The Past is Now, and Using Conflict in Fiction

WEBB

I must admit, I have history on the brain these days. It should come as no surprise that as a historical fiction writer, I subscribe to the idea that history is always relevant. Understanding what has passed is the answer to our whys and hows, and becomes the building blocks of the future. While reading (and writing) historical fiction, I’m searching for aspects not always present in other genres of fiction, that are, in fact, the hisfic genre’s strengths. Things like: 

  • Escapism: living in a different world for a while 
  • Nostalgia: wasn’t everything better and easier before XYZ happened or XYZ was invented? 
  • Voyeurism: watching and experiencing the nature of a life different from our own from a safe distance 
  • Honoring genius or bravery of real people who haven’t been honored before 
  • Knowledge: learning about how and why social mores, political movements, art movements, technology, and a million other aspects of daily life evolved, as well as how they have paved the way for today 
  • Comfort:  True stories of fortitude and survival are oddly comforting. They convey a message of hope and endurance. In those stories, we see the strength of the human spirit and understand that we will get through this, come what may, and there is not only an end to everything, but the other side. 
  • Today, history is being made around us, for better or worse, and as writers, it’s nearly impossible not to consider how that affects our ways of life as well as our thinking. To many of us, we’re watching in horror as history’s dark past becomes the present once again. It seems we are doomed to repeat history as is so often said, because the human memory is short, and frankly, I don’t know many teenagers—or many adults—who have learned from someone else’s mistakes. Mostly we learn from our own. So here we are, in the midst of a great conflict. 

     Lately, common words in our everyday vocabulary are: 

    protest, resist, contradict, agitate, depose – all examples of CONFLICT 

    Another way to view conflict J. Turnbull of Oregon State University shares with eloquence: conflict really means “thwarted, endangered, or opposing desire.” These are fundamental words to those who wish to protect democracy, protect rights, protect others, but they’re also fundamental words in our writing lives. Conflict in all its forms are essential to a character’s journey and development, and ultimately, to the outcome of their fate.  

    There are many ways to sew conflict into a story, both externally and internally. A combination of both makes for a stronger narrative in general, though some character-driven stories are quite successful with the majority of the conflict being internal as well. We probably know a lot about conflict already, but I find after years and years of writing, it’s still easy […]

    Keep Reading

    / /

    More Technology for Writers

      Last year I wrote a post about some inexpensive high-tech tools that I found useful as a writer, and the response I received suggested that this was a pretty hot topic. Since that time,...
    Read More about More Technology for Writers

    When It Absolutely, Positively Isn’t Ready

    Posted on the file cabinet next to my desk is a refrigerator magnet someone bought me with a quote from Douglas Adams that reads: “I love deadlines. I love the wooshing sound they make as...
    Read More about When It Absolutely, Positively Isn’t Ready

    How to Tweet so People Will Listen

    Last month we discussed two strategies that work for writers on Twitter. #1. Be a person. #2. Connect with other people. Of course those two goals are easier said than done. You'll see so many writers tweeting links...
    Read More about How to Tweet so People Will Listen

    For the Love of Paper

    Over the past few years, I’ve grappled with a relationship problem that’s severely impacted my writing:  My computer and I have been growing slowly but surely apart. As a companion for my day job publicizing...
    Read More about For the Love of Paper

    Transformational Journeys—Working With Archetypes

    One day, as I was really struggling with the direction of my work in progress, I got up and began restlessly searching through my bookshelves and found an old, tattered copy of a book someone...
    Read More about Transformational Journeys—Working With Archetypes

    2 Ways Your Brain is Wired to Undermine Your Story – And What To Do About It

    One of the things I love about advances in brain science is that scientists are finally proving so much of what writers have been saying about the human condition since long before the invention of,...
    Read More about 2 Ways Your Brain is Wired to Undermine Your Story – And What To Do About It

    Take Six: with YOU

    photo by fensterbme Therese here. This is Donald Maass's usual posting day, but because he is still contending with the aftereffects of Hurricane Sandy, he asked to use this time for...
    Read More about Take Six: with YOU

    Admitting Defeat to Find Success

    Photo by Flickr's cobalt123 I haven't had an easy time with my second book-in-progress. I came up with a concept just before my first book sold, and fell in fast love....
    Read More about Admitting Defeat to Find Success

    Are Some Realities Too Real For Fiction?

    After years of studiously avoiding even the slightest scrap of reality in my fiction, I've become an inveterate includer of my own world in the worlds of my characters. My narrator in The Kitchen Daughter...
    Read More about Are Some Realities Too Real For Fiction?

    Take Five: Juliet Marillier and Flame of Sevenwaters (Plus: Giveaway!)

    Penguin US edition, releases 11/6 Therese here. It is my privilege to tell you about WU contributor Juliet Marillier's latest book release--another in her mega-popular Sevenwaters series--called Flame of Sevenwaters. If...
    Read More about Take Five: Juliet Marillier and Flame of Sevenwaters (Plus: Giveaway!)

    Writers: Enjoy Every Success, No Matter How Small

    The quote "Writers: enjoy every success, no matter how small" came from Nathan Bransford, and it's such good advice. Sometimes we get so obsessed with some big goal (getting published, writing a bestseller, etc.) that...
    Read More about Writers: Enjoy Every Success, No Matter How Small

    Sometimes the Sun Shines When It’s Raining

    At the time I thought of writing this post, I didn't know we'd be on the tail end of Frankenstorm when it aired. So perhaps it was fate that made me ditch the first ten...
    Read More about Sometimes the Sun Shines When It’s Raining

    Don’t Forget to Celebrate

    A couple of days ago I caught myself trying to do five things at once: bake scones for a family visit (English scones, the kind you eat with jam) complete the fancy beading on a...
    Read More about Don’t Forget to Celebrate

    The Waiting Game

    Jörg Weingrill One of the most difficult – and most unexpectedly difficult – aspects of being a writer is the waiting game. It doesn’t matter if you’ve published four books, as...
    Read More about The Waiting Game

    After “The End” – The Epilogue

    Ah, the epilogue.  Tons of e-ink has been spilled about it.  Writers have tried to define it; agents have clashed over representing books that contain it.  Editors read epilogues with red pencils at the ready. ...
    Read More about After “The End” – The Epilogue