code:A degree of reader effort essential, though not the bulk, due to effort promotes engagement: intellectual, emotional-moral, recreational imagination. "Ideal" means an idealized mean bull's-eye, not per se a most ideal ratio. Over-realization disengages as much as under-realization from too much writer holds reader hand per target audience aptitude.^| = + Writer
|| = M +
|| = +
E| = +
f| HIF
i| +O=
o| + =
r| + =
t| + =
|| + = Reader
|O_____________________
----- Realization ---->
M = MerlionEmrys 9-3:3
H = Hemingway 6-5:5
F = Faulkner 6-6:6
O = Orwell 5-5:5
I = Ideal 6-6:6
Reader-Writer Effort:Realization
quote:I'm not sure I follow. There's only one actual character, so how is their an individual and a self?
An individual and the self.
quote:I have only a vague notion of what any of this means. Would it kill you to have an "ing" or a conjunction every great once in a while? Really? :-)
A degree of reader effort essential, though not the bulk, due to effort promotes engagement: intellectual, emotional-moral, recreational imagination. "Ideal" means an idealized mean bull's-eye, not per se a most ideal ratio. Over-realization disengages as much as under-realization from too much writer holds reader hand per target audience aptitude.
quote:Is that an insult, or a compliment?
This fragment is a self-idealization mishmash of World of Warcraft media and Nathaniel Hawthorne "Young Goodman Brown" motif descriptions.
quote:Okay. Don't fully understand most of that and still have almost no idea how it relates.
An individual and the self is a broad theme-topos category for self-realized insider exterior and interior discourse related to an "internal conflict" and complication.
quote:Okay. Still don't know what Read-Writer Effort Over Realization is. I could make a guess based on what I'm used to those words meaning, but that probably wouldn't be how you're using them together.
Each university workshop course section I attended throughout, twenty-seven semesters total, creative nonfiction, script, and fiction, presented a graphic aid depiction of Reader-Writer Effort Over Realization, different from the one above. The above is per moi and an extension of extant knowledge thereof. The others were a vertical parabola, the apex of which equates to the bull's-eye target above.
quote:Yes, more robust, just at the same time nearly incomprehensible. I could probably handle either a bunch of unfamiliar words or having them strung together without anything that tells me what place they serve in whatever point is trying to be made or how they relate to each other, but both makes it very, very hard.
Yeah, unnecessary and trite -ing words and conjunctions bore me. My muse forbids those, exhortation to reconsider more robust expression,
quote:Uh huh.
Otherwise, neither compliment nor insult, nor proscriptive or prescriptive, as per my usual: descriptive responses.
quote:Hmm, okay. I thought it was something like that, but with you I'm never sure.
An individual and the self is a dramatic contest with the self, irrespective of if with others, too.
quote:Okay, so basically reader comprehension and writer comprehensibility.
Reader-Writer Over Realization is a quotient of reader effort and writer effort to realization of what a narrative's pieces, parts, and wholes depict. The quotient as a fraction, (Reader, Writer)/Realization of the set (A, B)/C or (A, B) ÷ C. An ideal result is about 1 to 1 to 1, or 1/1/1 or 1:1:1 or 1. Oneness among reader, writer, and "Oh!" realization.
Reader-writer over-realization is overwrought detail, description, summary, or explanation, like a pun explained, or a joke, a non sequitur, a story, a process, etc., and recreational value spoiled by the explanation. Under-realization is inadequate detail, etc., to intimate and infer "Why should I care?" "Oh, really?" and "Huh?" our host Orson Scott Card's questions readers ask and want from a narrative.
quote:Hmm, okay. I don't see where any of that indicates a "dramatic contest with the self"-and there isn't one later on either, at least not that I remember, but whatever.
An individual perceives the self and a gather and expresses personal thoughts about the self and the gather, meditative, albeit narrator received reflections and direct report.
quote:That's a matter of opinion.
An energetic is a dynamic moral truth discovery narrative, irrespective of per se superficial action adventure.
quote:Yeah, I can see that being an issue. Might try to cut a little and bring the introduction of the enemy in sooner.
The fragment reads more like an aftermath celebration than a prelude to an action to come, to me, though narrative implies the latter's anticipation by default.
quote:Don't really understand most of this, but there IS some backstory to this and it might not be a bad idea to try and give a hint of it a little earlier...hmm...
Backstory stall more so, too, than action in quiet whisper, simmer, or energetic boil forward movement.
quote:A rock is a rock, and will be a rock for everyone. It will be hard for everyone. It will have the same mass and molecular composition for everyone. Also, within any given language, the word for "rock" will be the same for everyone.
