There's no denying it. A lot of (I'd go so far as to say most) great fiction is either:
[a] inspired by the idea of renewing or continuing something (like Gaiman does with his sort of fairy tale grown-up fantasies that read like children's fantasies or the pulp revivals)
[b] a reaction against something (like the Harlem Rennaissance and feminist literature of the sixties or the Beat Poets)
[c] a little of both (the remix notion of taking something old and making it new to the point the old fans most likely won't like it)
It's a bit heavier of a topic for one of our roundtables, but I'm curious where your body of work falls.
Aside from esoteric ideas and nature, etc. what are the genres that appeal to you that you want to pick up on their tropes and see them continue through your own work? Which of those tropes and trappings mean the most to you and show up most often in your work?
Kay Iscah: The Seventh Night world is very much about folklore and fairytale tropes. I genre-hop a lot, so won't go into all my books and stories. And it would be another book of literary analysis to answer all these questions. So sticking with Seventh Night and one short story I've written called "The Magically Thinning Mirror" and hitting some main points.
Sean Taylor: Hands down, I love the tropes of sci-fi, horror, and superhero stories most of all. I love the way they so effortlessly settle into a sort of magical realism as people accept all the oddness that goes on around them and just move on with their lives. A guy shoots lightning from his eyes to fix a falling bridge? No problem. It's a Tuesday. A girl who holds her head at her side and talks with you about family secrets? Who cares? She seems nice enough. A friend who can slide between dimensions by tugging the strings of String Theory? Been there, done that.
HC Playa: Sticking with what I both like and write, that would be fantasy with romance. Now, I have it on good authority that I do not, in fact, write romance (per multiple romance publishers). I write fantasy/adventures that just so happen to have some kissy-face stuff in them 😂. I like the world-building of fantasy, being transported to an entirely different world, be it high fantasy or urban. I also enjoy the human aspect of romance paired with the guarantee of a happy ending. Now, there's a place in fiction for sad and tragic endings. I, personally do not wish to write that most of the time. The world is harsh enough. I prefer to offer an escape. So I like going with larger-than-life protagonists, super capable, highly intelligent heroes. After all, Sherlock Holmes, Superman, and Bilbo Baggins are memorable BECAUSE they are extraordinary. I like the white knight or occasionally they are the tarnished knight...but ultimately good and love always wins.
Looking at those genres you love, what are the things about them that you try to push aside or ignore as a way to bring your own mark on them, or to make them important or apropos for modern audiences?
HC Playa: My heroes might think they are rolling in to save the heroine, but buckle up buckaroos, in my worlds, it's usually the heroines that do the real saving. There are no helpless, hapless damsels. Again, there's a place for that. Plenty of women love the damsel in distress being saved by a savvy, hot hero. One of the reasons I don't fit the romance genre is b/c my plots don't center on the absurd miscommunications and dating games that are central to a romance. If my heroine wants to know if the hero is interested she just asks...maybe it takes working up the nerve, or clever events that drop her hints (or him), but no silly games....after all, they are usually trying to save the world.
A lot of classic fantasy is from a male POV. A lot of romance features overbearing males who just need the right female to "tame" them. I got very tired of both of those things. It shouldn't be THAT groundbreaking for both the male and female protagonists to be badass in their own way and realize they make a great team when they communicate.Now in newer works, I am expanding to queer relationships. That's a whole other box to unpack.
Kay Iscah: Despite the settings or fantastic magical elements people are people. So if their responses to the unreal feel realistic or natural the character tends to resonate with someone, if not everyone. Cultures and technologies change, but we still tell many of the same fairytales because they resonate with us on very fundamental levels. Escaping abuse, enduring hardships, traveling (or at least leaving home), finding or losing love, pursuing our passions, and longing for wealth (or at least financial stability) are all pretty universal.
Sean Taylor: What I hope most to move beyond in my preferred genres is the (what I call) sort of shallow storytelling that was painted in broad strokes and stereotypes, whether character or plot. I want to create worlds that smack of realism -- at least until the baby elephant grows wings and sings 12-bar blues standards. I want my stories to more accurately reflect the types of people I see on a daily basis. You can call that woke if you want to, but I call it reflecting the real.
If I'm writing in a specific time period, like my 30s private eye, Rick Ruby, then I want to go deeper than the surface mysteries and tell the kind of stories that couldn't be told back then, whether because of race, gender, or sexual orientation of the characters or the kinds of goings-on in the plots. I want to take the tease of burlesque and racial tensions that made the back cover of the book to sell it but never really showed up inside and put it inside the stories where it belongs.
What tropes or trappings does your work most try to change? Are there social issues you want to write about (without, you know, blatantly writing about) or stereotypes you intentionally set out to destroy (or for a lesser loaded word) dismantle in your work?
Sean Taylor: I kind of answered this one above, but I really want to write the kind of stories that people I know in my life now didn't have a chance to be written into back in the day. I want to see the pages fill up with non-white, non-straight people, not because I have a political agenda but because they didn't get the opportunity then, and if I can do something about that now... well, it may be too little, too late... but it's something I can do. So I plan to do it. Period.
How have you combined these ideas in single pieces of work before so that you are building and unbuilding at the same time in the same story?
Kay Iscah: "The Magically Thinning Mirror" is a short story written like a fairytale, but it's also a pretty blunt metaphor for anorexia, about a woman who wishes herself thinner until she vanishes altogether. However part of the point of fairytales and folklore is to deliver an idea or lesson without a lecture. You keep the story simple, leaving space for the reader to process their own thoughts on the topic. And by simplifying the story it can have secondary lessons like taking a good thing too far to the point it becomes bad, or not being satisfied with what you achieved.
No comments:
Post a Comment