subtext and your target audience
Apr. 21st, 2009 10:29 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Whenever I hear of subtext, I think of some articles. This one, about Star Trek vs. Star Wars. And this one about Star Trek, and this one about Star Wars.
Go ahead, go read them. It contains a Valuable Lesson: don't take people who talk about subtext too seriously. 0:)
But it also has useful things to contemplate about writing groups and advice. I've gotten stories where I got crits telling them that one side of the story was well-developed, and the other one a strawman. The problem was, I got several of these crits. And they didn't agree about which side got shafted. After reading and contemplating, I concluded that I had hit a nerve and had to rule these readers out of my target audience for the story.
Go ahead, go read them. It contains a Valuable Lesson: don't take people who talk about subtext too seriously. 0:)
But it also has useful things to contemplate about writing groups and advice. I've gotten stories where I got crits telling them that one side of the story was well-developed, and the other one a strawman. The problem was, I got several of these crits. And they didn't agree about which side got shafted. After reading and contemplating, I concluded that I had hit a nerve and had to rule these readers out of my target audience for the story.
no subject
Date: 2009-04-22 05:36 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-04-22 01:56 pm (UTC)Glad you liked 'em.