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.