NonCon and Reluctance... dealing with the apple and the orange in the same basket

H

HandsInTheDark

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If non-con horrifies you, please skip this post. Thanks.

The fact that these categories are combined here has never bothered me much, because I've written stuff that blurs the line, so the combination takes away a hard decision at posting time.

But some people who are perfectly fine with a character being aggressively pressured into sex ("aggressive males are hot") would be absolutely not ok with forced sex ("abusive males are not hot"). And since some people react very badly to fiction about non-consent, the whole category becomes a minefield.

Noncon itself is a weird category. On one end of the spectrum there's the classic rape fantasy - the man comes out of the shadows and forces sex, or at least the variation of violence that involves penetration. There are people who get off on this fiction, almost to the exclusion of other sexual interest. But in the real world, this kind of noncon is thankfully rare. Rape in the real world is more often a sexual encounter that starts off erotic but then escalates past the permission given by the female; it's a disagreement of intent or a loss of self-control or just a manipulative bastard intent on forcing his will. The emotional impact is different; in the real world it's just as damaging but in fiction the audience who likes it appears to be honoring a very different fetish.

Then there's the legitimately grey area of high pressure seduction, where a guy (reverse the genders if you want, but I never do) uses the most aggressive of sexual play and manipulation to get the girl ratcheted up to she'll point she'll whisper a shaking yes (darker: fail to articulate a clear no), even if she'll regret it the next day. It misses being rape only because the woman could extricate herself if she chose to; she doesn't because of some fear like disappointing the guy, or just wild arousal, or (on the darker side) a threat like blackmail or economic retaliation. Physical force isn't employed. I've seen a sharp divide in opinions on this, some people find it smoking hot reluctance and some consider it rape or close enough to be horrific.

Beyond that there's the usual repeated teasing of romance and erotic play that slowly and more comfortably brings the woman to Yes. The male can be aggressive in these, but he backs off and lets the girl simmer in between, and the story is about the repeated advance and retreat and a slow shift in what's permissible.

My issue is these all go in the same category - but if I read my fans right, there are three different fetishes with not much in common in this range.

1. The fetish of violence and abused innocence - the woman had no choice and the eroticism is in the fact that she was compelled, over her strident and then pleading Nos. (At a guess, a number of women who want this kind of writing have abuse in their backgrounds, but not all of them.) For some the appeal is just the rape itself, for others there's appeal in watching the female forced to learn to want more. There's no romance here in general; and the lovelessness is part of the point. You will be used, and to your horror you may come to crave that, but if so that's just worse for you.

2. The fetish of Aggressive Maleness, the male who wants you so hard he'll push limits and break rules. It's dark because it teeters on the edge of blatant rape, but the woman is worn down and made to welter in need and a desire to please (or placate), and the heat comes from seeing her yield. As this is fiction, it often end with her having massive orgasms because we all know she wanted it all along; but that aspect is there for male readers and I'm not sure it works for females quite as well. It can end in Romance, but only if the guy was an old hand at this kind of play but decides to settle down with this particular conquest. If not it's the Hot One Night Stand story, and the woman comes out wetter but perhaps wiser. (Or just wetter and sluttier.)

3. The more mainstream fetish of courtship. Highly sexualized wooing, repeatedly tempting the girl closer and closer to just opening her legs and giving herself, even if at the beginning she was initially uncertain about the guy. This is your smiling, too-knowing handsome male assertively luring the woman down a well-worn (but not by her, though perhaps by him) path. It ends in romance, much more often than not.

These three fetishes don't seem to overlap in any one person, though I'm on thinner ice claiming that. But all three groups have to go to the same category to have their itch scratched, and for some the other two fetishes are dull or horrifying. (I don't think you can claim that last group belongs in Romance, because Reluctance involves pushing a limit and some people find any pushing of limits horrific.)

Have people who've written in this area found effective ways to cope with not setting off the different kinds of readers in this category? I get plenty of nice feedback, but I'm noticed that the writing I do for group (3) hates very high and the writing I do that covers (2) and touches (1) rates a tenth or two lower, and from the comments I think it's because expectations get challenged. One person's reluctance, etc.

The obvious answer - tell them up front how far it's going to go - is a non-starter. I'll take a two tenths ratings hit before I'll give away plot like that. And foreshadowing doesn't seem to work.

So how do people who write in this category deal?

Also - while asking for this is pointless.. should the categories be split?
 
