Gothic Day of Creation: Dialogue Workshop

Today is the Gothic Day of Creation over at Romancing the Gothic project, with so much good stuff going on! I kicked us off with a dialogue workshop, and if you missed it, here are some highlights for you…

Choose your characters for the workshop. You need Character A and B. Pick a Gothic trope to form the basis of their discussion, drop them into a setting and let one character have a piece of information that the other one needs to know.

Consider dialect, idioms and accents and build them into your worldbuilding for the scene, the character backstory, and be aware of not appropriating the modes of speech used by minority groups you do not belong to.

Resources can include dialect dictionaries and YouTube recordings of extinct or dying or rare accents and dialect. I’ve used www.sussexhistory.co.uk/sussex-dialect/Sussex-dialect.html which you can buy as a hard copy but also is free here online. Dialect dictionaries are great because some of them – like this one – tell you origins of the words and idioms (they may not be correct in all cases but they give a good flavour of the dialect, etymology and perceptions of it at the time the dialect dictionary was compiled).

  • What points of contact does your world have?
  • Who mixes with whom?
  • How does the history of your character’s home affect their vocabulary and speech patterns?
  • Do other characters understand them all the time?
  • Do your characters start picking up each other’s words and phrases?
  • When do your characters code-switch? Under what circumstances do your characters slip into a different accent to their normal one and why?

Dialect can be used as a marker of class and this is not always a good thing. It can intersect with other kinds of prejudices, and betray complicated dynamics among your characters if they are from different – or even the same – socio-cultural/religious/political/ethnic background.

Decide whether the two characters you picked are from the same or different kind of background, and how this will translate into the dialogue. What bundle of preconceptions and stereotypes accompany their first impressions of each other and how do their accents/dialects play into this?

Subversive dialogue! Language is as much about the artful failure to communicate as it is about communication… How can you play with constructed dialects/actual ones, riddles, idioms etc, so that the characters reveal everything the protagonist needs to know, but in such a way that the protagonist does not immediately understand they now have all the information they need? The unraveling of meaning can then be part of the central mystery. It can also add tension if the reader understands before the protagonist does.

Pick Character A or B to impart some info to the other one. How are they going to do it and will B understand?

Go over your dialogue and read it out loud. How do you render pauses, repeated words (when people stumble or need time to think), words they rely on to fill gaps as they think like “um”, “er”, or “like”, or a swear word, and so on? What about emphasis – words or individual syllables? How can you represent this on the page?

Exercise for Homework: find a short video or soundbite of people speaking naturally. Transcribe it as closely as you can, with all the pauses, repeated words, punctuation to represent their syntax and rhythm of speech, etc. Don’t correct errors like mispronounciation or idioms that they get wrong. This might give you ideas around how to transpose this onto fictional characters in your own writing.

If you enjoyed my workshop or like these tips, feel free to buy me a coffee!

#amwriting #GothicFiction #romancingTheGothic #writingWorkshop

Fan Art!

I’ve had some awesome fan art from ‘trie, a concept artist who discovered The Crows via the Romancing the Gothic book club. I’ve shared it on my Twitter and Insta but sharing here as well with the original illustration by Tom Brown, the artist who illustrated the eBook and paperback versions of the novel.

Ricky Porter was a very popular antivillain character among book club folks and featured in the Saturday lecture “BE GAY, DO CRIMES: QUEER GOTHIC REIMAGININGS” by Dr Sam Hirst, who organises and facilitates the Romancing the Gothic network and events [for free]. Support Sam here: https://ko-fi.com/samhirst

Sadly, the recordings of this lecture weren’t useable for uploading to the YouTube Channel, so GOOD NEWS! The lecture is going to be repeated, probably in August. So if you missed it or just want to hear it again, you can sign up to get RtG newsletters and info on the site (www.romancingthegothic.wordpress.com).

Ricky and his role in The Crows features with minor spoilers in Part 4 of the lecture which considered asexual/aromantic representation in Gothic fiction.

Dr Hirst discussed the relationship between the main characters [Carrie, Ricky and Fairwood House itself] in terms of a queerplatonic polycule, and how decoupling a sexual motive for murder from Ricky’s serial killer identity centred the complexities of his character and the development of the platonic/queerplatonic relationship within the plot!

If you’re intrigued, you can meet Carrie, Ricky and Fairwood House (also known as The Crows) in this extract of the novel: the first 5 chapters are available for free on Wattpad, and there’s a shorter snippet post introducing Ricky here on my blog. You can meet Carrie in this fun short (non-canonical?) post, set before the events of the novel, and get to know the house in this one.

If you want to know more about the topic in general, stay tuned! I’ll let you know when the date for the lecture’s repeat is announced and also post the link when the recording goes up at a later date.

Here’s Ricky as imagined by Tom Brown the illustrator (top), and as reimagined by ‘trie (bottom)!

Ricky Porter by Tom Brown, detail of illustration in both eBook and Paperback formats Reimagined fan art version of Ricky Porter (in colour) by ‘trie blasingame, tentacle-made studios

‘trie blasingame || tentacle-made studios | | conceptual mixed media artist, illustrator, and writer
where to find tentacle-made studios:
quixotism and curiosity: from tentacle-made studios
tentacle-made studios on instagram
tentacle-made studios on twitter
online portfolio (housed on flickr)
tentacle-made studios on tumblr
tentacle-made studios’ facebook fan page
tentacle-made studios on youtube
where to support and buy tentacle-made studios’s art:
tentacle-made studios commissions
tentacle-made studios on redbubble
tentacle-made studios on etsy
tentacle-made studios on patreon
other projects ‘trie is involved in:
conversations from the north woods (podcast)
the adventures of squid & barnacle (webcomic)

#art #bookClub #etsy #fanArt #illustrations #patreon #redbubble #RickyPorter #romancingTheGothic #tentacleMadeStudios #tentacleMade #tentacleMadeStudios #TheCrows #tumblr
#MFWG are a big fan of Romancing the Gothic events and if you like #horror #folklore and #videogames the talk this weekend by Jennifer Cooke that looks fantastic! #RomancingTheGothic tickets are free/pay what you can https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/cycles-repeated-bodies-folklore-and-horror-video-games-w-jennifer-cooke-tickets-940357072317
Cycles Repeated: Bodies, Folklore, and Horror Video Games w. Jennifer Cooke

This talk will explore a range of survival horror games

Eventbrite
The always excellent Romancing The Gothic has a talk this weekend by Jennifer Cooke that hits a very sweet spot of #horror #folklore and #videogames well worth a look, as is the #RomancingTheGothic programme in general, tickets are free/pay what you can https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/cycles-repeated-bodies-folklore-and-horror-video-games-w-jennifer-cooke-tickets-940357072317
Cycles Repeated: Bodies, Folklore, and Horror Video Games w. Jennifer Cooke

This talk will explore a range of survival horror games

Eventbrite

#CallForPapers: Devils and Justified Sinners – 2024 Conference

This will be an #OnlineConference marking the 200th anniversary of James Hogg’s Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner.

#Gothic #GothicStudies #RomancingTheGothic #JamesHogg #OnlineEvent #Academics #Horror #HorrorStudies

https://romancingthegothic.com/2023/09/04/devils-and-justified-sinners-2024-conference/

Devils and Justified Sinners – 2024 Conference

An ONLINE conference on 24th and 25th August 2024 marking the 200th anniversary of James Hogg’s Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner The conference is entirely online and is open t…

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