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johnny
writing machine in bad repair
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#17 | ||||
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I'm sure that most people don't know the etymology of words, or at the very least realize that the characters need to say a great many words that shouldn't exist in order to make the dialogue understandable, relatable, and so on -- but are they confused if a hostess in a fantasy asks that guests enjoy an assortment of hors d'oeuvres? It's a word so very obviously French, do they get distracted by the question of where a French phrase came from in a world without France? I think a lot of novels get away with this sort of thing by populating their world with stand-in countries and cultures and applying the borrowed foreign phrasing to those fictional counterparts. What's everyone's opinion on this workaround? | |||||
Posted 04-18-2017, 06:03 PM |
#18 |
Suzerain of Sheol
Desolation Denizen
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It probably won't be a very helpful answer, but I think really it would come down to how you personally handled it. It's easy to imagine ways that those inclusions could seem tacky or strange, but that doesn't mean that they necessarily have to be at all. A large part of it for me would be the style of the narrative; if it sounds like there's a storyteller with a real personality describing things, I wouldn't think twice seeing a reference like that. In a more distant narration, though, it might stand out to a greater degree.
But, that avoids the issue of those terms actually being used in the setting itself, as in character dialogue, which I really think could be tolerable as long as it sounds natural. Reactions will probably vary on a case-by-case basis, too. I am not hugely a fan of stand-in countries in secondary world fiction, though. It feels somewhat shallow, when even a mix of historical cultures with no additional creative invention on the author's part would be more interesting, generally. Then there's the Traitor Son Cycle where it's literally medieval Europe except with monsters and magic, and the map is all wrong and all the countries have pretentious Ye Olde names (Alba and Galle for England and France, and so on.) but everyone is in on the con from page 1 being that it opens with a company of knights fighting a wyvern with Hermetical magic while swearing by "Jesu Christo". And really, what more can you ask for? :P Cold silence has a tendency to atrophy any sense of compassion between supposed lovers. Between supposed brothers. | ||||
Posted 04-18-2017, 06:53 PM |
Espy
Wanderer
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#19 | |||
Suze, I mean, minus Lawtan, everyone so far in this thread = writers/ex-writers.
Speaking of Final Fantasy (slightly off-topic), the thing that has bothered me the most about that series is the "ninja" class. Just...argh. No. I've rambled about this particular incongruity to many friends, most of whom see no issues with it. I can't be the only one who feels twitchy about the Ninja class... STONEWALL WAS A RIOT | ||||
Posted 04-19-2017, 12:06 AM |
#20 |
Suzerain of Sheol
Desolation Denizen
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I remember how strongly you felt about it, but not quite specifically what your annoyance was.
I don't want to derail johnny's thread, though. Hit me up on skype. Cold silence has a tendency to atrophy any sense of compassion between supposed lovers. Between supposed brothers. | ||||
Posted 04-19-2017, 01:33 AM |
johnny
writing machine in bad repair
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#21 | |||
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I really wouldn't want to give that impression to anyone reading my stuff - I'd rather my world be built more naturally - but I guess it's not the worst thing ever, either. | ||||
Posted 04-19-2017, 12:32 PM |
#22 |
NekoAthena
Harmless
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This is quite a conundrum for me as well. I'm writing a sci-fi setting that has ancient civilizations and empires reimagined as star systems in the same galaxy. The main system is based on the ancient Greeks. Since the species is human, it's not too much of a stretch to say that the language is a renaissance from the actual period on Earth, which may or may not be part of the very distant past of these same people. But if you want it to be utterly divorced of Earth history, then it gets muddier to me. The solution may just be that these people are speaking their own alien language, and those particular words and the best English (or whatever language you are writing in) can translate? I mean you can use more generalized descriptive words instead of specific jargon (like "keyboard" instead of "pianoforte"), but I wouldn't get overly literal, cause then it will sound like Homestuck troll names lol (not that that is bad, but that had a much different intention).
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Posted 04-19-2017, 02:54 PM |
Suzerain of Sheol
Desolation Denizen
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#23 | |||
I was trying to think of why I don't really wrestle with this particular issue very much last night, because it's actually taken a fair bit of reflection to even come up with comments here, and it ultimately comes back to, I'd guess, my tendency to eschew world-building details wherever possible. I pretty much only invent setting information as I need it for my story to progress and leave everything outside of that vague and undefined, which contributes to the overall sparse/concise nature of my prose, I think.
Does that strike anyone as a problematic way to approach secondary-world fiction? I think, rather than obviate the anachronism/extra-universal references concern of this thread, it just shoves them out of the spotlight, which, it occurs to me at this moment, may not be a net-positive. Cold silence has a tendency to atrophy any sense of compassion between supposed lovers. Between supposed brothers. | ||||
Posted 04-19-2017, 04:26 PM |
#24 |
Espy
Wanderer
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Suze -- Not sure if I mentioned this back when we were talking about that particular tendency sometime over Skype, but IMO only having setting information where it's relevant to the plot, and eschewing most other world-building, lends itself to the writer having to pull deus ex machinas if they manage to write themselves into a corner.
STONEWALL WAS A RIOT | ||||
Posted 04-19-2017, 04:54 PM |
Suzerain of Sheol
Desolation Denizen
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#25 | |||
I suppose that's why I tend to plan my plots in detail before I start actually writing. (And also why I never get around to actually writing anything...)
Cold silence has a tendency to atrophy any sense of compassion between supposed lovers. Between supposed brothers. | ||||
Posted 04-19-2017, 05:06 PM |
#26 |
johnny
writing machine in bad repair
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Like the suggestion to keep the whole fictional universe vs. alternate-Earth setting vague, it's something I think could confuse readers and take them out of enjoying the story. Quote:
It basically boils down to whether or not logic (the fact that there should be no "pianoforte" in a world without Italy) beats the world-building shorthand of using existing terminology to ensure that readers picture exactly what you want them to picture. Again, for me, it just comes down worrying over reader confusion. | |||||
Posted 04-19-2017, 07:02 PM |
Quiet Man Cometh
We're all mad here.
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#27 | |||
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Posted 04-20-2017, 12:25 AM |
#28 |
Quiet Man Cometh
We're all mad here.
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Ultimately, everything been to boil down to how well we can pull something off, rather when whether we should try in the first place. | ||||
Posted 04-20-2017, 12:30 AM |
Suzerain of Sheol
Desolation Denizen
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#29 | |||
Personally, I think you should just go all-in with how you'd like to do it, and see how beta readers react. You can always dial it back if it seems like a consistent complaint, but there's every chance you'll pull it off. :)
...or you can be like me and ignore what they say! Cold silence has a tendency to atrophy any sense of compassion between supposed lovers. Between supposed brothers. | ||||
Posted 04-20-2017, 02:13 AM |
#30 |
NekoAthena
Harmless
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Posted 04-20-2017, 02:17 AM |
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