If non-con horrifies you, please skip this post. Thanks.

The fact that these categories are combined here has never bothered me much, because I've written stuff that blurs the line, so the combination takes away a hard decision at posting time.

But some people who are perfectly fine with a character being aggressively pressured into sex ("aggressive males are hot") would be absolutely not ok with forced sex ("abusive males are not hot"). And since some people react very badly to fiction about non-consent, the whole category becomes a minefield.

Noncon itself is a weird category. On one end of the spectrum there's the classic rape fantasy - the man comes out of the shadows and forces sex, or at least the variation of violence that involves penetration. There are people who get off on this fiction, almost to the exclusion of other sexual interest. But in the real world, this kind of noncon is thankfully rare. Rape in the real world is more often a sexual encounter that starts off erotic but then escalates past the permission given by the female; it's a disagreement of intent or a loss of self-control or just a manipulative bastard intent on forcing his will. The emotional impact is different; in the real world it's just as damaging but in fiction the audience who likes it appears to be honoring a very different fetish.

Then there's the legitimately grey area of high pressure seduction, where a guy (reverse the genders if you want, but I never do) uses the most aggressive of sexual play and manipulation to get the girl ratcheted up to she'll point she'll whisper a shaking yes (darker: fail to articulate a clear no), even if she'll regret it the next day. It misses being rape only because the woman could extricate herself if she chose to; she doesn't because of some fear like disappointing the guy, or just wild arousal, or (on the darker side) a threat like blackmail or economic retaliation. Physical force isn't employed. I've seen a sharp divide in opinions on this, some people find it smoking hot reluctance and some consider it rape or close enough to be horrific.

Beyond that there's the usual repeated teasing of romance and erotic play that slowly and more comfortably brings the woman to Yes. The male can be aggressive in these, but he backs off and lets the girl simmer in between, and the story is about the repeated advance and retreat and a slow shift in what's permissible.

My issue is these all go in the same category - but if I read my fans right, there are three different fetishes with not much in common in this range.

1. The fetish of violence and abused innocence - the woman had no choice and the eroticism is in the fact that she was compelled, over her strident and then pleading Nos. (At a guess, a number of women who want this kind of writing have abuse in their backgrounds, but not all of them.) For some the appeal is just the rape itself, for others there's appeal in watching the female forced to learn to want more. There's no romance here in general; and the lovelessness is part of the point. You will be used, and to your horror you may come to crave that, but if so that's just worse for you.

2. The fetish of Aggressive Maleness, the male who wants you so hard he'll push limits and break rules. It's dark because it teeters on the edge of blatant rape, but the woman is worn down and made to welter in need and a desire to please (or placate), and the heat comes from seeing her yield. As this is fiction, it often end with her having massive orgasms because we all know she wanted it all along; but that aspect is there for male readers and I'm not sure it works for females quite as well. It can end in Romance, but only if the guy was an old hand at this kind of play but decides to settle down with this particular conquest. If not it's the Hot One Night Stand story, and the woman comes out wetter but perhaps wiser. (Or just wetter and sluttier.)

3. The more mainstream fetish of courtship. Highly sexualized wooing, repeatedly tempting the girl closer and closer to just opening her legs and giving herself, even if at the beginning she was initially uncertain about the guy. This is your smiling, too-knowing handsome male assertively luring the woman down a well-worn (but not by her, though perhaps by him) path. It ends in romance, much more often than not.

These three fetishes don't seem to overlap in any one person, though I'm on thinner ice claiming that. But all three groups have to go to the same category to have their itch scratched, and for some the other two fetishes are dull or horrifying. (I don't think you can claim that last group belongs in Romance, because Reluctance involves pushing a limit and some people find any pushing of limits horrific.)

Have people who've written in this area found effective ways to cope with not setting off the different kinds of readers in this category? I get plenty of nice feedback, but I'm noticed that the writing I do for group (3) hates very high and the writing I do that covers (2) and touches (1) rates a tenth or two lower, and from the comments I think it's because expectations get challenged. One person's reluctance, etc.

The obvious answer - tell them up front how far it's going to go - is a non-starter. I'll take a two tenths ratings hit before I'll give away plot like that. And foreshadowing doesn't seem to work.

So how do people who write in this category deal?

Also - while asking for this is pointless.. should the categories be split?

