derive your fantasy settings from somewhere other than medieval europe you cowards
apart from anything else it gives you the chance to read some world history from parts of the world that aren’t europe and that shit is non-stop fun
some to start you off:
the an lushan rebellion (and literally all chinese imperial court drama makes european political machination look totally pathetic)
the battle of tondibi (and literally the entire fall of the songhai empire to the morrocan invaders)
the hajj of mansa musa (the richest man of all history)
kublai khan’s repeated and failed attempts to invade japan
this isn’t even stretching to like, russia, southern africa, the pacific, or anywhere in the americas yet?
c’mon man don’t you wanna base a fantasy story on patachuti?
#this isn’t even an argument for social justice#i am just fucking BORED
Avatar the last Airbender did this excellently.
Tag: writing resources
Getting Started
Torture is a very difficult topic to write and with so much
misinformation presented as fact it can be extremely difficult to research.
It’s difficult to know where to start.This blog was very much suppose to serve as that starting
point but now, several hundred thousand words in, the blog itself is a bit of a
labyrinth.So this is a quick summary covering some of the most common
points that affect fiction and writing.Common Misconceptions
about TortureIf you’ve followed the blog for any length of time you’ll
probably have heard me talk about the prevalence of torture apologia in
fiction. Here are some of the common inaccurate stereotypes about torture that
fiction continues to use.These are the ‘arguments’ fiction often uses to support
torture, arguments that have no basis in
reality.
- Showing
torture as an effective interrogation technique. That’s really not
how the human brain works.- Showing
torture making victims passive.- Showing torture making victims obedient. The evidence we have
suggests torture makes victims much more strongly opposed to their
torturers and any group the torturer represents than they were previously.
Victims may become compliant in the short term but this isn’t the same as
long term obedience.- Showing torture ‘forcing’ victims to change their strongly held
beliefs. Brainwashing does
not work. There is no way to force
someone to change their beliefs.- Showing torturers as superhumanly good at detecting when victims
are lying. They are as terrible at it as everyone else.- Showing torturers as skilled. Torture really doesn’t require
any degree of skill, intelligence or even training.- Showing
certain torture techniques as fundamentally harmless. Fiction
tends to show solitary confinement, sensory deprivation and electrical
based tortures as much less harmful (or indeed lethal) than they actually
are.- Showing torture as ‘scientific’. It really isn’t and the idea
that torture can be ‘made better’ pervades arguments justifying abuse.- Showing torture as something only the ‘bad guys’ do. This
often means twisting the definition of torture so that the ‘good guys’ can
continue to beat people to a pulp without being called into question for
it.There are also a lot of inaccurate tropes about torture
victims, giving at best misleading and at worst insulting portrayals of
survivors. These include:
- The idea that torture victims are ‘broken’.
- The idea that survivors can never live full, happy lives.
- Conversely
the idea that survivors quickly lose all symptoms and torture has no
lasting effect on their lives.- The idea that torturers can control the victim’s symptoms or
experience. They really can’t. So
far no one can accurately predict an individual survivor’s symptoms, much
less control them.- The idea that certain physiological responses to torture are
‘better’ then others. This is particularly unfair to victims as it
often judges their worth based on which set of symptoms they happened to
develop.- The idea that resistance is unusual. Resistance to torture is
the norm. Studies
on the historical use of torture to force confessions show that an average
of 90% of victims refuse to
comply with torturers long enough to sign a confession.- The idea that survivors can ‘always remember’ what they endured. Torture
causes memory problems and while victims rarely completely forget such a
traumatic event they often get
key details wrong because of this. This makes prosecuting and proving
torture extremely difficult.- The idea that ‘good guys’ resist torture and ‘bad guys’ don’t.
This rather neatly blames victims for being tortured, whatever their
beliefs.What counts?
The legal definition isn’t really what most people think. It
depends less on the practice or technique used to inflict pain and much more on
who is doing it.For an act to be ‘torture’ in the legal sense it must be
carried out by a government official, public servant or member of an armed group occupying territory. A police officer
beating someone while on duty is a torturer. The same officer beating their
spouse is an abuser.Beyond that torture is: ‘any act by which severe pain or
suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted [] on a
person for such purposes as obtaining from him or a third person information or
confession, punishing him for an act he has committed, or intimidating him or
other persons.’ (UN Declaration
against Torture)This means that lot of things that get dismissed as ‘not
really’ torture definitely count.
Practices like sleep deprivation (for example constant noise and light),
starvation, dehydration, stress positions, beatings, forced exercise, virginity
tests and prolonged solitary confinement- all count.Be aware of what you’re writing.
