Monday, April 30, 2012
Letter To the Leaves: Bald is Beautiful
You will be happy to know that I have completed 50 frames of my novel. However now that I am at this point it is clear that I am not ready to wrap up the first draft quite yet. I don't want to limit the narratives running through my novel so I am going to keep writing frames until I have fully resolved the conflicts I have created.
This week I want to shed some light on the type of person I am in the hopes that you might better appreciate the message I am trying to convey to you, my Fellow Contributors, with this magazine and my blogs. And being that this blog is my soapbox, I wanted to give you a personal story so that the next time you are feeling down, you have something to read that leaves you saying someone is here with me and understands what I am going through.
When I was two years old I was diagnosed with an auto-immune disorder called Alopecia Areata Universalis. This disorder changes the body's immune system and causes the victim's hair to fall out all over their body. I don't have hair on my arms, legs, head or face. I don't even have hair in my ears or nose. There is nothing medically wrong with me other than that my hair doesn't grow.
Growing up was interesting to say the least. You can imagine what a challenge facing my classmates in elementary and middle school was with patches of hair missing (It wasn't until 8th grade that I decided to shave my head and go bald. My hair has not grown back since). I can still remember all the questions everyone would ask me:
Are you sick?
Did you know you look like Powder?
Do you have cancer?
It wasn't until I went to college that I discovered the one thing that had made me feel like an outcast, was what made me beautiful, unique...Bermuda.
Being bald is what gives me character.
My loving Mom deserves a lot of credit (and thanks and love) because she took the time to educated my teachers and classmates about my disorder. She supported me and told me that just because someone is different doesn't make them bad or ugly or any less deserving of respect.
And when Nick, Slick, Jack and I started this magazine it was this ideal that became the re-bar of our foundation. That different is not bad or any less deserving of respect.
Being different is building the HOOVER DAM.
Bering different is landing on the MOON.
Being different is ending SEGREGATION.
Being different is accepting GAY MARRIAGE
Being different is electing a CATHOLIC or BLACK for president.
Being different makes AMERICA great.
Not being able to grow hair on my arms, legs, head and face has made me more aware of the inner uniqueness each of us possess with our voice.
There is a story behind each of us. A story waiting for words to express it.
I dare you to share yours.
As Always
Undoubtedly Yours,
Bermuda the Man
P.S.
If you know anyone with Alopecia Areata or you yourself have it, please email me at
Bermuda.Editor@gmail.com
I would love to answer your questions and provide support in anyway I can.
For more information on Alopecia Areata please click the following link, NAAF
Friday, April 27, 2012
Brain Control: What Makes Literature so Lovely?
Thursday, April 26, 2012
Art: Magical Mystery or Definable Beauty?
Wednesday, April 25, 2012
Passive Aggression: A Rant
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
"Your Story Sucks..."--Steve Zelt
Monday, April 23, 2012
Letter To The Leaves: Ima Show You How Great I am
This is suppose to be the week where I continue my series and speak about Framing. But this morning something happened that has sent me in a tail spin of inspiration and sharing it with you is the only way to right my flight.
I was posting a clip from Youtube today for Shakespeare's birthday (it was an audio recording of Act III of Titus Andronicus) before class when I came across this video. It was the advertisement but instead of automatically clicking 'skip' I decided to continue watching the video as I heard Ali's voice in the background.
As I starting watching more and more, it was the commentary going on in the background that made me realize that Ali was a poet. A smile stretched across my face as I began to appreciate the poetry coming from Ali's mouth.
Here's a few of the lines he said in the video
"Ima show you, how great I am.
Last night I cut the light off in my bedroom, hit the switch, and was in the bed before the room was dark.
Ima show you, how great I am.
Only last week, I murdered a rock, injured a stone, hospitalized a brick, Im so mean I make medicine sick.
Ima show you, how great I am."
I was taken aback by the images he created, but more show by his delivery of his lines. It was the force and bravado that he carried in his voice that gave me goosebumps.
I think sometimes we get caught up in what kinds of narratives we are going to tell with words or what poetry can tell us about the human condition and we forget the power and inspiration and motivation words can give us.
Language is unique from others in that it unites us all in a blanket of expression. We can share ideas, fears, loves, pain and strength. We can come together as one and also be torn apart.
