So, at the risk of possibly getting some grumbly comments, I
wanted to talk for a little bit about a new buzzword I see popping up more and
more often. Agency. Journalists and critics are latching onto
it to talk about characters (often women and people of color, but I've seen it applied to characters of all genders and races). Like so many buzzwords, though, I
rarely see it defined by the folks using it.
Which, of
course, makes it easier for them to use...
This is a
bit misleading, though. Agency isn’t a new word. It’s actually a fairly old
sociology term (from the Enlightenment) that’s migrated into literature. Well, migrated’s a bit misleading, too. Maybe it was chloroformed and woke up tied to
a chair, unsure what it was doing here.
In a
sociological and philosophical sense, agency refers, in simple terms, to free
will. Can a person make their own choices and affect the world around
them? How much does the world or society
they exist in constrain that ability to make choices? Does it cancel out free
will altogether, or just the appearance of free will? Is there a point where I no longer have free
will?
While this
is fascinating stuff to debate over drinks, it doesn’t really have anything to
do with literature. As I’ve mentioned in
the past, when I’m writing, I’m more or less the god of this little world I’m
creating. And I’m a micro-managing god,
too. None of the characters move, speak,
or have a single thought without my say-so.
There is no free will. Zero. Because
I’m creating all of it. Every sentence,
every idea, every word, every punctuation mark.
It all comes from me.
Okay, in
all fairness, some of the punctuation comes from my beta-readers and copyeditor.
When
critics and literary pundits talk about characters having agency, at the core they’re
talking about something we’ve addressed here many times. A a writer, I need to
make my readers believe these characters are people who are having an actual effect on the story. My characters shouldn't be window dressing, they need to do things. If I’m going to
make a point of Wakko or Yakko or Dot being in my story, then there should be
an actual reason they’re in the story.
I read a
book a while back that was your standard “chosen one shall save us” sort of
thing. A young girl—we’ll call her
Phoebe—discovers her birthright and powers, must go into hiding, has to fight
off enemies she didn’t know she had, needs to learn how to harness and direct
her abilities. We’ve all seen this a few
dozen times at this point, right?
Except...
well, Phoebe didn’t really do anything.
She didn’t discover her powers, she learned about them from her parents. She didn’t decide to go into hiding, she was
told to go—pretty much forced. There
were two guardians who fought off the enemies for her (one actually sacrificed
himself so she could get away). Hell,
when Phoebe finally got to the Tabernacle and began to train, people were even
walking her through that. She just kind
of stood around looking dazed and confused.
Phoebe didn’t make an actual, independent decision about something until
page 114.
Not exactly
inspirational, that chosen one. In fact,
for those first 113 pages Phoebe could’ve been a duffelbag full of towels all
the other characters were handing off to one another. She just didn’t do anything.
Y’see,
Timmy, my characters need to face challenges and need to respond to
them. They should make choices—ones that
are consistent with who they are. They
need to be active, with their own thoughts and opinions. And they should have a real affect on how the
story plays out.
Here’s a simple
test we can perform. Let’s say I
scribble out a two or three page summary of my current novel or
story or screenplay (choose which one applies to you). I want to be as thorough as possible without changing
how I’m telling the story. So I put all
the introductions, reveals, explanations, and so on in the same order they
appear in the book. Make sense?
Okay, so
let’s look at this. What characters did
I mention? Which ones did I skip over?
Reading through my summary, I mention Eli, Harry, Zeke, Theo, and Fifteen. I don’t mention Eli’s childhood friends by
name, the bus driver, the cashier, or the cigarette man. That’s because they’re all supporting and background characters. By nature of the beast, they should be a
little more... well, two dimensional.
They’re the stepping stones and redshirts of our story, so we’re not going to focus on them too much.
So let’s look
at the characters we made a point of mentioning and naming. These should all be important to the story,
right? Every one of them is key somehow.
Now, take
one of them out.
If these are
actual characters who are supporting the plot and making things happen, my
story should fall apart without them. If
Dot can step in and immediately pick up the slack from Wakko’s absence... well,
he can’t have been that important to things.
If nothing at all changes when Yakko vanishes, he definitely wasn’t
important. And if they’re not important,
if they’re not having an effect... I really need to ask myself why they’re
here.
So do great stuff
with your characters. By having them do
stuff.
Next time...
I’d like to talk about the bug problem.
Until then, go write.
this happened to me the other week when i wrote out a synopsis. Someone asked what the bad guy actually did during the story... and it turned out, not a whole lot. I'd just put a bad guy in because, well, you need a baddie, right? Like you say, i could've written in an evil duffle bag and it would've worked the same. :/
ReplyDeleteYeah, I've had that moment a few times, too-- the horrible realization that one of my characters is just a duffle bag.
ReplyDeleteI think I'm going to use that from now on. My own version of the pretty lamp test. :)