Kimberly
asked
Kristen Simmons:
When you began writing Article 5, did you give any specific thought to developing characters that challenged stereotypical gender norms? If so, how did the dystopian genre aid or enhance your ability to breathe life into these characters and do you feel that dystopia provided the perfect setting in which to question and challenge the status quo?
Kristen Simmons
Hi Kimberly,
Great questions. I don't know that I had the specific intention to challenge stereotypical gender norms, but rather to create survivors in a world that had been taken over by a morality driven regime. The dystopian setting was the perfect place to do this because the world was so harsh that the characters regularly had to make decisions that impacted their survival. (As an aside, I didn't know that I was writing in the dystopian genre at the time - I was just writing the story that came up in my head. It was later, once I had an agent, that she told me the story would be marketed this way.) That said, the world in Article 5 is such that women's roles are very defined and limited, and so in order for Ember to be able to accomplish what she needed to, she was forced to overcome those barriers in addition to those which addressed her basic needs (safety, food, shelter, etc.). Basically, dystopia is the perfect place to challenge characters in all ways, and to magnify current societal issues (in my humble opinion). :)
Thanks for writing!
Kristen
Great questions. I don't know that I had the specific intention to challenge stereotypical gender norms, but rather to create survivors in a world that had been taken over by a morality driven regime. The dystopian setting was the perfect place to do this because the world was so harsh that the characters regularly had to make decisions that impacted their survival. (As an aside, I didn't know that I was writing in the dystopian genre at the time - I was just writing the story that came up in my head. It was later, once I had an agent, that she told me the story would be marketed this way.) That said, the world in Article 5 is such that women's roles are very defined and limited, and so in order for Ember to be able to accomplish what she needed to, she was forced to overcome those barriers in addition to those which addressed her basic needs (safety, food, shelter, etc.). Basically, dystopia is the perfect place to challenge characters in all ways, and to magnify current societal issues (in my humble opinion). :)
Thanks for writing!
Kristen
More Answered Questions
Leah P.
asked
Kristen Simmons:
This question contains spoilers…
(view spoiler)[
I loved "The Glass Arrow". I was wondering what made you want to write a standalone novel when there seems to be a lot more that could have been explored in Aya's world. Also, what made you want to just focus on Aya and rescuing her family versus Aya also trying to repair the world she lives in?
(hide spoiler)]
The Book Type Gal
asked
Kristen Simmons:
Hey Kristen Simmons! I really loved Article 5 and started read Breaking Point last year but unfortunately had to stop because my library needed it back ASAP! Don't worry, I'm about to pick it up again soon! Anyway, you have an amazing writing style and I love Ember and Chase. Have you ever written any short story to do with the Article 5 series or/and are wanting to? Thanks! xx
Kristen Simmons
2,008 followers
About Goodreads Q&A
Ask and answer questions about books!
You can pose questions to the Goodreads community with Reader Q&A, or ask your favorite author a question with Ask the Author.
See Featured Authors Answering Questions
Learn more