Here are some of the lines that Sylvester Stallone said in the video:
You, me, or nobody, is gonna hit as hard as life; but it ain't about how hard you hit, its about how hard you can get hit and keep moving forward, how much you can take and keep moving forward.
That's how winning is done."
Nobody has the right to tell you who or what you can be. Follow your heart and get what you deserve. We all have greatness inside of us, waiting for the opportunity to find a way to make an indelible difference on this Earth and the people who inhabit it. Whether with word, deed or song, we are all bards of humanity, all musicians of bliss, and all doers of good.
I want to end this by sharing a few lines from the video that really spoke to me and I hope do the same to you.
"Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate.
Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure.
It is our light, not our darkness that most frightens us.
Your playing small does not serve the world.
There is nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people won’t feel insecure around you.
We are all meant to shine, as children do.
It’s not just in some of us; it’s in everyone.
And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same.
As we are liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates others.
Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate, our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure."
As Always
Undoubtedly Yours,
Bermuda
Playing with the Medium Part 3: Implicit Goals
Friday, April 20, 2012
Cannabis Culture: Writing on 4/20
Thursday, April 19, 2012
Trapped in 140 Characters: Are Twitter and Facebook Ruining our Capacity for Argument?
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
Building Your Writing Toolkit: Part 6.3 – Bits and Characters, the Tool for the Job
A fictional character can get the better of its author in a number of ways, but the most common way that characters have of escaping your control is by turning into somebody you know, or worse yet by turning into you.
Hemingway could get away with writing characters who were basically Hemingway because, in spite of his tremendous unpopularity with feminist audiences (and probably the root cause of that dislike), Hemingway was a stupendous badass with giant brass balls who killed large animals and fascists, and who slept with lots and lots of beautiful women. The same is true of Ian Fleming, who wrote the James Bond books based on exploits he had when he was actually working as a secret agent. These men were not your average author and stories about characters who were thinly-veiled versions of the author were still interesting to read because the authors were interesting characters themselves.
John Irving, though, is not very interesting. He’s a writer who has been a writer for a long time; the narrators of his stories tend to be writers and many of them are named John – they also mostly live in New England, encounter bears, have strange experiences at hotels and are fixated with wrestling in one way or another. John Irving’s Johns are boring, so he does the smart thing and makes the book about the interesting characters (Owen Meany, Fran, State of Maine, Freud, Jenny Fields, Roberta Muldoon) who surround the various faceless, clever-but-boring Johns who tell the stories in his books. You, however, are probably not as smart as John Irving and if you are you still probably haven’t written as many books as he has, so you’re not at a point where you can write yourself into your novel.
The problem with writing yourself as a fictional protagonist is that you’ll find the character slowly becoming the coolest, most awesome, smartest, prettiest, most fashionable version of you, which I’m sure will be wonderfully masturbatory for you to read, but which will bore the tits off of anyone who is looking at your book going “why the hell is the main character here supposed to be so awesome – he hasn’t even done anything.” If anyone who reads your fiction says this to you, congratulations, you have written a Mary Sue, and if you’re not outright insulted just by reading that please make note that the term was spawned by Star Trek FanFic and see why what you’ve done is terrible by clicking that link and realizing that you’re an asshole.
Mary Sues are the worst mistakes that inexperienced (and some experienced) authors make, and they almost uniformly piss off audiences. A Mary Sue is a character that is good at everything without working for it, amuses or fascinates other characters even though the Mary Sue is dull, they’re given tremendous license by the author and the other characters to throw hissy fits and participate in damaging behaviors, they have few flaws and the flaws that they have are minor and endearing, they break all the rules of the universe the author has written them into, and they usually end up getting everything that they want. There are actually a lot of things that contribute to the Mary Sue-ness of a character and the reason a lot of writers accidentally create Mary Sues is because they want an everyman character, someone the audience can relate to who isn’t an outstanding person but manages to do outstanding things – it’s a fantasy that many readers will be drawn to at a superficial level.
If all of that sounds appealing for your character, consider that the most famous Mary Sue character in the fiction world right now is Bella Swan of the Twilight Series: she’s clumsy, suicidal and self destructive, boring as sin, comes from a broken home, and for all of that manages to fascinate the like omygod totally hottest immortal male lead, be the center of a love triangle, have the first human-vampire hybrid child that anyone knows of, and live happily ever after as a bloodsucker who doesn’t take human life. Mary. Fucking. Sue.