This isn't News Writing 101. You're writing creatively. You're writing fiction. I'd never divulge the plot up front. Save the upside down pyramid for newspaper writing but not for creative writing.

This is Literotica. Everything is acceptable and permissible but for stories with characters under 18 and bestiality. I'd say have fun with it.

If you want to write about rape, write about rape. If you want to write about murder, write about murder. Life is more horrifying than fiction. If a reader is bothered by what you write and what you've written, they'll read another writer, someone who writes about romance with happy endings with rainbows and unicorns.

Just as you must write for your audience, you must also write for you. You must write what you know. Be true to yourself in your craft.
 
There's a reason why non/con has generally low scores. It's because different people have different ideas of what a good non/con story is.

But I think you're right, non/con and reluctance are almost there same, but at the same time, depending on your fantasy, they could be miles apart.

I'm not sure if splitting categories is the solution, since there will be too many.
 
The obvious answer - tell them up front how far it's going to go - is a non-starter. I'll take a two tenths ratings hit before I'll give away plot like that. And foreshadowing doesn't seem to work.

Could you do this without giving too much away? Furryburt does this at the start of Hunted without disclosing the plot

Disclaimer - Please do not skip this!*

This story includes scenes of graphic non-consensual sex that some readers may find offensive. They are of a stronger nature than many within this category. You have been warned ;-)


and DeathandTaxes also

Squick/Trigger Warnings: This chapter contains scenes with moderate pain/impact play, restraint, and ass play. If those things are not your cup of tea, then don't say you weren't warned. Enjoy. :)

although I do wonder if readers skip the authors note, they often seem to ask questions in the comments that I'd covered there already.
 
Apples and oranges sums it up well.

As much as I hate non con, I do enjoy some reluctance material, but because the two are mixed-and I think shouldn't be-I don't even try to look for anything I'd like there, because minefield is a good description.

I have a reluctance story I wrote and it has consent, the male gives the girl several chances at walking away, but there's a reason she sticks it out. Its more sleazy than any kind of 'rapey'

I have had several feedbacks asking for a sequel, but they express its because "Josh" didn't 'really give it to her' in other words, they apparently are the rape fans, not the reluctance fans.

One person offered to pay me a commission to write a sequel to it and I considered it and asked, what he wanted to see and bottom line he wanted flat out rape so I declined.

But during our conversation we discussed non consent and I mentioned the type of story the site supposedly wants to see....looks like rape for however long then it turns into...okay, it was a role play, a birthday present, she paid the guys etc...something to say "okay, not rape'

The guy said to me, "Those are boner killers" I want rape. That comment is only worth mentioning because he said he has no trouble finding flat out rape stories on a site that claims they will reject them.

Everyone here knows I loathe the topic, but looking at it from strictly an author's eyes. I can identify that it is a tricky and tough category to get good marks/feedback in and its because of that mix that should not be mixed.

Write reluctance, the non con fans blast you for watered down crap.

Write the 'lit sanctioned' version of rape, but oh, wait...you get hit by the 'you killed my boner' guy as well as people who don't liek rape even if at the end of the story its not.

Write flat out rape you're burned by the reluctance, not rape crowd.

IT's not as bad as LW, but it has extreme factions and nothing seems to make them all happy.

because again, they should not be together.

On a competitor site they have just reluctance alone, they don't allow rape, but I think they have an 'extreme' type category.

My suggestion? Put non con alone and let the rape fans have their fix and in order not to add a category to lit, put mind control in with reluctance. It fits. The person is being controlled somehow into doing things they would normally not, but seeing they are not 'themselves' its not rapey because they think they're enjoying it, in most cases.

Of course I'll add that the site doesn't do itself any favors claiming a rule against real rape stories and having a section called non con in the first place. Its easy to see why there are so many rape stories here, if you don't look at the rules you see non con and think, okay I can write this here.

IT should be changed, they should be separated. Oh, and the rule should actually be enforced far more than it is.
 
Rather than a new category

How about a filter for the "new" stories so only categories you want will appear?
 
How about a filter for the "new" stories so only categories you want will appear?

How would you filter it? "Show me reluctance, not non con?" Show me just brother/sister not mom/son show me group sex with only FFM?

That's what tags and titles are for.

But even in those reluctance/non con would not be easy to decipher. I think the author's note's are the key, the OP says he will take the beating to not give something away, which BTW tells me he is writing along the lines of some type of twist to the end taking the edge off the event, but doesn't feel he should admit that.

