Showing posts with label commentary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label commentary. Show all posts

9.24.2010

Dusting off the keys.

Hello all. I'm not sure how many people read this, but I suspect some do.

I've been absent these several months, sorting things out in my own life, and taking a break from writing in the process. I've put aside the blog for far too long, however, and wish to remedy that in that near future.

However, as many of you have seen, most of my pieces are short-form scribbles, lacking any real beginning, middle, or end, just scenes that exist unto themselves. Not that there's anything wrong with that; flash fiction is something I enjoy, and would agree with some that it has adapted creative expression and aesthetic appreciation to our faster-moving times. Short stories are always wonderful exercises in life, and the moment, independent of all the baggage we may hold, deserves celebration.

However, for the longest time, maybe a few years, I've had much bigger stories to tell floating around in me, waiting for the time to come out. I feel that this may be as good of a time as any to seriously consider that possibility, to start outlining and drafting, to commit myself and my time to telling them. It may take years still to write them, to finish them insofar as anything written can ever truly be finished, but it is a commitment I hope to make. Some of the very stories posted here will become part of them, some of the stories I treasure the most.

I also hope to edit a few pieces I've written in the past two years, in hopes that maybe, just maybe, I can finally submit them for publication elsewhere. I've had links to certain magazines, online and in print, open on my browser for almost a year now; maybe now that I'm feeling better about myself and where I am in my life outside of writing, I can follow-through at long last.

So there may be still gaps of considerable time between posts, and I may use this as a sounding board for some of my other projects, or possibly as a way to explain my method or highlight the works of others. Furthermore, I'm considering using a much more personal pseudonym for my future works in print; that, however, I won't bother revealing until I actually succeed.

Thank you all for your patience and commitment. I can only hope to do my best as a writer from this point onward.

3.07.2009

A tired, tired multicultural examination of my own work.

      As writers, we struggle with conflict and identity, and ultimately agonize over what message we will convey through our medium. Particularly if we are born of privilege -- be it through constructs of race, gender, class, orientation, religion, or other such categories that place us in favor within society -- the idea of reaching beyond ourselves, to the struggles of others whom we cannot immediately identify with from our own experience, is one of the greatest challenges we face. It is, perhaps, the only way such privilege can limit us, an unfair trade for all the real life struggles others endure, day in, day out, sometimes simply because there is no other option.
      So when it comes to trying to accomplish something more with our writing, we can't just settle for stereotypes or simply what others have written before us. We have to accept our status, accept what it means, and instead of outright refusing that privilege, use it to resist the very systems that gave it to us and not to those who suffer for, really, arbitrary reasons. Only then can we move past it, into a greater cultural consciousness, to write some serious shit. After all, if you're stuck on feelin' guilty for being white, or unconcerned with the way women are depicted in various media, then how the hell will you ever write a convincing character that isn't a white dude? Especially to an audience that maybe aren't white dudes themselves?
      Or maybe that's just my own projection; fuck knows how many writers are out there today, getting steady work who have never attempted to look at things through a multicultural lens, let alone turned socioeconomic struggle into part of a writer's raison d'ĂȘtre.
      So that's why it bothers me when I write something, and I find myself asking, "just who was that," because there are certain aspects to identity I never bring up in my work -- and, usually, those same aspects are the ones that opened this essay. And I find myself asking if I've just gone and ignored all this myself, or if I've done something completely different and subverted the entire process by not making an issue of it.
      As an example: someone once pointed-out to me that, after reading one of my pieces about a same-sex couple, she was actually encouraged by the fact that their sexuality was never pointed-to; that it was just some sappy romantic piece between two lovers who shared the same pronoun was actually far more significant than, say, another story talking about the struggle of a society that refuses to accept them. Y'know, something embracing their love as being special just for who they are -- somehow more optimistic than anything else. I'm not writing this to toot my own horn or some shit like that, but that I was able to pull something like that off is encouraging, and has made me wonder even more about my approach.
      It's something I wish I could pull-off more with women in my works -- half the time, they're just waifish personifications of wistfulness and beauty; momentary expressions of my own personality that I identify as "female," but almost always to the characters' disadvantage. It's a maturity thing, I know, and I at least hope I've gotten better about that kinda shit with time.
      But the one stumbling block has always been race, and it's something that's always weighed heavy on my mind. Some of it stems from my father's own explicit racism, and some of the shit that went down in my younger days; anyone who tells you "small town values" hasn't seen what those places can do to a black or Persian kid. Maybe because I'm so conscious of it -- or try to be, anyway -- that I get paranoid easy, and back down from approaching it in my work. "Porcelain" gets used more often to describe characters than "tawny," "ebon," "swarthy," or "sable," and whenever I don't mention melanin at all, it comes out in other ways.
      And at this point, it's not even about race, but the culture, and staying true to multicultural form by not making what's "white" the normative experience in my work. Which really might be why I stick with fllash fiction and soft sci-fi, because it's easier to cope with in "slices-of-life" and works that assume, in some way, that the future (or the fantasy) will be at least egalitarian in nature. But it's a sign of immaturity for certain, and one that I need to actively push back against without coming-off as employing "tokenism" or stereotypical perceptions of race . . . or anything else, for that matter.
      And that's ultimately what it's all about. What good am I, as a teller of stories, if I can't be true in my work? I'd be just another dude who's setting the stage for further complicity in an unjust system -- a failure among my own ideals -- and a complete and utter hack -- a failure of my own dream. So I'll experiment, try my best to keep it real, and hope like hell that I can go somewhere with that whole "subtle subversion of norms" thing...

2.04.2009

Side note to that last scribble...

      To avoid lawsuits: yes, it is an homage to an already-existing property. If someone complains, I'll take it down.