But enough ranting. So why shouldn’t you make a character based on other people you know? After all, just last week I was telling you to observe the people in your life and write their traits into characters, so wouldn’t a whole character based on a real person be awesome? No.
Let’s pretend that you’re writing an abusive boyfriend into a story. You’ve decided that he’s a younger version of the German professor you had sophomore year, the one who made a girl cry in class and gave you a D and called students morons on a regular basis. Mr. Deutschmeister sounds like a real asshole, so he’s the perfect basis for an asshole character – except for one thing: you already hate Mr. Deutschmeister. Because you already hate this prick you’re less likely to spend any time convincing your audience to hate this prick. Every time you read what you’ve written you can hear his snarky voice boring into your skull and belittling you, but your audience can’t. Every time your character smacks his girlfriend you’re seeing Mr. Deutschmeister’s hands and frame and snarling face with the perfect clarity of rage-fueled memory – a memory your audience doesn’t share and can’t relate to. But Mr. Deutschmeister is a good start – you know what kinds of behaviors he had that pissed you off, you know the kinds of things he would say to hurt students, so all you have to do is have your character do and say those kinds of things in the character’s body and voice, not Mr. Deutschmeister’s.
Alternately, let's say you're writing a female lead or love interest, and let's say that you think your girlfriend is the perfect platform for a heroine. That's great, you adore your girlfriend and I'm sure you're very happy. We don't know your girlfriend and we probably won't see her strengths the way that you do because you know her as a whole person with flaws and secrets and passion and humanity while we only know those traits that you chose to share with us - which will probably not include the most interesting or damaging things about your girlfriend (because if you put those in a book she has every right to kick you in the nuts) that would make us sympathetic to or admiring of a character. But you know that your girlfriend has a great sense of humor, tremendous integrity and a gentleness that you would like to build into your character, so start with a fresh character and allow those qualities to infuse her without overwhelming her: if your character has a unique voice that is separate from the people you know it will be stronger and more independent as a character than it would be as an homage to a person.
This gets us to the problem of voice – how the hell do you get a character to sound like someone who isn’t you and who isn’t someone you know? That’s both very hard and very easy – you get to know them as an independent entity, in exactly the same way your audience will eventually get to know them. This works well if you have a plot planned – you meet your character as you drop them into this plot and watch them jump through the hoops that you’ve set up, you let them solve problems the way that THEY want to solve them, not the way that you do, and you let them evolve to meet challenges. A good character can become powerful enough to completely derail your plot, which can be good or bad – if they take the plot in a direction that undermines what you’re trying to write then you’ll probably want to revise the character a little, but if they hijack the plot into a new and better direction than the one you had planned you’ll probably see the value of changing a plot to better serve your character.
Characters are hard to write, and the best ones are like siblings – they can irritate the living shit out of you, but they’re there when you need them and they’ll do what they can to help you out. Try as hard as you can to keep your characters independent and not products of narcissism, blind admiration, or revenge and they’ll serve you well.
So to review:
Don’t make a character out of you.
Don’t make a character (entirely) out of someone you know.
Keep your characters relatable but realistic – they have to have our sympathy but they can’t be perfect.
Let your character become its own entity.
Don’t let your character overwhelm your plot.
Keep your characters as round or flat, or as static or dynamic as you intend them to be.
Characterize with what you’ve learned from the world around you.
Practice characters all the time by building up a stable of bit characters.
Have fun getting to know these little strangers.
Thanks for reading and I’ll be back next week with a new topic – voice as stain, the indelibility of a good literary voice.
If you get bored between now and then, check out these cool Mary Sue character tests and see how your characters stack up (please remember that the Mary Sue concept started in FanFic so some of the questions will seem strange) – though feel free to disregard the results; a personality test isn’t necessarily any more valid for your character than another one would be for you.
OnlyFiction Mary Sue Test
KatFeete Mary Sue Test
Ponylandpress Mary Sue Test
Anyway, cheers until next week,
-Alli
Tuesday, April 17, 2012
"I Sound My Barbaric Yawp..." In Free Verse, of Course
Monday, April 16, 2012
A Novel Idea Part 4: iFrame
I want to take a slight detour before I get into the structure of a frame.