Torture in Narratives
So where does that leave us as writers and what kind of role
can torture play in a piece of fiction?Barring tropes that are used to encourage real life torture
I don’t think there are ‘bad’ plots
so much as badly executed plots.Well written torture isn’t
a narrative shortcut. If you’re looking for something to keep a character out
of the story for a short time with no long term effects or an easy way to add
drama then a torture plot probably isn’t
a good fit.But it can add greater
depth and emotional impact to a story.Pratchett’s Small Gods
and Rushdie’s
Midnight’s Children both use
torture to tremendous effect: adding depth and urgency to their stories along
with searing critiques of the societal structures that allow abuse to flourish.The Age of Shadows
and Pan’s Labyrinth both use torture
to highlight particularly bloody historical periods, showing the pressures
normal people were put under to allow abuse and how they often rebelled.If you’re considering using torture in your story think
about what it’s actually adding to the narrative. Is it essential? Does it have
a long term impact on the characters and situation, even if it isn’t the focus
of the story? What does it reveal about the characters and the plot?These are stories
worth telling, whatever the genre. If you need help writing them I’m here. 🙂
List of Vocal Sounds for Smut
I present to you a – probably quite incomplete, I’m sure I’m missing a lot of speech sounds – reference list and a bit of a guideline for the different ways one can describe the sounds your characters make whilst writing smut. I’ll definitely be referring to it, because I sometimes get stuck on exactly how to describe a particular noise. (aka, “he can’t groan again, he just groaned last paragraph”)
Sounds (noun, both independently and describing speech): breath/breathe, gasp, moan, groan, pant, whimper, whine, shout, yelp, hiss, grunt, cry, scream, shriek, sob, growl, curse, sound, sigh, hum, noise, squeak, snarl, howl, roar, mewl, wail, choke, keen, purr
Sounds (noun, describing speech): rasp, husk, drawl, plea, murmur, whisper, beg
Descriptors (adjective): loud, hushed, quiet, low, high, high-pitched, little, tiny, soft, deep, unrestrained, restrained, strained, breathy, rough, sudden, short, drawn-out, sharp, harsh, hard, thick, smooth, thin, heavy, impassioned, insistent, hungry, passionate, repeated, filthy, debauched, sweet, slow, deliberate, guttural, languid, surprised, husky, distracted, happy, pleased, satisfied, wordless, cut-off, bitten-off, contented, hoarse, extended, long, depraved, aching, choked, strangled, broken, helpless, shuddering, shaky, trembling, urgent, needy, desperate, wanton, shattered, pained, eager
Combine a descriptor and a sound for best effect – for example, “needy moan,” “pleased hum,” or “sudden scream.” You can even use two: “low, rough grunt,” “sweet little cry,” “desperate, filthy noise,” as long as you don’t repeat a word that means the same thing, unless you really want to emphasize it. Avoiding repetition is pretty key here. You don’t usually want to say “hushed, quiet gasp” except on rare occasions when it’s very important how soft the sound was.
Use your own common sense, as well; some sounds and descriptors don’t generally work well together. “Deliberate shriek” probably wouldn’t work well, and neither would “languid grunt,” but again, this is all very situational – play around! Have fun.
Feel free to add to my lists, use for your reference or pass them around. It would be fun to see a randomized generator made, too, I’m just too lazy to do it myself. 😉
a (not-so) brief overview of markets that will pay you actual money in exchange for your short fiction
Writing is a rough gig. Get paid where you can. Here’s a bunch of places that will pay professional rates for genre (fantasy/science fiction/horror) short stories. All these markets take (and actually publish) unsolicited submissions – you don’t need an agent, and you don’t need to have previously published works.
Remember to format your shit, write a simple cover letter, don’t send the same story to more than one place at a time, make sure submissions windows are actually open, and never respond to rejection letters ever. Have fun!
(Information gathered from both Submissions Grinder – an essential resource for people actively submitting their work – and my own excessive and somewhat ridiculous reading habits.)
Current as of May 2018. Markets are listed alphabetically. Detailed info below the cut.
R
uhHHHH I don’t mean to be dramatic or anything but I literally wrote 50k words in two weeks without fuckening trying, like won NaNoWriMo in 2 weeks, TWO WEEKS, after joining 4thewords.com and I’m like
w h a t
- OK so it’s pretty much like Neopets + Gaia Online + RPG, But You Level Up Through Writing
- You “battle” cute online critters with your word count
- You can dress up your avatar and whatnot and there are different regions and crafting quests
- and my weird brain apparently responds VERY WELL to nerd gamification
- because Holy Shit I wrote 50,600 words in 2 fuckening weeks
- and am now 4thewords’ new hype squad
- (also if you join, use the referral code PEUOC65061 so if you get a full membership, which I totally am, we will both be rewarded)
basically, wow I have never been this productive in my LIFE and I can’t wait for their July mini nanowrimo event (they’re doing a pride month one right now so you can get a rainbow shirt and fight rainbow beasties it’s freakin adorable)
and if this sounds like something you would enjoy, go for it, try to catch me, just do it, come at me friends let’s write some good shit together