Morgan Taschuk Profile picture
Sep 25, 2018 13 tweets 8 min read Read on X
K Tempest Bradford .@tinytempest Description, Language, and Writing Inclusive Fiction #WXR18
.@tinytempest #WXR18
These are things she’s learned, not things she knew. Ask, learn.
.@tinytempest #WXR18
Exercise: shows two pictures of two women and asks us to describe what they look like. Describing people who don’t look like you is another craft skill. Identity markers that students don’t usually touch on: race, class, religious status.
.@tinytempest #WXR18
Describing the “Other”. Talking around the physical characters that mark race. This is partially style: don’t discard the things that you use to show character. It’s okay for your narrative to mark race and other differences from the dominant paradigm.
.@tinytempest #WXR18
In any culture, dominant paradigm: the ‘normal’ for the culture, the invisible. (nothing is ‘normal’ but it’s a shorthand). In America: white, male, Protestant, cis-gendered, heterosexual
.@tinytempest #WXR18
Why is this so haaaard? “If you notice race, you are racist!” Noticing is not a problem, it’s actions that act on it is a problem. Thoughts =/= actions
.@tinytempest #WXR18
Step One: State what is there for everyone. Whether they’re part of the dominant paradigm or not. What your character notices about the character can be a useful tool for character building or for plot purposes.
.@tinytempest #WXR18
Finding the right words. Don’t reach for the easy, e.g. using food metaphors for describing people of colour, tired and reduced to commodity. Resources: on Discord, on the mailing list.
.@tinytempest #WXR18
But what about poetry?? If you’re going to use food metaphors, use them for everyone. Make considered choices, don’t go for the easy. @tithenai: “If you’re going to eat one person, you should want to eat everyone.”
.@tinytempest #WXR18
e.g. Almond eyes. Asian people don’t have almond eyes! Some white people have almond-er shaped eyes. Claire Light's post: clairelight.typepad.com/seelight/2006/…
.@tinytempest #WXR18
Comparison & POV: does your viewpoint character think their appearance is the default? if so, or not so, what makes them think that? How would they describe themselves? How do they think about and describe how other people look?
.@tinytempest #WXR18
By them marking other people’s skin colour, you define what your character looks like, even in first person. People who are further from the dominant, notice people who are closer to the dominant paradigm because they’re protecting themselves.
.@tinytempest #WXR18
Hammer it home! Readers expect the dominant paradigm and may forget about the skin colour if you only mention it once. Mention other aspects of the character that speak to their identity multiple times.

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More from @50storieslater

Sep 28, 2018
Maurice Broaddus @mauricebroaddus Characterization Through Dialogue #WXR18
.@mauricebroaddus #WXR18
What is key to dialogue? 1. Pay attention to how people speak.
Exercise: record a family conversation and transcribe what people say. Different generations, ages, backgrounds. Start to see how people talk. eg Gilmore Girls, Joss Whedon, Quentin Tarantino
.@mauricebroaddus #WXR18
2. Good dialogue only evokes how people really talk. You don’t want to write how people really talk (um, uh, cussing). Straddle the line between how people really talk and how we wish they’d talk.
Read 21 tweets
Sep 27, 2018
And we're back #WXR18! DongWon Song @dongwon The Pitch
.@dongwon #WXR18
Authors vs Writers. Anyone can be a writer. Big achievement! craft skills. MFA, writer’s groups. A professional author is a different job: career management, workflow, deadline/time management, networking, marketing and promotion, PITCHING.
.@dongwon #WXR18
Always be pitching. Your pitch is not only for agents, it’s also for publishers, editors, marketing/publicity, sales. Build a readership, network with your peers, connect with booksellers, convince your family. A good pitch is a key element of achieving goals.
Read 13 tweets
Sep 24, 2018
Amal Al-Mohtar @tithenai Using Poetry to Write Prose #wxr18
.@tithenai #WXR18
Audience questions: Why people don’t like poetry? High school English, rigidity of form, why is ambiguity a feature and not a bug, extraneous to story (e.g. LotR: @tithenai disagrees), make you work
.@tithenai #WXR18
Talking about her experience writing a poem at the age of 7, parents were overjoyed about her art, to be a poet is a responsibility in her family to speak truth to power, following grandfather who wrote humorous poetry while incarcerated
Read 7 tweets
Sep 24, 2018
Up next! @PiperJDrake Piper J. Drake - Incorporating Romantic Elements in Any Story #WXR18 (there are handouts and one is labelled explicit! :O)
.@PiperJDrake #WXR18
What are romantic elements? Any moment that creates intimacy between characters. Sex =/= intimacy. Need intimacy to create a believable romance. Your reader will start to ‘ship that couple and that is gold.
.@PiperJDrake #WXR18
Both romances and thrillers are emotional rollercoasters. Romance is about hope. Thriller is about justice. Both create strong emotional bonds between the readers and characters.
Read 23 tweets
Sep 24, 2018
Next up: .@MaryRobinette Mary Robinette Kowal - Diagnosing Story Problems #WXR18
.@MaryRobinette #WXR18
Writer’s block can be a way of diagnosing that something’s gone wrong with a story. Four reactions: 1) drowsy: suddenly sleepy; 2) staring: how long can I look at the blank screen without putting words down; 3) restless: why am I suddenly in the kitchen?
.@MaryRobinette #WXR18
Drowsy writer's block: your story is boring you. back up to the last point that excited you and make a different, more dynamic choice.
Read 37 tweets
Sep 23, 2018
.@TheDanWells Dan Wells “First Chapters, First lines”. He's talking SUPER FAST so this is going to be a slightly delayed livetweet stream as I frantically take notes. #wxr18
@TheDanWells .@TheDanWells #WXR18 Early writers freak out over first chapters. Chillax. Just write whatever and come back and fix it later. or keep going til it gets good and cut the bad parts later. or Pantser: write chapter 1 last. however it works
.@TheDanWells #WXR18 What is the purpose of a first chapter? Better: what is the first chapter supposed to accomplish. 1. introduce the book; 2. make us love the main character; 3. Grab the reader's attention.
Read 22 tweets

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