This past Saturday was our one year anniversary. There are a lot of things that have changed over the course of this year. We have added more people to the original four. We have a blog, an online store, and a publishing company. We're on Facebook and Twitter. We've hosted open mics, book launches and late-night meetings fueled by caffeine.
But through all of these changes, our commitment to bringing you the best pieces of Individual Expression has not wavered. We are still a collective of human thought and insight and continue to strive to bring you the best product possible.
We seek to continue our goal of bringing people together in multiple mediums so that they may have meaningful conversations.
I want to end this by thanking all of the people that have made this possible, and for all of you who continue to read and share this magazine.
Thank you.
Now, onto Framing.
So below I have posted a photograph of what a page from my notebook looks like.
There are three key features that I would like to point out and each is marked by a different color and shape. Each color coded section refers to a different question I ask myself before I start any frame.
Who are the characters involved? What is the plot/conflict? What is the narrative voice?
By asking these questions I give myself a clear path to follow and it makes getting a few lines onto the page a little easier.
The first section, "Characters Involved" circled in green, helps not only to get you thinking about the who of a frame but allows you to group related frames quickly and easily.
The last section, "Narrative Voice" highlighted by a yellow rectangle, is important because it makes it explicit how the narrative is going to be told. In my frames I have used several narrative voices. For example Jacob's narrative is told in 1st person while Mark's narrative is told in 3rd person witness. I have also tried experimenting with narrative voices.
A new voice I am experimenting with is for William's narrative. I call it 1st person witness testimony (I'm sure there's some fancy literary term for this, but I'm a Law Student so please humor me). In this narrative voice there is no dialogue. Everything we get is from one person's mouth and by that fact hearsay. But what will make this narrative voice work will be the frames before this one. If I put frames before this that make William seem sympathetic then you will be more inclined to believe what he says. If I have a frame before this one where he is cheating on his wife, then you are less inclined to believe him.
The most important part of the Frame outline by far is the Plot/Conflict section underlined in red. This section helps me avoid writing meaningless details in the body of the frame which only serve to distract from the dialogue and narrative. This section also helps me to keep the pacing of the frame quick.
One additional benefit of writing out the Plot/Conflict before hand is that if I have to step away from my writing I already have a summary or rather an abstract of what the frame is going to be doing so I can quickly pick it up.
It' s important though to remember that just because you have outlined it in your Plot/Conflict section doesn't mean you have to follow it strictly in the body of the frame. The Plot/Conflict section is more of a guide to follow and is meant to help you. It should not be treated as though written in stone.
Remember, inconsistencies in your Frames are fine, and I would argue that they are preferable. These nuances and slight variations allow you to explore multiple ripples in the time/space fabric of your ever evolving world. These wrinkles will be ironed out in subsequent drafts so don't slow down your writing by trying to solve everything now.
Well, that's it for this week. Next time I am going to be finishing the second part of Framing and discussing how your Frames should work within their respective local narrative as well as the over-arching narrative.
Until next time,
As always
Undoubtedly Yours,
Bermuda the Man
Friday, April 13, 2012
What is it about Language That Makes Us Laugh?
We often laugh at a good joke or a well-crafted comedy without considering why we are laughing in the first place; in analyzing the comedy, our minds do the work for us, and we react according to the outcome of whatever process is going on in our heads. If the comedic occurrence happens to align with whatever secret guidelines of ‘funny’ have been hard-wired into our human minds, then we almost involuntarily let out a repetitive gasping for breath that we have been conditioned in this culture to call ‘laughter’. Surprisingly, this phenomenon, which also includes the baring of teeth, does not incite aggression in others around us – as it surely would in most other mammals – but creates an atmosphere which makes us feel comfortable with them. I don’t know about you, but in my opinion this whole humor thing is just plain weird.
With a joke, we hear the punch-line, and nearly instantly, according to a set of unwritten critical guidelines, we judge whether or not the thing was funny, and we involuntarily act accordingly. What exactly is it in a joke that causes our minds to be amused to the point of an uncontrollable fit?
I guess I’m so interested in all this because I recently came across Isaac Asimov’s “Jokester,” an odd short story about the origin and nature of jokes (online here), and it really got me thinking about how humans have evolved to understand the secret language of ‘funny’.
