Postby LadyRushia » Wed Sep 05, 2007 7:32 pm
Ehh, well, it's not like you put "Arden was pw3ned by Blanc" in your actual serious writing. If you put something like that in there, then you'd be eaten by editors and hardcore grammar/literary people. "Blanc pw3ned Arden" is correct and the Grammar Editing Literary People(GELP) would adorn your abode with lavish pies and colorful cakes that sparkle in the sun.
Or they would publish you, XD.
Yeah, the thing with all this people who write criticism(not the improvement kind, the analytic kind) is they point out *all* of this stuff and they're like "The author used this to represent this and it all ties into the overall theme of this!" Now, some authors(like Joyce) actually take the time to put all this stuff in there and make it extremely rich, but most of the time authors are like "Wow, I just put that in there because I felt like it" or "Oh, I never thought of it like that." I think that's the thing with writers. . .well, I think all writers are just born with a natural sense for all this stuff, and the professional ones don't really have to think about it.
Thou must knowest two more devices of rhetoric:
Polysyndeton:when you've got a whole bunch of conjunctions together. ex: Chairs and couches and tables and portraits Writers use this technique to make things seem really really big.
Asyndeton:when you've got no conjunctions. ex: chairs, couches, tables, portraits Makes it all seem small, right?
The thing with the more difficult and lesser known rhetorical devices is that once you learn them they start to show up in your writing. You will achieve epic win if you do this.
Oh yeah, one thing that I haven't seen too much of yet in your writing is symbolism, the kind where the author takes an ordinary object and makes it really really important. For example, in Naruto(don't know if you watch this series) the head band that the ninja wear are pretty significant. To Naruto, gaining it means that he's one step closer toward his goal; wearing it shows his pride for his village and his equal status to everyone else as a shinobi. Without giving away too much, Naruto has a big fight with someone who just abandons the village. Toward the end of this fight, the other person's head band is scratched, creating a big line running across it. When the fight is over, the other person walks away, leaving the scratched headband behind. Here, the object(the head band) is used to represent/emphasize the broken relationship between Naruto and this other person. And that's one of the reasons why that is one of the most important events in the entire series.
I can see you doing this already with Arden's necklace(though it may not portray the same thing as the example). When you make an odinary object(head band, necklace, sock, whatever) an important part of your story, it adds much more depth.
There's my 3.14 cents; you probably know all of that anyway and, since you've got the whole thing pretty much plotted out, you have more symbolistic symbols for the GELP to be like "WAAAH! ^_^"
I have diction weilding powers? **imagines self with a tone sword and a metaphor shield**