LoveIsAllYouNeed
Experienced
- Joined
- Jun 26, 2009
- Posts
- 75
The title is a line from the movie "Kingdom of Heaven".
It raises a question much on my mind this morning.
What obligation do we, as writers, owe ourselves, our audience and thus the world when it comes to the principles we advocate?
I can advocate Love, as it is a principle I believe in.
I could never advocate rape, under any conditions.
When I write, I consider, "what if someone is inspired to emulate what I've written ... to view others as I've described, to treat others as I've described?"
It creates a sense of social responsibility to others to not describe something unless I've validated it for myself, through experience.
I've been reading stories in the bdsm category, and I am appalled at the sheer volume of dehumanizing behaviour which, if carried out in real life, would lead to the destruction of self-esteem with all the dysfunctions that go with it.
And I wonder: does the author really believe this is how things should be done? Is this what the author wants others to believe? Is this why there are so many dysfunctional individuals involved in bdsm? Is this why there are so many preds?
As writers we are part of the process that conditions people to think and act in certain ways. One need only look at stories like Lord of the Rings, Star Trek or Star Wars to see the influence stories have on society.
So when an author advocates kidnapping and rape and through deus ex machina the victim "loves it", exactly what kind of world is being created?
It raises a question much on my mind this morning.
What obligation do we, as writers, owe ourselves, our audience and thus the world when it comes to the principles we advocate?
I can advocate Love, as it is a principle I believe in.
I could never advocate rape, under any conditions.
When I write, I consider, "what if someone is inspired to emulate what I've written ... to view others as I've described, to treat others as I've described?"
It creates a sense of social responsibility to others to not describe something unless I've validated it for myself, through experience.
I've been reading stories in the bdsm category, and I am appalled at the sheer volume of dehumanizing behaviour which, if carried out in real life, would lead to the destruction of self-esteem with all the dysfunctions that go with it.
And I wonder: does the author really believe this is how things should be done? Is this what the author wants others to believe? Is this why there are so many dysfunctional individuals involved in bdsm? Is this why there are so many preds?
As writers we are part of the process that conditions people to think and act in certain ways. One need only look at stories like Lord of the Rings, Star Trek or Star Wars to see the influence stories have on society.
So when an author advocates kidnapping and rape and through deus ex machina the victim "loves it", exactly what kind of world is being created?