I’m no professional psychologist, and the following really is all just slightly-informed speculation, but I’d like to try to put my finger on ‘funny’. Here’s one of the best jokes I’ve picked up:
“A woman and her three young daughters were sitting around the dinner table when the first daughter turned to her mother and asked, ‘Mom, why did you name me Rose?’
‘Well, my dear, when you were born a rose petal floated in through the window and landed on your head, so we named you Rose.’
The second daughter chimed in. ‘Why did you name me Butterfly?’
‘Well, my dear, when you were born a butterfly flew in through the window and landed on your head, so we named you Butterfly.’
Finally, the third daughter spoke up. ‘AHRJAGUFAAEE’
‘Keep it down, Cinderblock.’”
I’ve always thought this was hilarious, but why? When I look closely, I see that this joke, beneath all its framing, is really just a brain puzzle – a rat’s maze for your mind as Asimov might say.
The joke can be split into two parts, with the first part being the steady and predictable flow of information, and the second part being the sudden shift in the sequence of information that happens to still perfectly follow along logically. In this joke's case, the first part would be the repetitive questions regarding the origins of the daughters' names and the mother's repetitive responses, and the second part would be the unexpected break in the pattern of the story when the mother reveals the third daughter's name -- which still follows the mother's presumed process of naming.
When the second part of the joke reveals itself as something that does not follow the pattern of the first part, the mind instantly goes to work and quickly checks to see if the new unexpected piece of information logically fits with the rest of the information in the first part. Plugging the second part through the sequence, the mind finds that it works in an unexpected way and feels accomplished at its own understanding. As the mind practices its logic like this, the ‘funny’ reveals itself to us as a reward – perhaps an incentive to strengthen the mind with more exercise. Unconsciously, our minds amuse themselves with this little logic exercise, and we can’t help but laugh.
I know I've only scratched the surface of the nature of laughter, and I'm no where close to putting my finger on 'funny', but I feel like I'm off to a good start, and I'm excited to read into the subject some more. If you know of any good sources, please feel free to let me know.
Got any good jokes to analyze?
Thursday, April 12, 2012
"I don't like Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas...it's just about drug addicts in the desert"
How many times have you heard someone complain about a movie, show, or book with the reasoning of "it has no plot"? Examples of movies that have elicited such reactions tend to be either dialogue or reflection heavy, such as Before Sunrise/Before Sunset, Lost in Translation, Sideways, The Shining, etc. I am always inclined to ask one of two questions: "what exactly do you think plot means?" or "so?"
Let's first address the definition. A plot literally is a storyline, and, so, I assume that people who throw around this "no plot" reasoning mean more precisely that not much happens in the given story. This, while initially seeming reasonable, is the most egregious belief of all. People who say this- that a given story has "no plot" and that "not much happens"- likely have little to no conception of symbolism. Returning to an example above- The Shining- you'll clearly see what I mean by this. So it's literally nothing happening for Jack to sit at the bar and stare at the liquor cabinet. But, symbolically, what is happening in that scene? He's letting the alcohol back into his life; he is becoming an alcoholic again. Did we really need to get
For another example, take a show like Mad Men. What literally happens most of the time on that show? Not too much. The characters talk, and they often talk about work-related issues. However, over time, viewers watch this show week after week because they are invested in the characters' lives and what is revealed about them as time goes on. In other words, we become invested in characters for the same reason we become invested in real people: because we care about them. Would you say that you care about your friends because of the things they do? No, and you wouldn't say that about Peggy Olsen either. We have come to love her because we have spent so much time listening to her talk and watching her slowly (and realistically, I might add) grow as a person.
Okay, so the other way I sometimes respond…the reason I choose to respond with a "so?" or a "what do you mean?" is largely based on my emotions at the time of the conversation. If I kind of feel like engaging the person who would rather be watching Transformers than Amelie, I may ask him to define his terms. However, if I'm annoyed or generally viewing humanity as a lost cause, my inquiry will likely be monosyllabic. Moving on…
I recently watched another film that I'm sure many have decried has "no plot." In anticipation of the upcoming HBO show, Girls, I chose to watch Lena Dunham's Tiny Furniture. First of all, let me say that this is a fantastic movie with a challenging and, at times, devastatingly honest portrayal of a less-than-confident young woman. There are many seemingly unmomentious scenes, such as one that depicts Lena's character, Aura, standing in front of a row of white cabinets, inquiring to her mother across the apartment "where are the light bulbs?" in response her mother calls, "in the white cabinet." To the uncareful, uncaring eye, this scene is nothing more than an out-of-shape girl standing in her pajamas, looking a bit obscene and pathetic, staring at a wall in a house. But anyone who knows anything about symbolism and has the briefest of notions of what this movie is about could tell you much more about what this scene conveys. Aura is lost, and no one is helping her find the light.
