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“The purpose of most
great writing seems to be to reveal, in an ethical light, who we are." --- Anne
Lammott, Bird by Bird
Who we are is revealed in all the ways we express our worldview.
Our descriptions, actions, desires, and voice are all shaped by how we see the
world. Creating realistic and compelling characters that offer unique views of
the world is an essential part of writing.
Everyone recognizes worldview when they see it, but few writers know how
to label it or describe how it works. Because it’s such an essential part of
creating well-rounded characters and unique perspectives that draw readers in,
understanding how worldview works is an essential tool for most writers. Let’s explore.
1.
The Power of Literary Portrayals of Worldview
The power of well-wrought worldviews is evident in good
writing. If we read widely, we often
encounter worldviews that reshape our own…like seeing arranged marriage from an
Indian perspective in Lahiri’s “The Third and Final Continent,” or the view of
a teen struggling to cope with a parent’s mental illness offered in Nolan’s Crazy, or the
inspiring look at a Moari girl breaking gender stereotypes to become a tribal
leader in Ihimaera’s Whale Rider. There
are also inspiring stories that show us how exposure to new worldviews can
completely change people’s preconceived notions about members of specific
cultural groups as you see when a city-living bondsman travels to the
“backwoods” to arrest two draft dodgers and learns to see “country people” with
respect in Faulkner’s “The Tall Men” and the main character of Adichie’s “The
Thing Around Your Neck” goes head to head with stereotypes of cultural groups
across the globe to explore how both stereotypes and anger towards those who
hold them can narrow our worldview and hurt others.
In developing your
understanding of worldview, I highly recommend learning how to adopt an “emic
perspective” which means to view a culture as members of the culture would view
it vs. looking at it from the outside of the culture. Being able to look
at culture from an emic perspective allows you to be more culturally
understanding which is essential in a global society and in a community that
values social justice, acceptance, and understanding.
For instance, do you
or someone sitting in the theater three rows behind you speak to the characters
on screen? How is our response to this behavior shaped by your cultural
upbringing? Are there roots in this tradition found in the call and response
forms of communal communication that can be found in African American church
services and many community traditions found in numerous indigenous cultures in
Africa?
Before you judge any
cultural tradition, go emic, or go home.
Learning to "go
emic" is also exceptionally useful when creating a character. When you
explore how a character’s culture, life experiences, and current situation
shape how z/s/he sees the world, then you can create a unique character
perspective that allows you & your reader to see the world through a new
perspective.
You can learn more about going emic here.
If you do this for
each character in a situation, then you can create genuine tension and depth
that is common when people with unique worldviews interact. Showing characters
navigate this tension can also offer insights on how to do just that for your
readers. Had Reuven and Daniel understood each other’s worldview at the opening
of Potok’s The Chosen it would have
been a very short novel.
When crafting
worldview, it’s useful to recognize the power of voice, imagery, desire, and
action in shaping a character’s view of the world.
Let’s take a look at
how a character’s voice can take shape:
2.
Internal Voice
The internal voice of a character, often conveyed through a
first-person perspective, is an excellent tool for expressing how a character
sees the world, but you can also reveal it through a third person narrator’s
description of a character’s life as Faulkner so aptly does in the opening of
“A Rose for Emily.” In fact, it is Emily’s commitment to rigidly adhering to
her view of her own world that drives her to kill in a fatally flawed attempt
to maintain it.
With each narrative perspective, the elements of orality (or the
impression that the narrator is speaking) allow readers to feel as if they are
part of the story. And the unique ways that the narrator says things develops
them as an individual and often leads readers to keep reading in order to see
what they’re going to say next. Nissa
Bergen, a young southern character I’ve returned to three times in The Year of the Sawdust Man it’s sequels
is quite comfortable saying things like, “Who’s going to give an owl’s hoot
what we’re wearing?” and ”people call it romantic love like it’s something
spectacular, but for me romance was a kind of insanity you never recover from”
and readers get a strong sense of her voice and her view of the world rather
quickly with lines like these. Worldview
in voice is best conveyed through character specific word choice, elements of
orality, and the expression of opinions that allow us to see the world in new
ways.
You can learn more about voice by clicking here.
Speaking of “seeing,” let’s look at how worldview shapes
imagery,
3.
Image-ine That
Folks often ask me when I know it’s time to move from
researching to writing a historical novel and my most typical answer is to say
that I’m ready when I can describe a period as a person who lived in that era
might see it. I’m not a fan of
historical fiction that applies modern worldviews because it offers an in
accurate and misleading view of history.
