sr71plt
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Jul 18, 2006
- Posts
- 51,872
If you fell in love with your characters, you need to make your readers fall in love with them too. That's all.
this is precious.


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If you fell in love with your characters, you need to make your readers fall in love with them too. That's all.
That's funny. The only series of books that did that for me was the "Wheel of Time" series by Robert Jordan. Then he died and I was crushed. Then Brandon Sanderson finished the series and it was good, but not quite the same.I'm somewhat attached to my characters, but I actually get more attached to the characters in the stories that I read. Weird. I guess my writing isn't as good as what I read.
I have done bad things to my characters. One time I did very bad things to a character in the third or fourth chapter. I felt really bad after it posted. So bad that I'm sort of surprised that that chapter wasn't reported. The next chapter I pretended the 'bad' chapter was a bad dream. I still think about deleting that chapter.
I try to plan a story better now, so that I don't get so carried away by "Evil Greg", or at least recognize when it's coming.
There's something just so wong about that.
This article from last weekend's FT Weekend is about whether poetry and novels on certain topics should be banned from literary studies, or at least have a warning label slapped on them, if students find them upsetting....
This article from last weekend's FT Weekend is about whether poetry and novels on certain topics should be banned from literary studies, or at least have a warning label slapped on them, if students find them upsetting. (Hopefully you can get the gist of it by reading the introduction here.)
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I wrote a Comment on the article online saying:
Three reasons why emotionally difficult texts should be included in the curriculum:
First, there is a plethora of bad writing (in many senses) about rape, snuff deaths; topics which many young people like to access freely. If the canon of literature is cleaned up, there will be no critical perspective available in which to contextualise the 'bad' writing.
It’s important to learn to read these texts in the context of more violent times, when it was acceptable to joke about rape. Exploring our history in gory realism is more likely to help us understand humanity than idealistic denial.
Thirdly, to take a less controversial example, as a new mother I found I had become hyper emotionally sensitive. Had I been studying Lady Macbeth’s lines: ‘I have given suck ...‘ I might have found them upsetting. Of course: this is a declaration designed to have shock value. What I would look for would not be censorship, it would be tutorial support which could draw out my subjective understanding of the lines, and balance that contribution with objective understanding.
That would suppose an academic system geared to high quality teaching, whereas what we have got is one geared to high quality research.
If I responded, I'd probably start off with the view that students shouldn't be protected from everything that would upset them. That's how we've wound up with a generation of people who turn away from anything they don't want to deal with, refuse to take responsibility for themselves, and expect babysitting services. See that even here in the Literotica forum.
I agree they should not be protected from EVERYTHING that would upset them, but especially younger students should be protected from some things. I would never want an 8 year old to read the stories I post on Literotica (although I suspect some are and maybe even posting their own) and I wouldn't want them to go to the movies and sit through "Caligula" or something else like that.If I responded, I'd probably start off with the view that students shouldn't be protected from everything that would upset them. That's how we've wound up with a generation of people who turn away from anything they don't want to deal with, refuse to take responsibility for themselves, and expect babysitting services. See that even here in the Literotica forum.
Those younger students have already been exposed to violence, sex, politics, intolerance, bad taste, and bad food. What are you protecting them from? How will 'protecting' them help them face the Real World? The disease analogy: We can protect kids in isolation tanks, or let them develop immune systems. Which works better?I agree they should not be protected from EVERYTHING that would upset them, but especially younger students should be protected from some things.
No, I'm not saying put them in isolation tanks (although that would solve the problem of the little brats getting on my nerves) I'm just saying don't intentionally infect them with malaria.Those younger students have already been exposed to violence, sex, politics, intolerance, bad taste, and bad food. What are you protecting them from? How will 'protecting' them help them face the Real World? The disease analogy: We can protect kids in isolation tanks, or let them develop immune systems. Which works better?
Nobody should be protected from upsetting elements. Reality is uncomfortable. Reality doesn't care about your fragile sensibilities. If you can't deal with reality, reality will surely deal with YOU. We hear Tromp and Hillary whining that their opponents aren't treating them fair. Boo hoo. We hear parents whining that Mark Twain or George Orwell or Ms Rowling will corrupt their kids' minds. As if life hasn't already fucked them over. Yawn.
I don't think 8 year olds should be allowed to buy whiskey or cigarettes or go into porn movies. Nor do I think they should be forced to work in brothels or sold into sex slavery. If that is being over-protective then I guess I'm guilty.
Personally I'm fine with warning labels if something is really graphic. But I'd confine them to detailed descriptions of rape and murder. (The rape of Cassandra doesn't qualify). And I can't think of anything that really belongs in a school curriculum that gets that incredibly graphic. So I can't imagine we'll need to print up too many labels.
If I responded, I'd probably start off with the view that students shouldn't be protected from everything that would upset them. That's how we've wound up with a generation of people who turn away from anything they don't want to deal with, refuse to take responsibility for themselves, and expect babysitting services. See that even here in the Literotica forum.
The article I posted talks specifically about the medieval poem Gawaine and the Greene Knight. Gawaine, the ultimate knight in shining armour, is entangled in a net of sexual intrigue in the story and barely escapes with his life. He feels that his honour is tarnished although others still regard him as a non-pareil. Apparently, this ancient poem now has a warning label on it as a result of an obscure - even disputed - rape joke in it.
The scan of the article is too fuzzy for me to read, I'm sorry to say. But the whole article is available online, and worth a read. Just Google "Gawain Trigger Warning" and you'll find it.
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I prefer a good discussion of a sensitive topic to a trigger warning. It's better for students to confront stuff that may make them uncomfortable than to opt out. It's up to the teacher to provide a setting in which students can freely discuss their reactions to difficult material.
Okay, I admit it. I let my inner Yeti out and he bested me. I should have been more reserved and kind in my second post. My only excuse is that exploitation of children is a high-degree hot spot for me and I let my emotions get the better of my brain. Classic Literature should not be censored. period. I couldn't read the article, and didn't take the time to try and find it online, and if that is what this is all about then I stand chastised and corrected.I think that's going a bit far, GC. Nobody is arguing that anyone under the legal age for protection against these things should be exposed to them. (I don't think anyone should be forced to work in a brothel or sold into slavery of any kind, either.)
'Protecting' over 18 year old college students - the subjects of the newspaper article - from classic literature is another matter.
I've come to realize I'm way off topic from what NS put out there. Had I read the article, I probably wouldn't have commented, but all I read were the posts and unfortunately I took them out of context. But I think I have made my stance clear so I'm going to plow onI think people need to start being prepared for real life younger than college. Sorry. They shouldn't suddenly be pulled out from underneath mother's parachute and dumped in life the day they are legal to be doing stuff they should have been thinking about and dealing with intellectually before then. I have some granddaughters who are going to be getting one hell of a surprise life whammee one of these days soon.