LJ_Reloaded
バクスター の
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2010
- Posts
- 21,217
After months of studying my preferred themes I've discovered that I primarily love stories that are heavily based on the subversion, deconstruction and reconstruction of plot devices (tropes) and genres.
To me, when you subvert, deconstruct and then reconstruct, that is where the most growth potential in story-writing lies. That, and "my xxx is different" (otherwise known as "xxx, with a twist", or "xxx: reimagined"*). While original stories are hard to come by nowadays, this to me is the closest that one can get. I would say that deconstruction is the weakest of all three and reconstruction is the strongest: anyone can break down a genre/trope, but to rebuild it in a more exciting way that helps suspension of dlsbelief requires true mastery.
So just give me a plot device or genre, subvert it masterfully, and hand it back to me reconstructed, and I'm more likely to want to read/watch it...
* although I wasn't feeling "Battlestar Galactica reimagined" for most of its series run...
To me, when you subvert, deconstruct and then reconstruct, that is where the most growth potential in story-writing lies. That, and "my xxx is different" (otherwise known as "xxx, with a twist", or "xxx: reimagined"*). While original stories are hard to come by nowadays, this to me is the closest that one can get. I would say that deconstruction is the weakest of all three and reconstruction is the strongest: anyone can break down a genre/trope, but to rebuild it in a more exciting way that helps suspension of dlsbelief requires true mastery.
So just give me a plot device or genre, subvert it masterfully, and hand it back to me reconstructed, and I'm more likely to want to read/watch it...
* although I wasn't feeling "Battlestar Galactica reimagined" for most of its series run...