HOW CAN WE HELP YOU?

Word of the day
 

strenuous - October 11, 2008
(adjective) requiring energy and strength.
 
Latest News
 

Overfeeding on Information
... that's not addiction, I d...

New Social Media Tools At the Democratic Convention
RSS feeds and live video in wi...

Ted Nicholas on headlines
If a copywriter sold $6 billio...
Sponsors
   

Recommended Links
Visit now!

WE RECOMMEND you take the time to visit the following on-line resource sites that are linked below.
 

COPYWRITING



Why Google Indexing Requires A Comple...
Build Trust Through Ezine Articles
Writing for People and for Search Eng...
Ten Steps To Grow Website Traffic
Web Site Analysis - A Study in Damag...
Space Debris: The Sky is Falling
Powerful Article Writing Strategies F...
Is Your Site Optimised?
The Domain Name Game
A Guide To Online Payment Processors
What is Creative Commons
Links From Articles
Links From Blog Comments
Web Content Mass + Keyword Optimizati...
Computer Software Genres That Help St...
Oracle Financials Implementation in B...
Payment Methods On Ebay
Boost E-Bay Profits With Web Audio
Auction Titles: Keywords To Bigger Eb...
10 Ways To Save Time And Money With P...
HomelandDefenseStocks.com Exclusive F...
A brief history of email
Do Your Autoresponders Drive Your Cus...
Are There Any Ebay "Secrets" That Are...
An Ebay Seller's Checklist.
Printer Ink Cartridges - Easier And C...
Dedicated domain hosting with Windows...
Find the Best Digital Camera for Your...
How To Use The Ebay "Checkout Service".
How To Leave Great Buyer Feedback.
How To Pick A Web Site Domain Name Fo...
How to get listed with google in less...
5 Linking Strategies that Work
Power Of The Written Word (Part I )- ...
a href="make-documenting-your-software-easier.html" class="boxlink">Make Documenting Your Software Easier...
Effective SEO Comes Cheap
Dating Online
Flash Tricks For Improved Search Engi...

More Article Pages 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5
 
 
 

Stories and Feelings

by Bill Johnson


Sponsored Links

Many stories are a journey of feeling for a story's audience. As characters overcome or pass through various obstacles to get what they want, they pass through stages of feeling, and readers who identify with these characters or become invested in what happens to them, share these feelings.

This makes a story different than real life, where many people struggle to access their true feelings, feel a need to take drugs to mute or control their feelings, or feel unable to express or experience feelings.

Some writers struggle with writing about feelings because they tend to be thoughtful and reflective, waiting until after an experience to process their feelings. Writers who deal with their feelings with detached reflection tend to create story characters who deal with their feelings with detached reflection, often off-stage and out of sight of a story's audience. The story's audience gets an objective report about a character's feelings, but does not get to share those feelings in their most immediate and potent form.

The very creative process that helps fuel storytelling, thoughtful reflection and an ability to visualize the creation of a story world, lends itself to storytelling being an objective process (watch the movie in your head and write down the details). The trap for some writers is that when they draw on their own experiences from life to create objective portraits of characters, they experience these objective portraits subjectively. Think of this in the context of someone else's home movies. To you that collection of stills of a Hawaii vacation might include some great shots of beaches but, since you aren't on them, so what? But, to the creators of these home movies, each picture helps them relive, re-feel, the experience.

It's the job of the storyteller to help his or her audience experience that beach in Hawaii, what it feels like, and to suggest a story-like purpose to being on that beach (that something is in need of resolution and fulfillment).

I'm not suggesting there isn't a place and purpose for objective writing. Hemmingway, for example, appears to be writing in an objective fashion, but he is always direct and immediate about creating a subtext for what the action of a story means, both to a character and to a story's audience.

Writing feelings that connect with actions and suggest a dramatic purpose is a skill that some writers need to study and learn.

About the author:
Bill Johnson is author of A Story is a Promise (http://www.storyispromise) and office manager of Willamette Writers (http://www.willamettewriters.com).


Circulated by Article Emporium

 

 
Home :: Links :: Site map :: Contact us
©Copyrighted by Termpapermachine.com. info All Rights Reserved 2007