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Characters of Color
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Mary
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Jul 28, 2016 11:04AM

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You just might have started a riot. But I'll have my two pennyworth in the hope it may be helpful.
It may prove to be very hard to write a believable character whose life experiences are far removed from ones own. (Different race. Different gender. Different sexuality. And so on.)
Also. My own fear is that trying to create characters outside of ones own ethnicity leaves one open to all sorts of criticism from those who see themselves as the guardians of political correctness.
And before anyone starts hurling abuse I ain't saying that this kind of scrutiny is wrong, I merely make the point that it is often worded in a way that suggests the critic is a much more evolved being than the pond life he/she is criticising.
Therefore I have stuck to pink as the skin colour for most of my protagonists. I have made exceptions, though, for green - and grey with scales.



If you have extensive knowledge of another ethnic group and can give it an authentic voice, go for it.

If skilled authors expend the necessary time and effort to access the abundant material available and engage in intelligent discourse with relatives, friends and acquaintances representative of the particular aspects in question, they will create characters that are believable, accurately portrayed and interesting. If they don't, they won't.

Everything that Jim said. If you're not sure, *ask someone you know.* Read a lot of things. If you're not sure about what you read, ask someone you know.
I knew I wanted to write about what it was like for a regular person to be caught up in the Islamic revolution in Iran for one of my books -- so I asked my hairdresser, who was a refugee. She was able to tell me things, answered all of my questions generously ... and gave me information that would allow me to write a believable Persian male character.


I tend to go about it this way: I write people as people. I fear that writing people this way or that way due to superficial stuff as skin color, how many years they've been alive and so on will produce nothing but stereotypes. Does their skin color or age or what have you have any bearing on the type of character they are? I suppose, but it's a bit of a secondary thing. A house is more than just the color of paint outside, after all.
Write your characters the way you want to write them. Have no fear.

Not to mention that different race doesn't necessarily equal different life experience.

Yes. This. Granted, it may be true of all of us that our characters carry a bit of ourselves in them, how dull would our books be if every character was exactly like us? I could write a novel about a bunch of middle-aged fat white guys like me, but even I would get bored of it after about three sentences.

I don't do preferences though. Only male-female pairings in my books

Even though you may think it's easier to write characters of colour in Fantasy/Sci-fi, as authors can create the cultural background, those genres have still traditionally omitted characters of colour (unless they're aliens or monstrous creatures). So it's about effort and a willingness not to stick to what you know. I personally find it strange in modern works based in cities where there is not one person from a different ethnic background. That speaks volumes to a reader of a different background about the author.
As Jim said, research is key. If you're willing to do research for your book on setting, language, locations, history, male/female POV etc, it's not going to be more difficult to research a culture or races. And all you've got to remember is that, as Dwayne said, we are all people. If all of the stigmas and stereotypes were reversed, we'd still all be people. Good luck with your writing. The fact you care suggests you'll be fine!

