Last night I was introduced to the idea that plot-driven and character-driven don't need to be a binary proposition, you can mix-and-match 'em, or hybridize 'em. That's the first time I recall seeing this idea, and it immediately struck me as true. Several times before I've made similar discoveries, that ideas writers often take as binary propositions actually work better on a sliding scale, a spectrum. Just as dark and light don't necessarily mean only intense blinding white light or absolute darkness, the happy medium is somewhere between the two. In fact either absolute is blinding in its own way.
Up until this realization hit me (or rather was introduced to me by @ps102 on my progress journal), I tended to avoid thinking much about plot-driven story. I mean, I know it's a thing, but I wasn't very interested in it. It's the kind of story I liked when I was a kid, but as I grew older I started to think of it as having simple, cardboard cut-out characters, and that didn't appeal to me anymore. And yet, when I'd look into character-driven story, what I found applied mostly to lit-fic, and not really to the kinds of stories I like, which are usually genre stories. So I sort of thought what I'm interested in is something that mixes the two, but I didn't think about it more than that, and I assumed I was trying to do something unheard-of, that wasn't actually a thing, as if I was blazing a trail nobody had ever thought of before. Hah!
In my defense, it isn't easy to find information about hybridizing the two approaches, and I had never stumbled across the idea before. But this is the internet, and it's come a long way since the early days. Now you can find info on just about anything that strikes your fancy. You just need to be aware of what to look for. And now I have the concept firmly in mind—a merging of plot-driven and character-driven story.
So today I decided to see what I could find. At first just the usual crop of articles comparing and contrasting the two approaches. I had seen a lot of these already, it's the standard way of looking at it. Opposites they be ye see, and ne'er the twain shall meet.
Then suddenly I hit pay-dirt:
(Not the actual title of the post, but a sub-title that conveys the important aspect of it)
This is the only article I've seen so far on the topic, but I hope to find a few more I can list here as well. Plus, you know the drill. I'll be elaborating in the comments below for a while. I love when I find an exciting new idea to explore, especially when it helps me become the kind of writer I want to be.
- This entry is part 17 of 33 in the series General Writing Related.
Plot driven / Character driven, and a hybrid of the two
Categories:
Series TOC
- Series: General Writing Related
- Part 1: The New Weird
- Part 2: Creative/Critical—pick one
- Part 3: Back to Basics
- Part 4: No Art without Craft
- Part 5: Internal Dialogue
- Part 6: Conflict
- Part 7: Emotion
- Part 8: Story Unites
- Part 9: Noir
- Part 10: Noir #2
- Part 11: Neo-Noir
- Part 12: Noir #3
- Part 13: Noir #4
- Part 14: Chapter and Scene
- Part 15: Dialogue = Action
- Part 16: Webbage
- Part 17: Who or what is driving this thing?
- Part 18: How Many Words?
- Part 19: Short Story Structure
- Part 20: Telling Tales
- Part 21: Transcendent Writing
- Part 22: Inner Life
- Part 23: Characters in King and Spielberg
- Part 24: What can be Learned from Buffy?
- Part 25: Looking closely at some Hardboiled Writing
- Part 26: Writing from the Unconscious
- Part 27: Alter Yourself
- Part 28: Writing From Life
- Part 29: Local. Script. Man.
- Part 30: Dunning Kruger
- Part 31: Looking into Leiber
- Part 32: Discovering Writing
- Part 33: Devices of Horror
- This entry is part 17 of 33 in the series General Writing Related.
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