Slash

A shipper story written about a love affair between two same-sex characters, lesbian or gay. For a discussion on whether canon supports such relationships in Daria, see Homosexuality in Daria.

Lesbian stories (called yuri in anime fandoms) dominate slashfic here. Daria/Jane, Quinn/Sandi, and Jane/Quinn are the best known sorts of slash fiction in Daria fandom. Tales involving male gay relationships (yaoi)are exceedingly rare in this fandom but not unknown ("Overcompensation," "Ragged Denim," "TnT").

In a curious alter-ago picture at the end of the TV movie, Is It College Yet?, Lindy and Alison were depicted in a scene on a farm with a number of children, implying that they were a lesbian couple with a family. Crusading Saint used this image as the basis for his story, "Love, Reign Over Me," arguably the only slash shipper given some form of support by the TV show.

Generally speaking, there are two types of slash stories seen in Daria fanfic: the purely erotic ("The Passion Club," "Girls' Night Out") and the romance, or relationship explorer ("Out On Vacation," "Pause in the Air"), though some stories manage to combine both ("Writes of Passage").

"Coming out" is almost always an issue and promises considerable turmoil and angst ("Out On Vacation"), if not outright danger ("The Two of Them"). Same-sex relationships are prey to the same difficulties and breakups as heterosexual ones, with outpourings of angst always a possibility ("Just the Sun at Night").

Given that the Daria series offers almost no support for any same-sex coupling (see Homosexuality in Daria), slash stories are of necessity creative in their choice of partners. They have been written about characters who usually have antipathy for each other ("Quinn's Nights at Casa Lane," "Writes of Passage") or don't even know each other in canon ("Bar Fly"). Some are clearly alternate-universe tales, rewriting the series as a whole to incorporate lesbian or gay relationships ("Pause in the Air"). Science-fiction and horror fanfics carry the creativity further&mdash;sometimes very far indeed ("The Alpha and the Omega"). Same-sex characters can even have sex together but not be homosexual ("Witches’ Flight"). The genre has even been taken to unconscionable extremes in terms of parings, such as Daria/Quinn liaisons ("Night of the Storm", "The Winters of Those Gone Before").