That's his decision, but to other authors who care about score or trying to appeal to the right readership its not a bad idea.
 
although I do wonder if readers skip the authors note, they often seem to ask questions in the comments that I'd covered there already.

As a reader, I most certainly read the author's notes. I figure if they wrote one, it would probably behoove me to read it. I also don't want to get side swiped while I'm reading; I have certain distastes and triggers that I'd rather avoid getting surprised by.
 
Could you do this without giving too much away? Furryburt does this at the start of Hunted without disclosing the plot

Disclaimer - Please do not skip this!*

This story includes scenes of graphic non-consensual sex that some readers may find offensive. They are of a stronger nature than many within this category. You have been warned ;-)


although I do wonder if readers skip the authors note, they often seem to ask questions in the comments that I'd covered there already.

I've read that story and the note definitely belongs there; if I wrote something similar I'd have no problem adding a disclaimer too. But I don't write that level of brutal. In my stuff part of the appeal is not knowing how far the guy will go. But of course that's also exactly the problem.

I suppose if the category were split there'd be endless argument: "That's noncon not reluctance!" "No it isn't!"

For a moment I contemplated a scale of 1 to 100, 1 for barely even Reluctance and 100 for full on brutal rape.

1:
She lowered her head, shyly, and only her parted lips suggested his suggestion had affected her. But as his hand settled under her chin and raised her head, she nodded, hesitatingly. "I... I knew what you wanted when I came in," she whispered softly, eyes dropping. "I just... please, you need to go slowly..."

100:
His massive hand gripped the stained blouse and hauled down. The cloth shredded from her body and she was driven to her knees, the fury in her eyes giving way to terror. He pulled his belt and in a few short, brutal seconds, her wrists were bound. He slapped her across the face and made her look into his eyes. "It would have gone so much better for you if you'd said Yes, Princess. When I'm done with you you won't be able to speak at all - but you'll still be able to come, mindlessly and out of fear."

The problem is that the extremes are easy but what's a 50? And Lit would need to support a feature that said "only show stories between 20 and 55". That's unlikely to appear.
 
Cannot see how rape can be anything other than rape. Regardless of how it is couched in lovey dovey terms like non consensual it is still rape.
I know I know I am obviously wrong again, how the heck could not giving consent ever be called rape. Gosh I hear those worms calling.
 
Sheesh, all these other authors talk about getting feedback and comments from readers and I just...don't. What am I doing wrong?

Anyway, the splitting wouldn't work because it would force authors far less driven than you to make a decision. Just take a look at the tagging system, in which authors happily make up their own bizzaro tags for their stories.

The solution? A Kickstarter campaign to create an AI that can read stories, assign appropriate tags and impartially but accurately judge content of all the stories on Lit.
 
I think you're overly concerned with persuading "consent lovers" to like, understand, or appreciate non consent.

Instead, cherish the difference. For the most part, if a story is in its correct category (whatever that may be) particularly if its a controversial one, most people who wander into that neighborhood used their GPS to get there intentionally. Let them read and enjoy, and let the uninterested continue choosing not to.

Aka.. Drop it? Stop defending your category of choice and just have your fun with it. Console yourself that the same can be said about your arch nemesis' category of choice. Equal opportunity drop its to all!
 
So maybe the OP's proposal is to create "rape" and "not rape" subdivisions of the non-consent categories?

Non Consent/Reluctance isn't even one of the biggest categories on Lit, so why would the administrators subdivide it? To please a few highly replaceable writers?
 
Splitting categories just isn't going to happen. It's a logistical nightmare.

If it was going to happen, it would have happened to Loving Wives years ago. That's where the most stark divides of readerships within a category are, and the category has more than enough traffic to split into two categories that would do just fine on their own.
 
Surely, non-consent is very difficult in a short story. The aim is to mirror the Stockholm syndrome with the "victim" slowly changing to desire the treatment and not want to return to a previous life.

You can't do that in a 3 page Lit story.
 
Sheesh, all these other authors talk about getting feedback and comments from readers and I just...don't. What am I doing wrong?

I write in categories (SciFi, Reluctance, NonErotic) where there are fewer readers and writers and it's easier to stand out. I do a lot with character development, plot and and setting. I'm not writing strokers or aiming at specific kinks; my characters are realistic, so my readers can see themselves in them, and engage deeply. My settings often have at least a pinch of fantastic element, so my readers tend to be the imaginative sort.

