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| Aspiring Writers For aspiring writers of science fiction and fantasy - discuss issues of writing, and find useful writer resources and have a sample of your work critiqued here. |
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| | #61 (permalink) |
| Moderator Join Date: May 2006 Location: Texas
Posts: 8,547
| Re: Swearing in books It depends on how much there is of it and how extreme it is. Such, if used properly, can add to character, it can also lighten things at particularly grim moments, if the expletives are a bit odd. I wouldn't just pepper his language with the harshest terms, but a lot of characters in fiction use such words a fair amount... they just don't tend to be the ones that modern people find all that offensive when they're used that much, unless it's really necessary to drive home a point about that character and make him (or her) thoroughly unpleasant.... |
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| | #62 (permalink) |
| Gorgeousness Join Date: Feb 2007 Location: Oregon
Posts: 666
| Re: Swearing in books My personal opinion is that fantasy isn't the best setting for copious amounts of bad language, because it's just too contemporary. But perhaps an editor would be a better person to ask? Because even if it doesn't work for most stories, it doesn't mean it couldn't be pulled off. |
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| | #64 (permalink) | |
| Lady of Autumn Join Date: Oct 2006 Location: Lincolnshire
Posts: 3,376
| Re: Swearing in books Quote:
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| | #65 (permalink) |
| Crazy Writer Join Date: Sep 2006 Location: Sri Lanka
Posts: 61
| Re: Swearing in books There was one book I read about a decade ago that had so much useless gratuitous profanity that I ended up getting so fed up with it that I grabbed a black felt marker and started blacking them out. It was pretty shocking seeing how many black marks there ended up being. Of course, I gave up after a few pages or so, both blacking it out and reading it. I'm pretty sure it was a Ludlum, so possibly the one mentioned further upstream, although I wouldn't swear to it on a stack of Bibles. Occasional profanity I can handle. Gratuitous everywhere profanity? I won't even read it. To me, it feels like laziness on the part of the writer. |
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| | #66 (permalink) | |
| Moderator Join Date: May 2006 Location: Texas
Posts: 8,547
| Re: Swearing in books Quote:
I do agree that, in most fantasy settings, it's a very dubious procedure to use contemporary curse or swear words, as they will seem out of place; other than that... try to make it realistic for that character, but don't go overboard.... | |
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| | #67 (permalink) |
| Dreams of Midnight Join Date: Oct 2006 Location: Cumbria
Posts: 696
| Re: Swearing in books Aragorn used to swear like a trooper off camera and off page, he just made sure none of it was in the media to sully his image in the Fourth age. Also Frodo was the Shire's swearing champion five years in a row. And that's the twuth. |
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| | #68 (permalink) | |
| SFF writer Join Date: Sep 2007 Location: Cambridgeshire
Posts: 76
| Re: Swearing in books Quote:
In my book, mostly I use Shakespearian-style insults ("thou mewling whey-faced aleworm"*), or bits of British English slang that don't sound too modern, like b-ll-cks. The F-word may be traceable as far back as the early 16th century in written records, but it does sound rather modern owing to the fact that it was banned in print until recent decades. OTOH it doesn't feel out of place in "The Lies of Locke Lamora", which has a quasi-historical setting that seems to me to fit somewhere between the 15th and 18th centuries, judging by the costume descriptions and overall level of technology. Since that seems to be the period when "swive", the main slang verb for copulation in the Middle Ages, was replaced by f---, that would make sense. If I do use f---, though, it certainly won't be in such abundance as in "Lies..."! * the 'thou' is an important part of the insult, not a casual archaism - by the late-16th/early-17th century, it had become a by-word for name-calling: "If thou thouest him some thrice, it shall not be amiss" (Shakespeare, Twelfth Night) - Sir Toby Belch, advising Sir Andrew Aguecheek on how to proceed in a duel, by beginnng with insults. | |
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| | #69 (permalink) |
| Moderator Join Date: May 2006 Location: Texas
Posts: 8,547
| Re: Swearing in books Well, let's see if I'll have to censor my own link here.... ![]() Online Etymology Dictionary And yes, it appears that the earliest usage in print was around the early 16th century, but it was around much, much earlier... its origins are in doubt, as you can see when you look it up at that site, and it's closely related (in some derivations) to "fr*g", of course. The thing to remember if using cursing in any fiction is to balance what is considered a curseword or swearing now and what was considered so at the period you're writing about. Words we view as such may simply have been the proper term for something in the original language and time, yet if they hit a modern reader as inappropriate, it can be jarring. It's a fine line one has to walk between the two.... |
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| | #70 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Sep 2007 Location: Kent
Posts: 77
| Re: Swearing in books I agree with the contemporary argument, I find that words like Bast**d are ok in moderation...another point to consider is that if your fantasy story is set in another world apart from earth, and this can apply to general fantasy settings as well as science fiction, then who's to say how your world has developed to use bad language. I've read authors such as Feist who've used the language used in the same sort of era e.g. "Jakes" in stead of the crapper or whatever, and that works well, but I've also read fantasy books with more modern swear words in it which also worked...its a matter of choice and whether it works for your particular book I suppose... |
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