PastMaster
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Jun 6, 2018
- Posts
- 774
I guess my problem, then, is with the label of 'sensitivity reader'. It has connotations that i disagree with in literature.And that's fine; there is a place for offensive art, including erotica. But it's like my old English teacher used to say, "Understand the rules before you break the rules."
If someone is crafting something in a way that's intended to be offensive, fine. I probably won't engage with it, but I won't pooh pooh those that do; I used to laugh my ass off at South Park, Bill Hicks, Dennis Leary, etc. Those guys were trying to piss people off and make them laugh at the same time; it's not my jam anymore, but to each their own.
Things like sensitivity readers are there specifically for the people that aren't trying to offend people. Note that I said "not trying to offend people," not "trying to not offend people." The latter leads to weasel words, the kind of corporate doublespeak that I think you and PastMaster are trying to avoid.
The former, though, is just an admission that not everyone can know everything. If your goal is not to offend, if it's just to write an interesting story about something like a Black man and a white woman falling in love, and you have very little experience with Black culture, why wouldn't you both do your research and ask someone afterwards that does have that experience, "Hey, does this seem write?" A sensitivity reader is just the formalization of that process, asking a person with specialized knowledge first "does this seem right," and afterwards, "did I nail that?"
There's a certain level of arrogance that says "you shouldn't be offended," or "people didn't used to be offended by this." No, they probably were, they just didn't say anything, because they felt, rightly or wrongly, unsafe about doing so. If you want to write a good story, like I said, use the resources available to you. You can still push ahead without them, or ignore their input, but there are literally people that will look at your shit for free and help you make it better/more accurate. Why wouldn't you?
I do - if writing about cultures, and things i do not have first hand knowledge of, research and try and get things accurate - I have, for instance, had several long conversations with trans members here as i am writing a trans character into one of my stories. If that is what is meant by a sensitivity reader then I'm all for that.