It turns out to be a recipe for attracting bright, interesting, engaged fans. Despite the fact that some of my stories brush against noncon and most of them could be a handbook for gender essentialism, I get virtually no hate mail, and even the few fans who've raised eyebrows at elements of my work get into thoughtful discussions with me about it. My interaction with authors here has been uneven at best, but my readers are the best. That's why I'm wondering if there's a better way to take care of them.

Obligatory text to keep this topical: Noncon is an impossibly broad category. In one of my stories, men kidnap women for long term relationships. It's clearly noncon in concept - but the concept arises out of arranged marriages. Arranged marriages are fundamentally noncon by any definition, but cultures that practiced it considered it worlds apart from rape. A lot of people here are glued to applying the western world mindset circa 1970 toward sex (partners choose freely and all are over 18) to the fiction here, but try to sell that view in medieval China, or Persia in almost any century... write historically and either you can't post here at all (underage) or you'd end up in noncon more often than not.
 
Non Consent/Reluctance isn't even one of the biggest categories on Lit, so why would the administrators subdivide it? To please a few highly replaceable writers?

Would you be interested in expanding on "highly replaceable"?
 
Would you be interested in expanding on "highly replaceable"?

Thousands of authors have posted stories here and new authors are submitting stories all the time. Quite a few of them are even good. If one author gets annoyed and takes their game someplace else, then there will always be another one to step in.
 
Thousands of authors have posted stories here and new authors are submitting stories all the time. Quite a few of them are even good. If one author gets annoyed and takes their game someplace else, then there will always be another one to step in.

Ah, ok. That's not as specifically targeted as it sounded.

A reason to subdivide would be to please fans. As I noted the blurred category actually makes it simpler for me, but i would rather make it simpler for readers. The same argument applies to LW, not that I write there.

I get that dividing a category means going back and reclassifying thousands of stories (or there isn't much point). No one has time. But to me at least, the current category is like buying a can of grey paint. Some contain charcoal grey and some are off white. Surprise!
 
Ah, ok. That's not as specifically targeted as it sounded.

Sorry if it sounded like I was targeting you. That was not my intent.

I figured that the author's title and description should be enough to keep easily offended readers away from stories they don't want to read, but if readers really did use those to avoid the stories that weren't up their alley then we probably wouldn't get some of the comments I hear about.

The categories could be subdivided another dozen ways and it probably still wouldn't keep people from reading stories that offend them somehow. That seems like a sort of masochism, and it extends beyond erotica. Some people listen to political commentary that they find offensive just to get their own blood boiling -- it's the same thing, I think.
 
I think you're overly concerned with persuading "consent lovers" to like, understand, or appreciate non consent.

Read the first sentence of the thread again. The people you think I'm targeting are exactly the ones I recommended stay out of the thread. Strike one. At any rate I don't care what people here like or dislike; I save those concerns for people who actually read my stuff.

I set ignore on someone I think you alluded to, to avoid the sniping over this topic; please feel free to do the same to me if I annoy you.
 
Read the first sentence of the thread again. The people you think I'm targeting are exactly the ones I recommended stay out of the thread. Strike one. At any rate I don't care what people here like or dislike; I save those concerns for people who actually read my stuff.

I set ignore on someone I think you alluded to, to avoid the sniping over this topic; please feel free to do the same to me if I annoy you.

The quantity of words posted multiplied by the quantity of posts in multiple threads all on this topic indicate that you care and you care a lot. Interception, ran back for a touchdown, followed by a successful two point conversion during which your team committed a penalty, 15 yards assessed on the ensuing kickoff. :nana:
 
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in the old days psychotherapists endured scrutiny that served to desensitize us to the shit patients bring to the couch. I went thru the mill but its uncommon today. I've seen therapists lose it and go apeshit over what their patients reveal.

In Vietnam I went apeshit the first few times I was under fire. My 2nd night there some clown dropped two 500 pound bombs close by. You get used to it. Later, I enjoyed watching the battleship NEW JERSEY kick some serious ass with its 2000 pound shells dropped atop some gooks close by. A year later I stayed in bed unless a mortar or rocket fell outside the door.

People read our wares for vicarious experience theyre not likely to have. Sensitive writers are as useless as noob head shrinkers and noob army new guys. Why is rape worse than murder? or Titanic sinking?

Someone get Lovecraft a sweet puppy.
 
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