intratextual element may be as blatantly obvious as having characters directly address a particular pairing (i.e., Dean confronting "Destiel" in Supernatural's 200th episode, "Fan Fiction" [10.5]) or as subtle as a reunion between two characters loaded with romantic dialogue (i.e., Steve and Bucky, "Stucky," in Captain America: Civil War [2016]).
  • 2018, Brianna Huber, "Slash and Stigma: The Impact of Media Representation on Public Perception of Slash Fiction and Fandom Culture", thesis submitted to the University of Oregon, page 100:
    For example, for a Stucky (see definition below) kink meme, someone might request fics that take place after Bucky becomes the Winter Soldier, that incorporate his metal arm into sexual activities.
  • 2018, Alen Ríos & Diego Rivera, "Vulnerability and Trash: Divisions within the Stucky fandom", Otherness: Essays and Studies, Volume 6, Number 1, December 2018, page 35:
    The Stucky fandom encompasses all kinds of fans, and acts as a vast space for fans to find their preferred content.