by Deren Hansen
One of the truisms of storytelling is that your protagonist is only as good as your antagonist. If, like the Monty Python sketch about the self-defense class, your antagonist threatens everyone with (wait for it) a banana,
and your protagonist uses his pistol to save the day, we've learned
nothing* from the story because the only stretching the protagonist was
forced to do involved reaching for his pistol.
Part of what makes stories superior to daily life is the presence of a
clearly defined villain (that and the fact that a good story-teller
skips the boring bits). You may object that there are plenty of stories
where the villain doesn't have a face or is something that can't be
embodied in a single person. While that's true, those stories still
ultimately reveal the nature of the antagonist (or antagonistic forces)
and show how the protagonist overcomes (or at least deals with) them.
Conflict is the fuel that feeds the story engine. That's why a great deal of writing advice (like the Christopher Walken cow bell sketch on Saturday Night Live)
boils down to, "Ratchet up the conflict." But you can't have engaging
narrative conflict if the parties and their conflicting objectives are
not clear.
When story needs to motivate as well as entertain, the need for a
clear-cut antagonist is all the more pressing. If you were told two
stories, one with rainbows and bright flowers about puppies who learn
they should be nice to each other, and one about oppression and wrongs
to be righted--right in your very own neighborhood--which is more likely
to move you to do something more than turn to the next story?
The crux of the motivational problem is that we live in a world whose
name, if we had to follow the convention of a large, U.S.-based toy
retailer, could be, "Ambiguities R Us."
I should have foreseen the present partisan and cultural divide coming:
parties need an enemy--a threatening "other"--to call their partisans to
action. During the Cold War, one of the partisan battle fields was a
tug-of-war (pun intended) over who was strongest on defense (which was
code for who would stand up to the Soviet Union). Since the collapse of
the Soviet Union, we've had a parade of mostly Middle Eastern dictators
and terrorists. The latter, as a nebulous threat, haven't lived up to
their narrative potential to provoke fears entirely out of proportion to
their actual activities. So now, without a strong external threat, we
have no choice but to look inward and find even more fearful threats at
home. In other words, our lust for narrative conflict drives us to turn
on ourselves.
For a significant portion of the middle ages, an irrational fear of
witches served very nicely to keep village congregations huddled
together. We now look back, tut, and shake our heads at such
superstitions, and then, in practically the same breath, rise up in
righteous indignation at their modern counterparts.
I'm not asking for enlightenment--or even tolerance. I'm simply pointing
out something that as storytellers we, of all people, should
understand: we're not the only ones who go out of our way to manufacture
conflict because that's what a good story requires.
* Except that you should carry a pistol if you're likely to be attacked by fruit-wielding maniacs.
Deren Hansen is the author of the Dunlith Hill Writers Guides. Learn more at dunlithhill.com.
Showing posts with label strength. Show all posts
Showing posts with label strength. Show all posts
Wednesday, March 27, 2013
Monday, January 21, 2013
Wednesday, September 21, 2011
What Makes a Strong Female Character (LTUE)
by Deren Hansen
One of the panels I attended at the 2011 Life, the Universe, and Everything conference addressed the question, "What makes a strong female character?"
Here's what the panelists had to say:
Bree Despain
The panel touched on the fact that, for reasons ranging from biology to culture, the ways in which men and women can or are expected to show strength differ. If you're not careful--if you work from stereotypes--you're likely to make mistakes like writing "men with boobs" in the name of "strong female characters." Instead, the best strategy is to approach each character, regardless of gender, as an individual with their own collections of strengths and weaknesses.
Clint Johnson also said, "Strength in narrative has to be proven." Again, regardless of gender, the best way to show strength in narrative is to give the character two real choices and show that they are able to choose either way (I call this my Second Rule of Two). If a character has consistently chosen safety over conflict during the course of a story, and if at the end they are offered a safe and honorable way out, the fact that they stay and fight says a great deal more than if they are simply cornered and have no choice but to fight.
Deren blogs daily at The Laws of Making.
One of the panels I attended at the 2011 Life, the Universe, and Everything conference addressed the question, "What makes a strong female character?"
Here's what the panelists had to say:
Bree Despain
"Someone who makes their own decisions."Clint Johnson
"All great characters are problem solvers: they do things. Women tend to solve problems differently than men. Where men often try to attack the problem head-on, women build teams and solve the problem socially."Jaleta Clegg
"A strong character must have courage."Sheila Nelson
"There are more kinds of strength than the 'kick butt' kind. The women who had the greatest influence on me all had a quiet, daily kind of strength."Jessica Day George
"Strength doesn't mean they're never vulnerable. Perfect characters are dull. Characters whose strengths and weaknesses play off each other are much more interesting."Clint Johnson
"In the best stories, the strongest characters are those that act with the greatest strength in spite of their weaknesses."Echoing Clint's comments, the fundamental answer is that the things that make a strong female character are the same things that make a strong male character: someone interesting who does something, and whose actions give us insight into who they are.
The panel touched on the fact that, for reasons ranging from biology to culture, the ways in which men and women can or are expected to show strength differ. If you're not careful--if you work from stereotypes--you're likely to make mistakes like writing "men with boobs" in the name of "strong female characters." Instead, the best strategy is to approach each character, regardless of gender, as an individual with their own collections of strengths and weaknesses.
Clint Johnson also said, "Strength in narrative has to be proven." Again, regardless of gender, the best way to show strength in narrative is to give the character two real choices and show that they are able to choose either way (I call this my Second Rule of Two). If a character has consistently chosen safety over conflict during the course of a story, and if at the end they are offered a safe and honorable way out, the fact that they stay and fight says a great deal more than if they are simply cornered and have no choice but to fight.
Deren blogs daily at The Laws of Making.
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