01 March 2013 @ 02:30 pm
All the Things Friday - Marriage & Commitment!  

Assassins, Marriage & Commitment



The issue of would and/or how do assassins commit to a relationship is a common trope in the Clint/Natasha fandom. So let’s discuss!

A few questions:
- Would this couple enter into a committed relationship?
- Would they be exclusive?
- Would they marry?
- How would Natasha’s frequent assignments as a seductress (a) affect Clint and Natasha as a couple, and (b) affect her assignments?
- How would a committed relationship affect either/both individual’s performance in the field/battle situations?
- Which partner is more willing to commit?

In my experience, Clint is usually portrayed as more willing to commit than Natasha. Do you agree with this? Do you like it when authors portray Clint and Natasha as being in a committed relationship and/or a marriage? Do you like it when authors portray one or the other as being unable/unwilling to commit?

Share your thoughts and your recs! Recs do not have to be happily-ever-after, btw. Mine tend to be b/c that's how I roll, but anything regarding marriage, commitment, whether or not to commit to each other, etc. will fit the bill. :-)

Recommendations

Heavy in Your Arms by [livejournal.com profile] cybermathwitch - Clint and Natasha are soulmates (WIP). I include this here b/c it has a very detailed take on Natasha’s issues with commitment. (That it’s one of my favorite fics EVER is just a bonus.) :D

If Ever the Two Were One by [livejournal.com profile] thoughts_to_ink - one of my favorites; “Five ways the Avengers found out Clint and Natasha were married, and one way they didn’t. Featuring domesticity, scrambled documents, Tony and Pepper getting their snoop on, and of course some general badassery.”

Brown and Gold by [livejournal.com profile] cybermathwitch - an AU crossover with Anne McCaffrey’s Dragonrider series. While very AU, Natasha’s issues with starting a relationship are universal to her character.

Naked Pantomime in the Dark by [livejournal.com profile] _samalander - High school theatre AU in which Clint is the one with commitment issues.

Is This Love? by shaneequa - The five times people told Natasha that she loves Clint, and the one time she realized it. A nice look at Natasha realizing she wants to be in a relationship.

Better Together by Salenya – The process of Clint and Natasha deciding they belong in a relationship.

Rest for the Weary by [livejournal.com profile] workerbee73 - Awesome rumination on whether or not to take their working relationship to the next step.

Like Teenage Gravity by [livejournal.com profile] londondrowning - They were secretly married through the events of the film.


Let the discussion begin!
 
 
( Post a new comment )
(Anonymous) on March 3rd, 2013 04:35 pm (UTC)
Re: Clint and Relationships
Reed Richards of the Fantastic Four in his research came across the multiverse and with the Captain Britain Corps, went about numbering the realities (because apparently that's that type of things the smartest guy in the universe does with his spare time; although it was probably just an excuse to find other Reeds and form the Council of Reeds to have someone to talk to who he didn't consider an idiot and can understand him). The core reality/primary continuity of Marvel was thus called Earth 616, everything else is considered out of continuity and takes place on a different numbered Earth, and isn't considered canon. So the Ultimateverse has a number, as does the MCU, Marvel Knights, Age of Apocalypse, etc.
As for the Clint/Kate relationship in the Hawkeye series, it's Barton's attempt at a healthy platonic relationship with a woman, as he tells her straight out he doesn't want to sleep with her so they can work together, because whenever he sleeps with someone that ensures that he will screw the relationship up.
[identity profile] chrisfaithalin.livejournal.com on March 4th, 2013 06:23 am (UTC)
Re: Clint and Relationships
Be that as it may, he is still relatively balanced in that universe. He isn't drowning in angst nor is he particularly angry or hateful. So portraying him as such is not AU.

Also, until Clint is dead, I, and any other fans, can choose to believe he will change. Isn't that what almost every story told is about...redemption and change. I mean there is a reason fans of Harry Potter are obsessed with writing stories for Draco. Or the reason Daryl Dixon is a fan favorite on The Walking Dead. We like to write/read stories about how humans can evolve. So in the end, I find there nothing inherently AU about many of the people's portrayal of Clint in these stories. He's never perfect, he's always rough around the edges, looking to kind of change his story and I think that is at its core what Clint is about.