“This Is Your Daily, Friendly Reminder To Use Commas Instead Of Periods During The Dialogue Of Your

“This is your daily, friendly reminder to use commas instead of periods during the dialogue of your story,” she said with a smile.

More Posts from Empressrea and Others

8 years ago

man: has anyone told you that you are beautiful

me: yes i tell myself everyday, toodles


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8 years ago

No entiendo a mi padre cuando me llama desde México.

He talks about the weather and asks if I have heard about the sun. I tell him the sun has visited me in times of great need, but my father is already postulating about his garden. The pineapples have been growing in the heat for one and a half years and will be ready to harvest soon.

His plants are tended with patience and love, watched in development from seed to maturity. So careful is he with these living creatures and plot of land he calls his own. I remind him it’s only his for eighty-seven more years. Perhaps he should consider future generations of the living. But his voice is distant across the lines. I don’t have time to think about anything but now.

I think about these things after we hang up. I wonder if the pineapples fulfill him. Or if the sun warms his old bones.

LKT © 2016

6 years ago
I Realize Now That Aveline Couldn’t Be In Inquisition Because The Breach Would Have Clenched Itself
I Realize Now That Aveline Couldn’t Be In Inquisition Because The Breach Would Have Clenched Itself
I Realize Now That Aveline Couldn’t Be In Inquisition Because The Breach Would Have Clenched Itself
I Realize Now That Aveline Couldn’t Be In Inquisition Because The Breach Would Have Clenched Itself
I Realize Now That Aveline Couldn’t Be In Inquisition Because The Breach Would Have Clenched Itself
I Realize Now That Aveline Couldn’t Be In Inquisition Because The Breach Would Have Clenched Itself
image
image

I realize now that Aveline couldn’t be in Inquisition because the breach would have clenched itself in fear if she was

8 years ago
My August Bullet Journals ❀
My August Bullet Journals ❀
My August Bullet Journals ❀

My August bullet journals ❀

+ instagram + 

4 years ago
Tension

Tension

8 years ago

How to research your racially/ethnically diverse characters

chiminey-cricket asked:

Do any of you have any tips for doing independent research for PoC characters?

This question is super broad, but I’m going to see if I can give it a crack!

First of all, consume media by the group in question. If you want to write a story with a Chinese-American protagonist, read some blogs by Chinese-Americans, read books by Chinese-Americans – both fiction and nonfiction – lurk on places like thisisnotchina so you can get a feel for what pisses Chinese and Chinese diaspora people off about their portrayal in the media, google for stereotypes about Chinese people and try to make sure you’re not doing those (even positive ones), go more general (East-Asian all-of-the-above in general since in many cases the harmful tropes overlap), go more specific (if your protagonist is female, look specifically for blog posts featuring the opiniosn of Chinese-American and other Asian/Asian diapora women; same if your protagonist is attracted to the same sex, is transgender, or deals with any other form of oppression besides anti-Chinese racism.) All of the above applies to Latinxs, Native Americans/Canadian First Nations, African/African diaspora people, Jews, Muslims, etc. Find out what we’re saying about ourselves.

Lots of things are available just from Google. “I have a Black character and I want to know what kind of hairstyles are available for her!” We have a Black hair tag, but apart from that, googling “Black hairstyles” will probably bring up some articles that can at least give you a good starting point to learn some vocabulary to add to your next Google search, like “natural” and “twists” and “dreadlocks.”

Next, you can talk to people in the group, but before you do this, be sure to have some specific questions in mind. “How do I write a Jewish character?” is not a specific question. “Do I have to make my Jewish character follow kosher laws if I’ve made her religious in other ways, or can she go to shul but not keep kosher?” or “What’s a term of endearment a parent might use for a child in Yiddish?” is much more specific. Remember, if you’re talking to someone they’re answering you back with their free time, so expecting them to do most of the work of figuring out what’s most important for you to know is a little entitled.

Besides, a more specific question will give you a more helpful answer. If someone asks me “how do I write a Jewish character” one of the first things out of my mouth will be a list of personality stereotypes to avoid, which isn’t going to be very helpful if what you really need for your fic was whether or not you have to write your character as following strict kosher laws.

