velvetpage: (Flights of Fancy)
velvetpage ([personal profile] velvetpage) wrote2005-07-14 12:26 pm
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Musings on clichés and archetypes

Probably the most interesting thing about setting this book underwater, in a dolphin realm, is that many of the clichés of speech that we take for granted simply don't work. I'm hesitant to use words like "territory," "homeland," or "house," for example. I've kept "territory" because I can't think of a suitable replacement, but "homeland" has become "homesea," which my spellchecker doesn't like at all, and my dolphins don't live indoors so "house" is not really a problem.

I've been trying to create new clichés and mottos that fit dophin society. "Revenge is a dish best served cold" has no meaning in a place where food is not cooked, so I changed it to a rather clumsy reference to fat fish being more nourishing than thin, young ones. I'm going to have to tweak that a bit, but the basic idea is right. My characters don't say, "What on earth," they say, "What under the sweet green sea." They don't talk so much as sing to each other, and while I use the word "said" for ease of use, I also use the word "sang" from time to time, and more melodic synonyms liked croon, hum, intone - all of those I use often.

At the only writing workshop I made it to at Anthrocon, reference was made to the fact that senses are different when your characters are animals. You can tell a good writer from an amateur by the volume of scent referents in their books. I don't think I was consistent with this in "Dreamcarver," though it was there at least sporadically. This probably has something to do with thinking of my characters as humans more often than not. Having changed milieux entirely, though, I'm forcing myself to think of my characters as dolphins. I have to make up mannerisms of speech and body language that fit creatures who live in three dimensions, who have no legs and therefore no waists or hips, and for whom light versus dark is less important than sound versus silence. And I have to couch these mannerisms in language that my readers will automatically associate with the clichés and archetypes with which they are already familiar. My characters have to come across as simultaneously human and dolphin - dolphin for the purposes of plot but human for the purposes of character.

I suppose that's the soul of anthropomorphic writing, right there.

[identity profile] purplkat.livejournal.com 2005-07-15 02:00 am (UTC)(link)
I've read it in a couple of books. People thought that cats could only see in black and white because they originally thought cats saw in the dark because they had more (I think) 'cone' receptors in their eyes than 'rod' receptors. The 'cone' ones can see in low light, but can't see colors.

Turns out, cats have more 'rods' than people previously believed, but they can see in the dark because they have an added something or other in their eyes that bounces the light around more. (Been a while since I read this, so I'm a bit fuzzy on the details) The reason that people's eyes reflect red in a camera lens is because the light shines off the blood vessels in the back of the eye, whereas many cats have that greenish color because the light is shining off that added bouncy light layer thing.

(It sounded a lot more professional when the cat expert wrote about it, mind.)

[identity profile] kesmun.livejournal.com 2005-07-15 01:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Cool. Thanks. I had someone tell me that cats were color-blind when I was good-naturedly complaining that my cat loves to be picked up when I wear a certain shirt and loves a certain blanket because they both match his eyes.