'm suspicious. I have been wrestling with the idea of "what is a story." Or starts, or ends, or the parts of the craft of writing. Or almost anything, I guess.
quote:Really? What's a story without a start? Or an end, of any sort? How about the middle being missing; or maybe any two of the three.
People agree on a narrative's basics?
I'm suspicious. I have been wrestling with the idea of "what is a story." Or starts, or ends, or the parts of the craft of writing. Or almost anything, I guess.
quote:Totally understand. I don't buy the idea that most of what I write is somehow "niche", but, for a lot of reasons, this story will have a bit narrower-than-usual window of interest.
Not my style, not my genre, so I think I am stopping on this. I am not your target reader, so that's not a problem.
quote:Well, it isn't a super-dense forest, but objection noted.
I didn't understand how he could see them if they were in the woods. I don't know what goat-eyes are.
quote:Yeah, well almost everything is a cliche in some way or other. All of art is becoming steadily more and more self-referential.
The characters have potential, but so far it could also fit into cliche.
quote:Funny you mention that, I've always wanted to try and write Hermes's beginningless, endless story that he used to bore poor Argus to death...or maybe a "motif of harmful sensation" story about somebody that finds it, and discovers it is deadly to anyone that starts reading it...
Really? What's a story without a start? Or an end, of any sort? How about the middle being missing; or maybe any two of the three.
quote:That's valid, I can see that. One could also say it may be a "story" but doesn't constitute a "narrative" (or vice versa, like how Lovecraft used "terror" to denote the "highest" form of fear with "horror" lower, and somebody else, I can't remember who, swapped them.)
Unbounded stream of consciousness is not a story to my way of thinking. And feel free to call me old-fashioned if you wish.
quote:In one book, the person who assassinated her father escapes from prison and comes after her. She goes to her attic with her weapon. She hears him come in, climb the stairs, he sees her, and they face each other, with their weapons.
Originally posted by Grumpy old guy:
What's a story without a start? Or an end, of any sort?
quote:So, what really appears to be happening is, we have a story that, for you, is unsatisfying. But, as Grumpy says, some just perceive it as a cliffhanger ending, rather than the absence of an ending.
In one book, the person who assassinated her father escapes from prison and comes after her. She goes to her attic with her weapon. She hears him come in, climb the stairs, he sees her, and they face each other, with their weapons.
The book ends there. That actually violates my understanding of what a story is -- to me, that does not count as an end.
quote:Seriously? You're using purple ink?
Orobomet stood on the wooded mountain-slope with arms spread wide. The inverted pentagram scarred into his furred forehead between his vast horns glowed a deep, rotting green as he infused his followers with eldritch forces of unholy fecundity.
quote:Are you referring to the...somewhat florid nature of the prose, or something else I'm not picking up on?
Seriously? You're using purple ink?
quote:Refreshing!
Originally posted by WarrenB:
I also found the principles embedded in extrinsic's graph useful: the importance of reader effort had not clicked for me in this way before.
quote:This isn't parody, but I still don't think you're that far off base. This is meant to be over the top and crazy, and sometimes that which is extreme (or frightening) can also be funny, in a way, at the same time.
As for the fragment, I'll just offer my reaction. I literally laughed out loud... "unholy fecundity" - "whip-wielding succubus dominatrixes" - "ribald and infernal creatures gathered under his phallic maypole". Over-the-top in a way that I found really amusing. But if it's not parody, then my reading is way off base. Still, it tickled me.
quote:Interesting. Of course, someone else might call what you call narrative story and what you call story narrative :-)
This thread took some working through. Worth it for the discussion about story though... Interesting. Leads me to reflect on story as a functional thing rather than an artifact. Artifacts (e.g. short stories) are produced by art/craft, but narrative begins as an inner representation/reflection/transformation of one's inner or outer experience/reality. (Whoa, that's a lotta slashes, but on we go - no time to polish posts as well as everything else.)
quote:While I do not believe that literature, or any art, must contain a "moral" or social commentary in order to be worthwhile or valid, very much of it does have those elements one way or other and storytelling and art in all forms have always been strongly linked to social change and whatall-just look at the '50s and '60s American counterculture largely born of and continually supported by a loop of literature and music.
short stories, novels, etc. - lies in the fact that this complexity is contained and transformed into something that's still layered and complex, but less emergent and chaotic than social 'reality'. Easier to make sense of, in other words. It also connects to other thinking I've been doing about the role of story (narrative and artifact) in supporting social/systemic change...
quote:It is an interesting idea, once I managed to figure out what in the Nine Hells it was supposed to represent.
