Martial Arts of Writing
I believe a lot of elements of
writing can be taught. An inexperienced writer who finds the right teacher,
right for him or her I mean, can learn much about things like characterization,
plot, setting, novel landscape, pacing, even to a certain extent paragraphing
and sentences. Putting it all together in a unique and powerful way, though, is
something the writer has to find himself. And so the reason writing programs
give a lot of people MFAs who never publish or who publish very little. I got
an MFA after teaching myself writing by reading (to me the most the single most
important thing besides writing itself a writer can do to improve) and writing.
Did the MFA help my writing? Yes. Is getting an MFA for everybody? No. Some it
won’t help. Some don’t need it. But for me it helped me focus on my weaknesses
and helped me know myself as a writer better.
When I was learning the martial art
Taekwondo I realized the importance of breaking down moves. We’d work on part
of a kick and then another part and then another part. It would take a long
time to put it all together and be able to do that kick right and then even
longer to be able to use the kick in combination with other movements. It would
take still longer to be effective sparring with the move. Some people never
could get there. They knew what they should do but they couldn’t make their
bodies do it. Or they couldn’t let their bodies do it. Some people could do it
fairly well. Only a few were really good.
Writing is more difficult. Still, I
think writing’s moves can be analyzed in ways and by isolating each aspect of
writing that aspect can be improved. Whether the writer does this herself or in
a program or with other writers doesn’t really matter. Whatever works.
But are there some parts of writing
that can’t be taught? Sure. The writer’s unique way of looking at the world.
The writer’s style, too, can’t really be taught though it can be developed. The
writer’s particular feel for language is, I think, like personality. And
there’s that one very magical part to writing (like with Taekwondo); everything
has to work together without the writer consciously forcing it to do so (of
course when rewriting the writer will be very conscious about his choices). The
writer has to find that unconscious place where he becomes the story.
Everything slips away. The room. His fingers moving on the keyboard. Words like
setting, plot, language, characters mean nothing to him. He is what he’s
writing.
And
here’s a blog from LitStack by Lauren Alwan about Robert Olen Butler’s book
FROM WHERE YOU DREAM and his method of writing from inside the character…which
I think has some similarities to my ideas about martial arts and writing
fiction.
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