Heeeeeelp!

Feb. 23rd, 2009 06:59 pm
masterofmidgets: (tony stark)
[personal profile] masterofmidgets
Workshopping was not nearly as terrifying as I expected it to be! Actually it went really well. I got some nice compliments on my writing on stuff like pacing, my prose style, my descriptive settings (very cool because I usually fail as descriptive scenes), and how I integrated the fantasy and realism elements. I also got some solid constructive criticisms - mostly that my side characters were too flat and their relationship to the main character wasn't developed enough, and that the dialogue heavy scenes needed to be expanded to feel less rushed(I did not think I could turn in a 17 page story and have people tell me parts needed to be longer!).

One of the things I was kinda sorta anticipating people having problems with was the male/male romance, because I realized I was writing it like a slash romance (rather than a gay romance), which takes certain things for granted, like the narrator not having much of a sexuality crisis. I think I will not make much change there, because OMGI'MATTRACTEDTOGUYS drama interests me so much less than OMGI'MATTRACTEDTOTHISSPECIFICINAPPROPRIATEGUY drama. But still, the concrit gave me some places to start on the revision, and I'm almost looking forward to the rewrite, even if I won't start it for a bit yet.

All in all, I'd call it a success. But still, I'm feeling all freaked out and stressed right now. Which I think has less to do with just the class and more with the fact that it made me start thinking about my major again. Because, well, I really honestly enjoyed, in a horrified, please-kill-me-now way, having people read my stuff and talking with them about how I could make it better. It felt so good and useful and productive. And it's making me start to give some more weight to the idea of declaring as an English major with a creative writing emphasis. And I just, I don't know why this is so scary to me. I don't know what I should do or what the right choice is, but I have to make it in the nearish future, and I've been spazzing about it all year.

I wish I could just ask for someone to tell me what to do, but I'm too old for that. So instead I'm just going to lay out what's in my head, and ask for advice. Or at least sympathy.

Reasons to be an English Major
  • I like reading books, and I like talking about them. To the point that I, completely under my own volition, read Anna Karenina during summer break and had long IM conversations with [livejournal.com profile] telyanofcelore about it.
  • I like writing (obviously)
  • I think - this is not very objective - I'm a decent-ish writer
  • I've really been loving the lit and writing classes I'm taking this quarter
  • I want to get my writing published eventually
  • there's some really neat people in the writing program here. Like Tobias Wolff. And Emily Kinney.
  • the course requirements are pretty doable (13 courses and 65 credits)
  • I don't know what I'll study if I don't
Reasons to not be an English Major
  •  I don't like some of the trends in literary criticism in academia that I hear about from English majors on lj (not necessarily at Stanford though)
  • I don't know if I'm that good of a writer
  • even though they'll support me no matter what, I know this isn't really what my parents want me to do
  • I wouldn't get to do some of the stuff I'm really excited by, like politics
  • I won't be that employable once I get out of school (and less so if I go to grad school), especially if I want to work in my field. Publishing is really competitive because all the English majors want to do it.
  • I'm scared that it is just a copout because I think it will be easy and I can't make up my mind on anything else

Date: 2009-02-24 04:47 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] deathbytamarind.livejournal.com
Also there are options to get published outside of all this. I'm looking into self-publishing my fiction somewhere down the line. I want to do it to say "I wrote a book." I don't even care if someone else buys it. I just want to write a novel and have it published.

There are also open submissions for anthology works and stuff. Here on LJ there's a comm for erotic authors (called [livejournal.com profile] erotic_authors, go fig) that posts calls for submissions almost every day. A lot of them pay, and they're not for shabby publications.

It's almost as much getting yourself out there than having the piece of paper. And if you posess the skill set (and I think you do) then you're already qualified.

Date: 2009-02-24 04:52 am (UTC)
ext_53859: (Default)
From: [identity profile] masterofmidgets.livejournal.com
That's definitely something to keep in mind - especially since the economy is wreaking havoc on the big publishing companies. It's really hard right now to get something accepted by a major company, but small indepent companies and self-publishers are doing a lot better, from what I've heard.

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