I also found the principles embedded in extrinsic's graph useful: the importance of reader effort had not clicked for me in this way before.
quote:So, here is the thing. In so far as I'm into such things, I think defining "story" as something (perhaps even any sort of what that expresses something) that has a beginning, a middle and an end is pretty reasonable in theory. Almost everything in human experience can be said, one way or other, to have those three things and so it is a very, very broad definition (which is mostly my favorite kind)
We could define a story as starting at page 1 and ending at the last page, and being everything in between. And everything is a story. Then we have nothing. No advice. No criticism.
What I noticed was the broadcasters try to turn a sports event into a story. Conflict and resolution. Turning point. Shifting momentum. Personalize the conflict. Finding deeper meaning. Handling the awesome moment perfectly.
It is as if there is something primitive and fundamental about "story", something somehow in our psyche. And one of the things about that story is that the reader is not left screaming "WHAT HAPPENS NEXT?"
To be honest, the reader might ask, "How does this end?" The reader knows that two people facing each other with weapons is not an ending.
I concede that for this book, I was so disgusted with the characters and the story and the author that I did not care what happened next. The author, with a known desire to win a literary prize, was bravely exploring the boundaries of what is and is not a story, trying to be original.
While cliff-hangers are sometimes endings to books, the expectation is that another book is coming. Do authors still do that? I thought the proper ending for a book mid-series is a resolution to some conflict but to still have loose ends.
quote:A text, since that's a wider category? (Though perhaps that's a little generically postmodern – since we could argue that everything is a text, or can be treated as one. But, let's not.)
Originally posted by MerlionEmrys:
And if a thing that is made of words and sentences and paragraphs on paper or a screen isn't a story, then what in the holy light of Elbesem is it?
quote:I would neither confirm nor deny either or more and other. I wondered if and whom would realize that connection.
Originally posted by WarrenB:
Back to extrinsic's graph for a moment. I just looked more carefully at the number sequence linked to 'Ideal':
"I = Ideal 6-6:6"
Intentional satanic irony related to this story fragment or just happy accident? :-)
quote:Yeah, I don't think text is very useful for what we're really talking about-it defines form, as in physical form, rather than content, just like "book" or "scroll", or method of delivery.
A text, since that's a wider category? (Though perhaps that's a little generically postmodern – since we could argue that everything is a text, or can be treated as one. But, let's not.)
quote:Before I talk about the other part, I had to snip this out and address it. I know you didn't mean anything negative, but I have to disagree that publication has automatic effect on effectiveness. My years in this place showed me beyond a shadow of a doubt that there is a metric butt ton of extremely effective storytelling that is not-and may never be-published.
nd if they're effective artifacts – i.e. published in one form or another and consumed by at least a few readers
quote:Yep, I think this is pretty much more or less as close as we're ever likely to come to an "answer." However, as you may, or may not have realized, this definition also, pretty much, makes "story" synonymous with "language."
My gut feeling is that stories are human constructions with explanatory power, They say something coherent about existence/life/reality – even if that something is ambiguous/open-ended/unresolved. Stories make meaning, of one kind or another.
quote:Yep, and for me that's what terms and definitions are for-basically shorthand, for when you just want to convey basic information. I resist terms and labels that try to convey more specific and/or complex things in one or two words, because such attempts break down for the reasons I've outlined. That's why my posts and conversations tend to be long. I hate being misunderstood, so if I want to do anything besides convey a very basic idea or meaning, I'm going to dig in and explain what I mean instead of trusting that some word or two-or-three-word phrase will mean to whoever I'm speaking to exactly the same thing it means to me.
Practically though, 'Stories have a beginning, middle and end," does have the (considerable) virtue of simplicity.
quote:No more so than the assumption that stories must all have an "end" at all-besides the most literal meaning of the word, to stop.
"Resolution" outcomes, ends, assumes one-of-a-kind story structure.
quote:Not all resolutions are conflict resolutions. Although I suppose that can depend somewhat on ones definition of conflict.
Damon Knight defines such a story type, though labels it a plot type, that is, the conflict resolution
quote:I still don't get it. What internal observations?
This way-far above fragment is an individual and the self external and internal observations
quote:You honestly believe that any prose work that doesn't have a moral (putting it simply) cannot be worthwhile?
all worthwhile prose is satire's depictions of moral aptitude struggles
quote:You keep paring "moral" and "aptitude" which seems a little odd to me, so I assume you're using a definition of aptitude I'm not familiar with...so I'm going to address this on a vague best guess of what you mean.
Does moral aptitude attend emotional expression? Yes.
quote:Actually, Tolkien's deal is a pretty good example of what I've been talking about with definitions. As far as Tolkien was concerned, his story was NOT allegory, it was fictional history. A case could be made for either one...so which one is "right?"