If you’re sending a question in to a writing blog or one of those race blogs like thisisnot[whoever], please read through their tags and FAQ to see if they’ve already answered it. Longtime followers of a blog would get very bored if all the blog’s content was nothing but “We answered that here last week at this helpful link!” Those who participate in answering these blogs are usually unpaid volunteers who provide a resource that’s already there to help people; help repay them for what they do by looking through the material on your own first.

How to tell if a source from outside the group is biased and bigoted: obviously, you’re not going to want to listen to Stormfront about Jews, or the KKK about, well, anything. If you’re not on a source created by the group in question, look for dry and academic language as opposed to emotional, informal, or inflammatory words – although dispassionate and technical language is no guarantee it won’t be racist, colonialist, or inaccurate. If you read enough books and blogs from the inside, though, you’ll probably see some of the myths from those other sources debunked before you even encounter them.

Lastly, don’t assume that all people who are Asian, African-American Christians, religious Jews, or Muslims are from cultures more oppressive, more conservative, more patriarchal, more homophobic, more sexist, or more controlling than the one in which you were raised. If your plot calls for homophobic parents or a repressive culture, that shouldn’t be the reason you make your character one of the groups listed. There is plenty of oppressive, anti-woman, and anti-queer thought in white American Christian/Christian-cultured society and personally, I believe such criticisms of the marginalized diaspora peoples I listed above belong in the voices of the cultures themselves.

–mod Shira

I’d not leave looking for dry and clinical information as the ONLY means to distinguish that a work is biased.

While yes it is pragmatic to say “look for academically toned wording,” … in addition to that, these folks really need to look into who the author is. Definitely look into the author. And the year the thing was published (because man if it’s from like the 60s or earlier, 9 times out of 10, throw that shit out).

Because people can disguise hatred and racism in careful diction so that it looks reasonable and polite. A shining example is physiognomy studies from Nazis and anti-Semite eugenecists. And the sad thing is, you really can’t trust people to read it and make the judgement call that this hate-in-disguise they’re reading is hate.  

Somehow, when someone says, “The people of the Levant express features such as […] which, at the risk of sounding untoward, suggest a very rodent-like persuasion,” people are like, “Oh, well, that was worded fancily and there was no angry or profane language, I suppose they’re right,” not stopping to think even for a moment that they just accepted that this book just said to them that Jews look like rats. I saw it happen in my Nazi Germany class when we were given reading material. It was fucking nuts.

So definitely, definitely look every outsider author in the mouth and cross-check any and everything that person says. 

–mod Elaney

Shira again: Elaney is right that you will want to be critical of outside sources, especially older ones. Also, be suspicious of blanket statements about a group such as “X group are” instead of discussing forces in X culture. For example. Because there’s going to be diversity within any group and it’s likely what’s being said isn’t inherently biologically linked to being in X group.

–mod Shira

8 years ago

50 books to read before you die!

# 1 The Lord of the Rings Trilogy # 2 1984 # 3 Pride and Prejudice # 4 The Grapes of Wrath # 5 To Kill a Mockingbird # 6 Jane Eyre # 7 Wuthering Heights # 8 A Passage to India # 9 The Lord of The Flies # 10 Hamlet # 11 A Bend in the River # 12 The Great Gatsby # 13 The Catcher in the Rye # 14 The Bell Jar # 15 Brave New World # 16 The Diary of a Young Girl # 17 Don Quixote # 18 The Bible # 19 The Canterbury Tales # 20 Ulysses # 21 The Quiet American # 22 Birdsong # 23 Money # 24 Harry Potter Series # 25 Moby Dick # 26 The Wind in the Willows # 27 His Dark Materials Series # 28 Anna Karenina # 29 Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland # 30 Rebecca # 31 The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time # 32 On The Road # 33 Heart of Darkness # 34 The Way We Live Now # 35 The Stranger (Algeria) # 36 The Color Purple # 37 Life of Pi # 38 Frankenstein # 39 The War of the Worlds # 40 Men Without Women # 41 Gulliver’s Travels # 42 A Christmas Carol # 43 Huckleberry Finn # 44 Robinson Crusoe # 45 One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest # 46 Catch 22 # 47 The Count of Monte Cristo # 48 Memoirs of a Geisha # 49 The Divine Comedy # 50 The Picture of Dorian Gray

8 years ago

@bubblegum-army it’s us

“why are you in fandom when you’re 20+”

because we built this kingdom, motherfuckers, with the trekkie zine housewives before us. 

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