K
KindofHere
Guest
............
Last edited by a moderator:
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I'm writing a new story in third person, but my last eight stories have been in first person, so I just finished writing a page without realizing that I had written it in first person. Son of a bitch.
Biting my tongue.
Again.
I'm writing a new story in third person, but my last eight stories have been in first person, so I just finished writing a page without realizing that I had written it in first person. Son of a bitch.
Biting my tongue.
Again.
As I may have written nearby recently, third limited and first are nearly interchangeable. Edit some pronouns and there you have it. Fun with first is that the narrator need not be reliable or even very coherent. Such can be spotlighted in third limited. First is just usually a bit more intimate.I hear ya. I always write in third person. I have the most difficulty with first person, present tense so I've been challenging myself by attempting it. It's fun and frustrating but I have a tendency to slip into third person on occasion.
As I may have written nearby recently, third limited and first are nearly interchangeable. Edit some pronouns and there you have it. Fun with first is that the narrator need not be reliable or even very coherent. Such can be spotlighted in third limited. First is just usually a bit more intimate.
What's third limited? Maybe I'll try that next. I guess writing for me is challenging myself to leave my comfort zone and try on different hats. I guess that's why I never stress about what I've written, it's more about my learning and entertainment than writing for others, which I've been told is a grievous error as one is supposed to write for an audience. Life is too short for me not to entertain myself even if it breaks all the rules of penning a short story.
Taking this week to read some of the AH author's works, get to know them and their styles a little more intimately. Too bad this thing called work gets in the way of writing. Going to try romance/ fairytale, this other story has me stalled. Unfortunately I'm not a romantic at heart so it's another challenge.![]()
Writing for an audience is a technology; writing for a story is an art. The two shouldn't be confused, though they do share much.
Never thought about it in quite that manner. So, entertaining myself by exercising my weaknesses, or perceived weaknesses, I am, in a sense, improving my technological abilities, thereby improving my capabilities of writing for an audience. The ironical aspects of this amuse me. Although, tbh, I find myself highly amusing at times, where often others do not.
@Hypoxia, I never fully grasped the freedom and choices first person narrative allows the author, thank you for this. This opens the door to some pretty colourful and wildly surreal opportunities for me. Don't worry I won't publish them, I've made enough people suffer through my experimental writing attempts, lol.
Writing for an audience is a technology; writing for a story is an art. The two shouldn't be confused, though they do share much.
I don't quite get what you mean by writing for an audience is "a technology". Just curious cause I'd like to understand your thought process.
Thanks for sharing your explanation. Before I go further, I'll post this warning:*Technical nerd alert*It could be a whole dissertation, but briefly...
Writing for an audience is placing the audience first. It is akin to illustration. It can be done very well, and good illustration does share inspiration with 'art for art's sake,' but it's purpose is not to create the story, or scene, or whatever, but to provide a visual to accompany or enhance it.
Writing for the story's sake doesn't concern itself with the audience; it writes the story for what it is or becomes. In a sense, as Lévi-Strauss put it for mythology, people do not write myths; myths write themselves through the minds of people.
The two do, as I said overlap greatly, and either can do it's job well or poorly; that depends on the overlap in the mind/hand of the producer. But they do differ significantly in orientation. The difference is also found in academic non-fiction: a report on findings is technology; developing a thesis/theory is art.
A few kinds of third-person POV.What's third limited?
You needn't get too incoherent, but first-person permits unreliable narration. Truth may emerge at trial or in overheard media reports. A large portion of humanity is psychotic -- run with that.@Hypoxia, I never fully grasped the freedom and choices first person narrative allows the author, thank you for this. This opens the door to some pretty colourful and wildly surreal opportunities for me. Don't worry I won't publish them, I've made enough people suffer through my experimental writing attempts, lol.
IOW writing for the audience is copywriting for which one is paid, and writing for the story is what we do on LIT.Writing for an audience is placing the audience first. <...> Writing for the story's sake doesn't concern itself with the audience; it writes the story for what it is or becomes.