J.R.R. Tolkien refused allegory, instead used epic simile for similar functions. Not altogether successful at no allegory, either. Allegorical personas, events, and settings populate his works: extended metaphors.
quote:See, it's the "worthwhile" that troubles me. It smells of an attempt to define some stuff as valid and some stuff as not, universally, which I have a really, really serious problem with (you can define stuff as worthwhile or valid for yourself or not till the Shoggoths come home, but not objectively and for everyone.)
Haven't yet read a worthwhile narrative sans a moral struggle at some level,
quote:Like Indiana Jones says, "truth" and "fact" are different things, so I wouldn't really use the term "objective truth" I'd always pair "objective" with "fact." So, to me, you can have personal truths, but objective is about facts and vice versa.
An objective truth differs from an objective fact as much the cosmos is wide.
The Sun rises and sets is an objective fact.
The Sun rises eager and sets angry is an objective truth.
Objective truth ranges from personal to global. Objective facts always are global truth, mostly; some will argue otherwise against most any fact anyway, regardless, irrespective of truth.
quote:Resolution is one way to manage a narrative's complication problem; satisfaction, accommodation, or closure are other ways. A least favored way is a deus ex machina contrived coincidence ("god from a machine").
Originally posted by EmmaSohan:
Let me try again. Suppose you as author have deliberately created some issue, like a conflict or problem, and the reader is reading to see how that issue is resolved. Then I think there's an obligation to resolve the issue.
And those units have a start -- the precipitating incident, the presentation of the problem.
quote:What about jokes? Do you want to say that if someone calls it a joke, it will be a joke?
Originally posted by MerlionEmrys:
I think another key here, is to avoid proscription...
And of course there is intent. Deep down I feel like if someone writes something and says it's a story, it is-other people can decide whether or not they like it, but if that thing about the baby shoes can be a story, seems to me like anything can.
quote:What utter sophistry.
As long as you're not trying to make objective value judgements about subjective stuff (which all forms of art/expression/literature/music/films/whatever the heck are) then I don't care about the rest.
Anything a person puts sincere effort into is worthwhile, on at least some level.
quote:I want to just agree with this, but I can't, fully. Or at least not in every circumstance.
Let me try again. Suppose you as author have deliberately created some issue, like a conflict or problem, and the reader is reading to see how that issue is resolved. Then I think there's an obligation to resolve the issue.
quote:I'd say that anything that creates laughter/smiles/humorous reactions and was intended as such is a "joke" (and a case could probably be made that the intent isn't even needed-a thing is a "joke" to anyone that finds it funny.)
What about jokes? Do you want to say that if someone calls it a joke, it will be a joke?
quote:Exactly.
Stories (and books) are too complicated to have a simple answer like jokes.
quote:Perhaps. But what? And to what purpose?
But maybe there is something to find.
quote:Not at all. Sincere belief.
What utter sophistry.
quote:Based on that, if I sincerely try to kill you, because I believe it right, it has value. Jim Jones was sincere when he poisoned the Cool-Aid. What value did sincerity have in giving that act valuae?
Anything a person puts sincere effort into is worthwhile, on at least some level.
quote:One thing I've noticed over the years, is that a sincere belief in anything, no matter how strongly held, has nothing to do with the accuracy of that belief. Some, on seeing such a statement, might see a sophistic tilt to that remark, which is why I tend to favor objective argument.
Not at all. Sincere belief.
quote:Again, more sophistry. Of course you lie, everyone lies. If we didn’t, there wouldn’t be a cohesive society. It is also a common trope in so many stories. And you deliberately misrepresent the meaning of the word sophistry you are trying to rebut, another sophist trait. Sophistry is not lying.
Not at all. Sincere belief.
Sophistry indicates, basically, lying. I don't lie, unless it's to save a life or such.
quote:And even more sophistry. My, you are good. But I find the basis of your opinions, the arguments in support of them and the conclusions of the majority of your arguments to be specious, fallacious and misleading. As well as essentially irrelevant to any discussion of prose or rhetoric.
Which is why I react as I do when people try to apply objective universal value judgments (sic) to art/creativity/literature/film/whatever terms you want to use.
quote:Context. I'd already made this statement once referring to creative works, I didn't feel I needed to re-iterate the slash-filled qualification that I was referring to the types of things we're discussing-creative works, literature in particular.
Based on that, if I sincerely try to kill you, because I believe it right, it has value. Jim Jones was sincere when he poisoned the Cool-Aid. What value did sincerity have in giving that act valuae?
quote:Naaa. After sophistry, the second most popular troll-trick is the old: you misunderstood what I said because...so it's all your fault."
Context. I'd already made this statement once referring to creative works,