And describing the era often requires having a firm control of the
imagery used to describe the past. A
character raised a Nebraskan in the 1870s would have a distinct way of
describing the accident that shattered his leg and reordered his life. In Worth,
Nate describes the accident saying, “The pain came with the rain. .. [and]
yanked me out of the here and now to a place that stretched me out until I was
thin enough to cover a prairie mile, each inch aching with a pain so sharp I
would’ve died to make it stop.” To create effective character-specific imagery,
you need to imagine their world down to the smallest detail. And it those
details rendered in strong sensory language that make readers feel as if
they’re really inside this character’s own world. Nate uses the prairie within
his description because it’s the landscape of his daily life. This description is also an example of what I
like to call double duty details those character descriptions that develop more
than one element of the story at a time such as the forward momentum of
character development, plot, and setting within the description of Nate’s pain.
A famous writing exercise reportedly used since the first
writing courses offered at Harvard in the 1890s is to describe a place like a
barn from the perspective of one character –say the farmer, then to describe it
from the perspective of other characters like the farmer’s spouse or a salesman
from a nearby city with a flat tire or a foreign exchange student who has only
seen barns in pictures. Each person’s
description should allow us to see a barn in a new way through the imagery that
character employs to describe it.
A character draws from life experience to describe things so each
character’s imagery should be specific to that person’s worldview—a city person
can draw from a life with crowds, street noises, and place were they actually
have shops dedicated to cheese and bread. On the other hand, a rural character
may draw from time spent in open spaces, traveling for miles to reach a store,
and a daily interaction with wildlife.
What you’ve lived and where you lived it will determine how you describe
things. It can also intricately dictate what you want out of life.
4.
I Know Who I Am and I Know What I Want
It’s the grandmother’s desire to recapture her early life that
leads the family horribly astray in O’Connor’s “A Good Man is Hard to Find” and
it’s Jacob’s deep need to find a sense of acceptance that ultimately leads him
into Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar
Children. The desires characters are
shaped by the world they live in. So often, we ask of a character we meet in a
story—why don’t they just---leave their cheating spouse, quit their dead-end
job, move to a less repressive community—but we’re looking at their life from
the perspective of our own. As a writer,
we need to see our characters from an “emic” perspective. Learning to adopt an emic
point of view will not only make you a better writer, it will allow you to
deepen your understanding of people from a variety of cultures. For instance, a
character who grows up in a working-class neighborhood where no one s/z/he
knows has ever gone to college, may not think it’s possible to pursue a four-year degree. Knowing the world your character comes from
will shape the desires that emerge from this character or the desires you
intend to explore may shape the world you place your character in. For instance, we may think there’s nothing
special about a child who wants to pursue a career in dance, but what if the
child is African American and lives in 1950s California, or the child wants to
dance ballet and he’s a boy from a working-class British family (Billy Elliot the Musical) or the child
is deaf?
As you can see, the world a character lives in shapes so much of
what they say, see, desire, and do, so let’s look at actions next.
5.
Acting Up
Anne Lammott says of character development, “Get to know your
characters as well as you can, let there be something at stake, and let the
chips fall where they may.” I’d have to agree. It’s really important to know
your characters and the world they inhabit, but you should never try to control
them. Allow them to surprise you. You may wonder how that could possibly happen
if you’re the one creating them. The answer lies in writing from your
subconscious rather than your conscious mind.
Your conscious mind remembers everything you know “off the top of your
head” your name, you address, and though, some of us would like to forget, your
age. More importantly, it often knows
all the negative things anyone ever said about your writing and all of the
grammatical and craft rules you should be following (hyperbole added). Your subconscious, on the other hand, knows
nearly everything you ever learned from the name of the future rule of Russia
who died play a target game with knives (Demitri) to the best place to get ice
cream in your favorite city (Peppermint Park in NYC). If you write from your subconscious, you
literally go with the flow of your writing and you ignore your inner editor and
write from within and you’re often as surprised as your readers by what your
characters do next.
The actions of a character are often determined by the world
they live in. When someone in the novel Worth cuts the fence on their neighbor’s
ranch, Nate and his parents are ready to rush out to herd the escaping cattle
back into their enclosure, but their newly adopted NYC orphan, John Worth, is
terrified of running onto the prairie in the pitch black because his city life
never prepared him for such things. On the other hand, Nate, a country kid, is
too scared to go out on the streets of Chicago at night because of his
upbringing. Or imagine what would’ve
happened if Ms. Bennett and Mr. Darcy actually spoke their true feelings from
the start in Pride and Prejudice. Keep in mind that acting out of character
and breaking out of the confines of social expectations is the stuff of legend
in most stories, so let your characters breakaway from how they were raised,
but make sure you do it in a convincing way.
Worldview may shape
both writers and the characters they create, but we can also break out of those
confines by learning other views of the world, so it’s important for all
writers to read widely, learn new things, and explore new perspectives to offer
their characters and their readers. We may not know the role of worldview in
our writing consciously, but we recognize it when we see it. Hopefully, this
article has offered you new tools that will allow you to develop this unique
element of craft in innovative and compelling ways.
Go Emic & Put the World in Your Hands
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