The truth is that movies like these have a higher purpose than just conveying action. Creators of such stories understand that there is, after all, more to life than action and that the most seemingly still and quiet moments of our lives may be the ones where the most significant change is taking place. And they know that "plot" can mean much more than just action.
Building Your Writing Toolkit: Part 6.2 – Bits and Characters, the Tool for the Job
I agree with Gene’s assessment of the situation (it should be clear by now that my appreciation of Stephen King novels borders on obsessive) for two reasons: one, because King is the king of characterization, and two, because people who decide to make King novels into movies generally wouldn’t know what characterization was if it bit them in the face.
Characterization is, as the word should imply, turning something into a character or adding character to something. This is important because if you don’t work at characterizing your characters nobody gives a shit about them.
There are four categories typically used to define characters: flat, round, static, and dynamic. A flat character is one who is two-dimensional, has little to distinguish him, and who has little depth. A round character is one who is interesting and complicated, who has strengths and weaknesses; she isn’t “just” anything – she’s bright but antisocial, friendly but with an evil streak, cruel but loves her family – she has depth. A static character is one who doesn’t change or develop; she is the same character at the end of the story as she was at the beginning, with no highs or lows and very little learned from her experience. A dynamic character is one who changes (for good or bad) and who learns from the experiences he has in the course of the story.
Characters may be flat and static (the dullest and most remedial part of this spectrum – think Bella Swan from Twilight), round and static (interesting but infrequent, Daniel Day Louis character from There Will be Blood is an example of this, as is John McClain from Die Hard), flat and dynamic (most representations of Tarzan and Superman fit this – the generic action hero/cowboy character who is essentially faceless but who makes an important change at some point), or round and dynamic (generally these are the most fun characters to read or watch – Huckleberry Finn is round and dynamic, as are Dexter from the TV series Dexter, Darth Vader, Elizabeth Bennet, and Bilbo Baggins).
The Harry Potter series has good examples in almost every one of these groupings. Harry himself is round and dynamic: he’s not just a perfect, flat little hero – he can be a whiny little bitch, he lies an awful lot, gets into loads of trouble and makes a few huge mistakes – and he’s dynamic in that he learns from his mistakes, is capable of seeing the bad in himself as well as the good, and is capable of changing roles (to the point that he accepts that he may be more of a sacrifice than he is a hero). Draco is round but static: he’s deliciously nasty and lets everybody know it, he struggles with the task of killing Dumbledore, he loves his family even though he is a spoiled brat, and is scared of Voldemort even though he’s supposed to be a death eater – but for all of that he doesn’t really change or grow in the novels; in the end (even in the epilogue) he’s just a sneering aristocrat who doesn’t like Harry – the same thing he’s been all along. Sirius is a pretty good example but not perfect fit for flat and dynamic: we’re told that he used to be a Marauder and that he was really cool when he was a student, but that’s about all that there is to his character except that we see the transformation he takes from ravening criminal to warm (but childish) guardian. Voldemort is, sadly, both flat and static, which makes him a substantially less interesting villain than he could be; he is and always has been evil (even the childhood scenes Rowling tosses in suggest that he tormented other children simply because he could), there’s no depth to him, he never experiences internal conflict, and he fails to interact meaningfully with any character around him – he’s just a monolithic Bad Guy who you never have a chance to identify with as you read the books.
This is not to say that all of the characters in everything you write need to be round and dynamic – you shouldn’t spend as much time characterizing your main character’s distant cousin who shows up for on scene as you should spend on your character – but it’s good to give some depth to most of the characters who show up on your pages. Dickens was brilliant at this – his characterization was sometimes as simple as coming up with a name that perfectly described a character, for instance the anti-change Barnacle family in Little Dorrit, Stephen Blackpool in Hard Times, who drowns in a well, or Sir Dedlock, a staunch and stupid conservative aristocrat in the legal novel Bleak House.
