A potentially controversial post... - Mari Biella
It’s time to don my flak jacket and helmet and try to look
brave, because I’m going to talk about the potentially controversial topic of
controversy. This is something of a pertinent issue for me. My novella Loving Imogen has a somewhat
controversial theme, and though nobody’s complained yet, someone might. Indeed,
given enough time, someone almost certainly will.
Authors are of course no strangers to controversy. James
Joyce got into trouble for his extensive descriptions of bodily functions in Ulysses. The Catcher in the Rye (ironically, for a book lamenting the loss
of childhood innocence) came under fire for its adult themes. Lolita got people’s backs up for obvious
reasons. American Psycho? Genuinely
disturbing, and I don’t shock easily.
Admittedly, just about anything
could be construed as being controversial. Controversy is in the eye of the
beholder; it’s all a matter of perspective. Don’t believe me? Why, even the dictionary has been banned from certain libraries.
But should authors shy away from controversy, or should they embrace it? How
controversial is controversial? It’s an important question for all authors;
it’s hideously complicated, I imagine, if you’re writing for children or young
adults. Words, once spoken, can’t be unspoken. They can be explained and put
into context, but never entirely withdrawn.
So how to handle controversy?
My own opinion, for what it’s worth, is that you shouldn’t
run a mile at the thought of potentially controversial subject matter. Nor, for that matter, do I think you should be inflammatory for the sake of it. Author Jennifer Weiner gives what I think is very good advice here:
“Characters first, issues second.” I don’t object to controversial storylines
when they grow organically out of the characters’ personalities, beliefs and
actions, but I do wince when I get the feeling that characters have been
deliberately constructed as puppets, whose foremost purpose is to illustrate
the author’s point. Good characters are rounded, three-dimensional people, not
ventriloquists’ dolls. I really hate it when “Evil Character x” is portrayed as the epitome of wickedness
or idiocy due to his holding, or not holding, a particular opinion. Apart from
anything, this just displays a failure of imagination. I once heard someone say
that every villain is the hero of his own story, and I think that is often
true. Trying to see things from your villain’s perspective is an enlightening
exercise.
Inevitably, of course, an author’s feelings and beliefs will
colour their fiction. However, I’d hate for a reader to put my book down
feeling like he or she had just spent several hours being bashed over the head
with my opinions. Speaking purely as a reader, I hate feeling like I’m being
preached to. I doubt any reader picks up any book because he’s desperate to
know the author’s opinions about a given topic.
This ties in with that vexed question of how present and
visible the author is in a story. There are different opinions on this, and
different ways of writing. My own preference is for Mari Biella the author to largely
disappear from the finished work. I want to be largely irrelevant to the
reader. Of course, I’m there, lurking
in the background; I just don’t want to be noticed. I’m not the important one.
The characters are. I’ve written about characters who are entirely different to
me, and have completely different opinions. I disagreed with them, but I didn’t
dislike them. It’s hard to dislike someone you understand so thoroughly.
What is important, I think, is to craft a good story, to
tease out your characters’ beliefs and emotions, to make it real. A touch of
controversy can add depth and realism to a character, since nobody’s a saint.
Indeed, handled well, controversy might even disappear from the finished text
to a large extent. After all, your story is not a debate about a given topic;
it’s a visit to another person’s world, outlook, and experience.
If something happens, then it’s part of our world whether we
like it or not, and as valid a subject for fiction as any. Fiction can actually
provide a safe environment in which to explore controversy – safe because it is fiction, these people are characters,
and these specific events have never actually occurred. But at the same time I
don’t think fiction is ever really about
a controversial topic. It’s about characters who happen to become involved in
something that might be construed as controversial.
Is anything game in fiction, or should we leave some stones
unturned? Any comments welcome.
Comments
And villains? I find it fascinating getting inside their heasd and creating empathy. I loved my bad-boy so much I wrote a spin-off series from his point of view.
Julia – my novella deals with some rather unconventional and ill-advised personal relationships. It’s not American Psycho-level controversial, by any means, but it’s not inconceivable that someone will be offended by it either. I hope I’ve dealt sensitively with the theme, but others might disagree...
Jo – this is a massive problem, and one that I’m not sure of the answer to. There’s sometimes a fine line between the legitimate desire to explore difficult topics and blatant insensitivity. It’s a similar problem, perhaps, to the question of whether you should include “trigger warnings”, alerting readers to potentially sensitive themes. On the one hand, it warns readers of material they might find distasteful or upsetting; but then, on the other hand, just about anything might be distasteful or upsetting to someone.
Debbie – I love getting inside my villains’ heads too! And I often find that I end up empathising, if not quite sympathising, with them.
Now I have to prove I'm not a robot and choose an identity!
I once ran one or two workshops on writing 'issue based' drama for the Traverse young playwrights and one of the exercises I asked them to do was to think of a character who represented everything they hated on a particular subject - that was the easy bit. Then they had to write a monologue as that person, getting inside his or her head, writing in their voice. They always found it difficult - but they also always found it a useful exercise. I agree with you that as far as possible the writer as a person needs to disappear into the reality of his or her characters. We've all encountered those pieces of drama or fiction where the writer sets out with an 'issue' in mind and then invents a set of unbelievable characters saying unbelievable things, to illustrate it.
I do believe quite strongly however that we don't have a right not to be offended. But increasing numbers of people seem to think that they do!