azuire: (they're probably using starhub)
azuire ([personal profile] azuire) wrote in [community profile] inkstains2010-10-06 10:02 pm

tnt: what do you mean it's symbolic

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Today's TnT Open Thread was brought you by the lovely [personal profile] thorarosebird.

Do you find yourself writing about certain things when you didn't mean to? Or find recurring themes you didn't put there intentionally?
so_wordy: (bookish)

[personal profile] so_wordy 2010-10-06 11:22 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm not sure quite what to call it, but I usually write about the characters. All my stuff is behavior heavy, relying on nuances in body language. These are things I notice in real life, sort of like tells or reveals, that I think many people tend to miss.

When it comes to setting however..uh...it's absent. I need to physically see/research something to be able to write about it adequately.

Religion has also been popping up a lot in my poetry. Symbolism = love.
msmcknittington: An icon with a quote from Hamlet: "Words, words, words." (Hamlet words)

[personal profile] msmcknittington 2010-10-06 11:26 pm (UTC)(link)
I find myself writing about light a lot. Especially diffuse half-light, like twilight or moonlight or the light of a single candle. Or the transition of light through the day. Or someone opening a door or curtains and changing the light in the room, which definitely has symbolic meaning, but I don't always intend for it to be there.

I also end up setting things in the autumn frequently, transitioning into winter, which does have an effect on the quality of light. Autumn/winter light is that diffuse light. I think I might just like writing about interstitial places and threshholds and things that are neither one thing or the other. Like in the novel I am writing, a lot of it takes place on an airship traveling between countries that are traditional enemies, and one of the reasons the airship captain has that career is because it means he can make a home in the air and not have to become "rooted" in the soil of either country. That isn't something I intended to write about when I started off, either.

(Ha, my novel. Oh, self. I feel like I should be wearing a cardigan with leather patches on the elbows and using an NPR voice. You know, while talking about the dirigibles. *snort*)

I write about difficulty sleeping a lot, too, but I think that's just because I have insomnia and when it becomes obvious that I'm not going to sleep, I write. That's totally me writing what I know. :P

[personal profile] ex_pippin880 2010-10-07 03:21 am (UTC)(link)
.......do magic boxen count? I seem to like magic boxen a lot.

And human-like children of non-human things.

And strange jewellery.
mercredigirl: Screencap of Twi'lek Jedi Aaylas'ecura from Star Wars, kissing. (Aayla Secura)

[personal profile] mercredigirl 2010-10-07 04:05 am (UTC)(link)
Yep! Recently I've been writing a heck lot of postco & gender themes -- consciously, I think, now that I've noticed, but it was quite unintentional at first. And sometimes things just stick 'emselves in -- my Ada fic, f'rexample, she has an orchid. I don't know where the orchid came from, but now I have to think abt. the historical Chinese presence in SEA just to account for the orchid.
solumin: A flash of orange flame, like sparks. (Default)

[personal profile] solumin 2010-10-07 03:37 pm (UTC)(link)
I write about dreams, especially in my poetry. I'm pretty sure it's because I can never remember my dreams, and even if I do remember them they're always out of focus. So I guess I focus on the mystical side of dreaming: why it happens, why we can't remember them...stuff like that. Love and loneliness also show up a lot, usually as sort of secondary themes or something like that. (I posted a poem a while ago, if you want an example: http://solumin.dreamwidth.org/872.html)

In my stories, there's sometimes a man-vs-nature motif. Gods and the supernatural are usually involved somehow.