katallison: (Default)
katallison ([personal profile] katallison) wrote2005-06-12 05:20 pm
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So I posted something earlier today about getting back into writing, and in a comment, [livejournal.com profile] cesperanza pointed out that I'm really a "Method" writer, one who (like a Method actor) spends a lot of time upfront thinking through characters' emotions and motivations, and then has to struggle to figure out what the characters should do to express those; whereas she writes in what she calls the "British" method, analogous to the great British actors who stand *here* and say the line and then walk over *there* and do that piece of business, and work back from there to discern and build in the emotional underpinnings.

And now I'm fascinated by this, because I just assumed that everyone goes about writing in the same way I do, more or less, and I'm having fun trying to get my head around what it would be like to simply have some scenes in mind, and write them out, without having already done a lot of sort of preparatory emotional outlining to guide the process. And because I have a ton of other stuff I should be doing, I thought that instead I'd -- that's right, do a poll!

[Poll #511623]
ext_12452: (no shit)

[identity profile] heuradys.livejournal.com 2005-06-13 02:56 am (UTC)(link)
Steven Brust said to me once that he can't write anything, no matter how many bits of scenes are floating around in his brain, until he's got his first line. I've found that holds fairly true for me, as well. It may not turn out to be the very first line of the finished product--because sometimes the story requires more before where I thought it should start--but I need that First Line for everything else to hang off of.