World, Writing, Wealth discussion

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Summer of Haint Blue
All Things Writing & Publishing
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Does the race or ethnicity of a writer matter?
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I've never been a university professor, a woman, an assassin, an emperor's bodyguard or a colonist on another planet. As a writer it's up to me to research enough to allow me to write from those perspectives well enough to tell a good story.
I have been an autistic child struggling to understand a bewildering world, a university student, a bureaucrat, and a grumpy old man resisting other people's idea of "progress", so I feel I can write those perspectives with some authenticity. I have incorporated all of those into my stories, though only from my singular experience. And I certainly don't begrudge other writers using those points of view no matter their background.
That's what writers do! Without that ability, the writing world would be a sterile and joyless place.
I believe the important drive for more diverse voices should focus on allowing people with a variety of perspectives to be heard, and allowing them to tell the stories that they believe need to be told.
It should not be about shutting other writers down.

'I couldn't agree more, Jimmie.
It'd be incredibly boring if we were only allowed to talk about ourselves.'
Here about 3 hours ago and it vanished.

Hi Jimmy, nice to meet you, as this is the 'active,' thread, I'll move it to the 'All Things Writing & Publishing' where it has a better fit.
I'll delete the duplicate thread.
Cheers Graeme

That's what I like about far-future sci fi...POC won't have the same mannerisms, backgrounds, thoughts as POC today, so I think you can be forgiven for how they might act or behave or feel in that future time period.
That said, I think you really have to understand your audience as a writer. For example, go check out the gay romance categories on Amazon. You'd think the gay community would be one of the biggest proponents of diversity, and yet most if not all those books have white characters on the cover. Take a closer look, and a lot of those books are actually written by women.
To the writers here, if you're writing a diverse character just for the sake of catering to your audience, make sure that's what your audience actually wants, and it's not just the cries and complaints from people who would never read your work or that genre anyway.

In lit it’s less manifesting


Thanks for your comments.
P.S. I love the list of your favorite books. All Steinbeck novels, Catch 22, and Catcher on the Rye are books I’d would add to that list. . I named my daughter Eustacia from T Hardy’s “Return of the Native”.
Jimmie


To answer the question the thread poses, I seek out authors of other races and ethnicities. How else to expand my world view? I'm currently re-reading Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston.


I wonder if they use a pen name, does it matter? I don't read those genres, so have no idea whether it matters.

About 2 years ago, the author announced starting the transgender journey and changed to a female name. She lost some readers (and possibly gained others).
I like the story, the characters, and the writing. As a reader, I don't care as long as more books in that universe keep coming out.

There are a lot of Intersectionalists who assert that gender is a choice. What if a man who writes women badly, claims to be a woman?

There are a lot of Intersectionalists who assert that gender is a choice. What if a man who writes women badly, claims to be a woman?"
Then you've got a woman who writes women badly - really wanna run with that as a reason for your bad writing?
As a happenstance of genetics, I fit into several ethnic groups but do not claim to own the exclusive rights to write about them. I understand the need for diverse voices to be heard, and that's an incredibly good thing. But literature should be judged on its own merits and not who the author's parents are.
What say You?