I will have to disagree with you. Any form of art (and science) that is done to please someone rather than explore the reality of what it itself is, to me is a technology. It is the utilization of skills, whatever they may be, for a practical purpose, a purpose other than discovery itself. That does not diminish it to me, but it does make it different.
For me both what we call science and art are the same thing: they allow us to see the universe and beyond in a way we haven't, on a scale we can comprehend. Einstein is the greatest artist of the 20th Century; Picasso its greatest scientist. If what I write or paint or study is to please an audience, then there is nothing to discover; there is only the degree to which we please the other.
Too often we confuse science with technology; try looking at Stephen J. Gould's work to see more of how science is akin to art. There is much to be seen in looking at the cracks between and within things; audiences want the expected and expectable. The bourgeoisie denounced Géricault for not painting every hair in the riderless horses' manes.
* Third-shifting is like third-limited but the focus moves among players, hopefully not too disconcertingly.
ROSES ARE RED: "What a nice cock," I thought, just before I bit it off.
Anyway, first-person can be reliable or unreliable or unknowable. Depends on how much you want to fuck with readers' heads.
1. Third shifting sounds like an ADHD wet dream. Something I'm going to have to work up to, hard enough keeping one character's voice in my head let alone my own.But I am definitely mercurial so I believe it will be highly enjoyable and a pleasantly frustrating experience.
2. Roses are red....
The thing I delight in the most about your posts is the whimsical interludes you pepper your comments with. Whimsy is highly under rated and I get a kick out of seeing it in unexpected places.
3. I like mucking about with people. Prolly why I get such fun out of teasing posters on the GB. Sounds right up my valley.
Hope you're holding up well, you seem to have an admirable inner fortitude to deal with life's slings and arrows.
I never said to please an audience. I said it's only purpose is having an audience- not to instruct or be associated with any practical function.
And again, I'm not saying I have the end all be all definition, just what I've learned from studying the canon of Western philosophy on art and aesthetics, that's helped me in my creation and interpretation of art. I appreciate you sharing your thoughts on the matter.
In my experience, the more I try to focus on meaning or what people are going to think while I create, the less meaningful/more trite it becomes. If I focus only on what I know about writing a good story and apply that as I write, the better the story turns out.
*Oh, and the degree I studied for was a Bachelor's in Science, not Art- I just happened to go to a university with a stringent liberal arts and humanities program
If you're actually writing for an audience, then you need the technical skills to give them what they want. In my view, art/science doesn't need an audience; it just needs to be expressed. Since it demands real people to express it, however, we generally find that those who discover/create it want an audience. But that isn't creating for an audience; it's creating and hoping for an audience.
We had a poster here a while ago who declared Joyce to be a poor writer because he couldn't understand him. But Joyce didn't write for him; he wrote what he needed to write, and there are those of us who became Joyce's audience. Joyce's value as an artist didn't come from his seeking an audience; it came from his writing things that an unintended audience found intriguing, enlightening, and just plain fun. It may be easy to see an Odyssey in the life of an unimposing man in the course of one day in Dublin or a cyclical universe in the ring road around Dublin once someone has seen those things, but the artist is the one who sees them first for us.
You're essentially what I'm trying to say in different terms (learning how to write for an audience is part of perfecting the craft of writing, telling the story is the art), except science and art cannot be the same thing. Science involves natural processes, which is not Art. Art must be artificial, man made. If not, why would they be specifically separated on an academic level?
It is said only the Irish can truly understand Joyce. Have you read Ulysses? It's an extremely scholarly piece of literary fiction. But he was applying his ability as a storyteller, not as historian or philosopher. I'm not sure who the hell he wrote Finnegan's Wake for (other than Finnegan) because it might as well be in a drunk codex of another language.
I think it's interesting to talk about Art, even (or especially) if we don't agree, so thanks for engaging![]()