Where your characters fall in the spectrum of flat/round and static/dynamic is up to you, but you need to be aware of what you’re trying to create – if you’re looking to make a really compelling antagonist you’re going to be better off with a round character than a flat one because that will provide a challenging foil for your protagonist. Do you want to write a goofy, fun story, something along the lines of Ferris Bueller’s Day Off? Then static versus dynamic doesn’t matter as much in a main character, but it might be important to have dynamic elements to a supporting character – Ferris doesn’t change in the movie because he’s supposed to be perfect, but Cameron gets to stand up for himself at the end and Jeanne turns into less of a bitch – these supporting character transformations make the main character look better than if Ferris had undergone some profound change because he’s supposed to be a silly, flawless, inspiring hero.
Plotting your story before you start will help you make your decisions about what kinds of characters you want, but we’re not at plotting yet so we’re going to just assume you’ve got something of a story planned already.
Okay, so let’s say you know that you want a round, dynamic female protagonist with a flat, static boyfriend, a round, static female friend, a round, static evil stepfather, and a round, dynamic potential love interest. That’s fantastic. How do you make that happen?
I’ve said it before and I’m sure I’ll say it again – writers can’t be cloistered. You have to go out into the world. Think about the characteristics of people you like and admire. Your mom is stubborn but gentle, your brother is loyal, your father is kind, your friends are funny, your professors are intelligent, your TAs are zealous – no matter who you’re thinking of you can find something admirable about that person. Now describe it. How would you explain to your friends that your brother is loyal? What things has he done in the past that express his loyalty. Did he protect you from a bully once? Did he stick with a friend through an addiction? Does he get angry when someone makes fun of his friends? What makes it obvious that your brother is loyal? Now think of another admirable person – your zealous TA for this example. Your TA shows up early every damn day. She’s talked about the courseload she’s taking in addition to teaching your class. You heard her talk about the job she works on the side, and about the really long commute she has to get to school then back to work every day. But in spite of that you can tell she really loves teaching biology. A professor wandered in during your lab and while everyone was working she was talking to the professor about her thesis – you didn’t even realize that there was a whole community of people dedicated to studying the movement of water in plants, but this woman is one of them and she talks about stalks like they’re holy fire.
When you really think about the people you know and what you like about them (or what you hate about them) you begin to understand how characterization works. How would you describe your roomate’s sense of humor to your cousin from out of state? You’d tell a story, and you’d start that story with a little background: “you have to understand,” you’d say “Jim grew up on a farm fifty miles east of the middle of nowhere. He had more siblings than their family had cows, and…” and from there you’d tell your cousin something exceptionally funny that Jim had done, adding in some of his more common mannerisms for color, and by the time Jim came home your cousin would be itching to meet this funny guy from the farm who keeps her cousin laughing. The way you describe the people you like (or hate) to the people you want to like (or hate) them is the exact same way you need to write your characters, only more so.
The details that you don’t share person-to-person when you’re describing a friend or nemesis are the kinds of things you do need to include in your story. What does your protagonist walk like? How do they take their coffee? Where were they born? What do they think of hairstylists? (That one may sound stupid, but if you’re writing an independent female lead then telling your audience that “her hair is a usually neglected shoulder-length curtain, combed more often by fingers than a brush and mottled by several dyeings of the do-it-yourself variety to an odd, varied brown” does a lot more to characterize her than just telling them that “her hair is brown and wavy, curling softly to her shoulders.”)
So work on details, write down details, but most of all go out into the world and think about the people around you. When you see someone make an interesting gesture, try to figure out why. If the guy in class next to you has green hair then you should make up a story for how it got that way – what the first color he dyed his hair was and the progression he went through. If the teller at the bank keeps her nails short, question it in your head – does she bite them because of an anxiety disorder, or did she once scratch her eye as a little girl and learn a lesson from the pain? Look at the people around you and see what they say about themselves without saying anything – what comes off as practical in clothing versus what comes off as douchey? What do the colors that someone’s wearing suggest to you about their personality? Once you’ve thought about these things in the real world it will be much easier for you to write your characters with some character.
That’s all for this week because I’ve run long once again. I’ll be back next week with some things NOT to do to your characters, as well as some tips about making your characters speak in their own voice.
Until then, Cheers. Go write something.
- Alli