For the edification of the reader

The recent brouhahah over Stephen Fry saying asinine things about trigger warnings has given me an idea.


I’m going to add something to my website. I don’t know yet how I’ll arrange it in terms of code and presentation, but I’m going to provide content warnings for my fiction. Because I’ve had parents email me asking whether my book would be suitable for their kid (my inevitable answer: depends on the kid, and I don’t know yours, but the book contains XYZ), and readers asking whether my book contains a particular type of thing because they just don’t feel able to deal with that right now. So why not make that information publicly available? Yes, spoilers — but nobody will force you to read the content warnings. They’re there for the people who want them, and everybody else can go their merry way, exactly as they’re doing right now.


It will take me a while to write all this up (because I want to include my short fiction, not just my novels), and like I said, I need to figure out where I’ll put it on my site and how to code it (if you’re there to check the warnings for Work A, you won’t necessarily see all the warnings for Works B-Z). But apart from the labor involved, I see no reason not to provide this information. Also, I figure it would be good to ask: what kinds of things do you think it would help to see warnings for? I’m thinking major common ones, rather than trying to pin down every little thing — triggers can be very idiosyncratic. I’m also thinking of the kinds of things parents worry about, which aren’t so much triggering as inappropriate for kids at certain ages. So far I have:



Violence

Non-graphic violence
Graphic violence
Sexual violence
Murder
Major character death

Profanity

Mild profanity (i.e. “damn,” “hell,” etc)
Strong profanity (i.e. “fuck”)

Mild sexual content (i.e. reference to sex, but no direct depiction)
Drug use (not including tobacco, but including alcoholism)
Mental illness (PTSD, depression, etc)
Psychological abuse
Harm to children
Harm to animals

I’m not including things that haven’t actually shown up in my fiction, e.g. graphic sexual content, and obviously people’s boundaries for things like “non-graphic violence” vs. “graphic violence” differ. But if you can think of anything major I’ve left out, do let me know. (I’m also probably going to include special notes where necessary, e.g. “In Ashes Lie covers a period of plague in London, and gets quite grim and detailed about that event.” Because I don’t generally think I need to warn for illness, but I feel that’s one of the most horrific things I’ve ever written, and people might want to know it’s coming.)


Basically, I can go on providing this on a one-at-a-time basis — which requires people to do things like ask me “is there sexual violence in this book?,” thus possibly disclosing their own history in a way they would rather not do — or I can just put the info out there. I think the latter is the better way to go.


EDIT: good lord, self, have you written anything that doesn’t have non-graphic violence? (Answer: yes. But not at any length above novelette.)


Originally published at Swan Tower. You can comment here or there.



This entry was also posted at http://swan-tower.dreamwidth.org/758419.html. Comment here or there.
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Published on April 14, 2016 00:01
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message 1: by G. (new)

G. Tyler I would say remove major character death as its purpose is already covered by the Murder, graphic violence, etc. Having it just on its own just acts as a spoiler for the narrative to follow moreso than a warning of triggering content.


message 2: by Marie (new)

Marie Brennan G. wrote: "I would say remove major character death as its purpose is already covered by the Murder, graphic violence, etc. Having it just on its own just acts as a spoiler for the narrative to follow moreso ..."

The page will come with a clear note at the top that it contains spoilers. Many people react differently to "side characters get killed" and "a main character dies," so I think keeping those as separate warnings is still useful.


message 3: by G. (last edited Apr 15, 2016 02:22PM) (new)

G. Tyler Okay, I can see that but it still feels like a detriment to those looking for trigger warnings but aren't effected by that. Maybe put those behind a further spoiler tag that hides the info unless you click on it? I know some message boards have spoiler coding like [spoiler=etc] that will hide whatever is within the field unless you click the spoiler button it generates.


message 4: by Marie (new)

Marie Brennan G. wrote: "Okay, I can see that but it still feels like a detriment to those looking for trigger warnings but aren't effected by that. Maybe put those behind a further spoiler tag that hides the info unless y..."

The thing is, for some people that *is* triggering, and I can't hide everything with spoiler code or equivalent -- then a site visitor will wind up saying "huh, there's something else that might be triggering but I have to click to see whether it's something that I'm worried about," whereupon they either click through (thus defeating the purpose of hiding it) or don't (thus defeating the purpose of warning in the first place). I can and will hide specific details (e.g. say "major character death" but then hide who dies behind code or rot13), but ultimately, anybody looking for warnings for the things that bother them will unavoidably also see warnings for the things that don't bother them. The only solution to that is for them to ask me or someone who has read the book to warn them only about the things they want to know about.


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