lettered: (Default)
It's Lion Turtles all the way down ([personal profile] lettered) wrote2006-02-28 02:18 pm
Entry tags:

Con crit! Rant! Bitchiness!

It's writing month in [livejournal.com profile] tkp's journal, because she likes talking about herself in the third person, and also because it's March and she has a fetish about themed months. Later there will be flowers (edelweiss), my usual monthly questions, hopefully fun discussions about writing and how we do it and how we make it better, interspersed with all the B/A bits I wanted to post in February but didn't get around to.

For now, I'm going to rant about con crit, that never ending debate, and I'm going to put on my bitch hat and my snooty gloves, and say exactly whatever I damn well please.



First of all, a definition. My concrit:

-gives at least one compliment. The compliment must be wholly positive. No, "I liked your style in the beginning and I wish you'd kept it up towards the end." I might say something like that elsewhere, but I always try to include one bit of pure unadulterated praise, complete with why it worked for me and possibly examples of what I liked about it.
-suggests at least two problems within the fic. Sometimes it's really easy and deals with broad things: "I have a problem with a. your excessive use of adjectives and b. your characterization." Sometimes it means getting down into the nitty gritty: " I have a problem with a. your excessive use of adjectives and b. you missed a period after "orgasm" on page 52, third paragraph."
-provides at least one specific example that supports an initial critical claim. I.e., "You use too many adjectives; look how many you used here, here, and here."
-provides an explanation for why the examples + intial claim = fault. I.e., "Too many adjectives can clutter the modified object, making the description indecisive and hazy rather than producing a sharp and definitive image/feeling/etc."
-if one of the problems is with characterization, almost always discusses specific moments in canon where the character was in a similar situation and made a different decision. Especially in Buffyverse, there is almost always a similar situation. The logistics and circumstances may be different, but almost everything is going to deal with a core issue addressed in canon: love, sex, heroism, abuse, courage, guilt, etc.
-sometimes ventures a solution to the problem, complete with explanations and sometimes examples.
-almost always rounds off (or begins) the initial sally with a disclaimer so that the person on the recieving end knows I'm being picky about their work because I like it. The only time I don't do this is sometimes when someone asks for concrit and I feel obliged to offer it, because sometimes in those cases, I don't like it--but very rarely.

Which brings me to my next list.

I leave concrit for some combination of the following:

1. when I like the fic(s) in question
2. when I like the author in question, not just as an author, but as a person.
3. when someone is explicitly asking for it outside of their story; i.e., it's usually not a line in the A/N that says "concrit would be nice."

Usually, all three are required for me to leave crit. Sometimes, as in the case of [livejournal.com profile] peasant_'s awesome concritathon, I'm in a position where I feel obliged to offer crit whether I like the fic or the author or not, but that rarely happens. Which brings me to why only those things will inspire me to leave concrit.

As regards #1, I don't want to expend effort on something I deem unworthy. Some stories are so bad, I think the only way I could help is if I rewrote them myself. Sorry, I have my own fic to write. Other fics are salvageable, but do I really want to waste my time finding that one pure compliment for you that I believe is absolutely necessary for constructive criticism, and do I really want to expend my efforts wallowing in the quagmires of your atrocious writing long enough to figure out how it can somehow be saved? Nah, not me; I don't take martyrdom that far. Lastly, some fics have such a potential to be good, and just aren't, that it makes your fingers itch to go save them. But I figure, why waste time on them, when there are stories that I like, that have their own sets of problems? So, I only crit fics I like.

I only crit fics for people I like for several reasons, one of which is the same as above. Why should I waste my time on you if I don't like you? Why should I waste my time on you if I don't know you? (That said, a good relationship can start out with mutual critique. More often than not, though, that kind of relationship does not begin with a chunk of con crit. It begins with "Do you have a beta? If you don't, can I beta for you?"--and beta'ing is another ball game from con critting, imo, because all the things I'm talking about--liking the person, and the author wanting crit--should all be a given for everyone in a beta relationship.)

The other thing about knowing the people I con crit for is that if I know them, I'm more likely to trust them when they say "I want con crit," and I'm also more willing to trust the implication of that, which is always, to me: "I want to be a better writer." And that's also a reason behind #3: lots of people say they want con crits in their author's notes. Most people don't mean it, or if they mean it, they're not really going to use it. Even when people explicitly ask for con crit outside of their stories, they seem to rarely mean it. Take a look at that anon crit meme. I saw authors of every shape and type shutting down, tuning out, and getting defensive at critiques of their works, and I saw just as many saying "Yeah, I know I do that; too bad isn't it, but it's the way I write and I'm not going to change or think about changing" (except not in so many words).

Speaking of that anon crit meme, there's a whole 'nother side to this "trust" aspect between me and writers I like, or better yet, writers who like each other mutually. Just as I'm more likely to trust someone I know when they ask for crit, and trust that they'll take it and try to use it, those I offer it to are more likely to trust me in turn if they know me, and especially if they like me. If they've read my writing and appreciate it, my crit will mean more to them. If they know me as a person, they know I'm not offering crit to get them down or insult their writing, but out of a true desire to help. And if they know all that, maybe they'll be more likely to consider what I say and try to change their writing for the better.

Because my con crit involves one more thing besides the compliments and the examples and the explanations and the disclaimers, and that's payback.

Payback is discussion, and sometimes change. Payback can be the author agreeing with me, perhaps explaining why she has that problem or collaborating with me in how she's going to fix it, and actively working later on to fix the problem. Or, payback can involve the author disagreeing with my crit and defending herself, which can lead to me a. seeing her point and adjusting what I think her approach should be (the original crit always holds, because again, I don't offer it if I don't think I have a point. There just might be a different way of addressing the problem, depending on what the writer reveals her intention to be.), which also should eventually lead to actively fixing the problem, b. defending my crit until the author sees the error of her ways, and goes on to, again, actively fix the problem, c. agreeing to disagree, something I'm perfectly fine with, as long as I got some good discussion about writing out of it.

Payback is not the author saying, " My fic is perfect, bitch, how dare you say any different." That shuts down discussion, because I refuse to dignify things like that with responses, and it actively fights change. Payback is not the author saying, "Yeah, you're right, but I'm not changing," to which I react in much the same way. Payback is also not the author simply saying, "Yeah, okay, thanks," and that's it. Although the writer doesn't explicitly state there: "I'm not changing", the lack of interaction there suggest to me that the person is not interested. It might be a presumptuous conclusion, but if you're not going to discuss it at least a little with me, you're not giving me what I feel I deserve for my time and efforts, why should I waste my time with you?

Con crit absofuckinlutely means to me discussion. It means talking about writing, which is one of my favorite things to do in the world. It means talking about fic I like, again, favorite thing. It means talking to people I like, which most people aside from like the Unabomber think is fun. Sometimes it means discovering things I hadn't thought of before. Sometimes it involves discoveries about writing and canon and the price of eggs in China.

In conclusion, I rarely offer con crit, and it's not because I'm nice. I don't offer con crit to people who don't want it, and it's not because I'm worried I'll hurt anyone's ickle feelings, or discourage new writers, or step on someone's toes. I make sure my con crit includes compliments and disclaimers and things that make the author feel good, but it's not because I'm so fucking polite or kind or sensitive to others.

It's because I'm selfish. It's because I don't do something for nothing; it's because I want to get something out of con crit. I want to read fics I like, and if I see problems in them, I want those problems to be gone. Offering sincere compliments about things I truly liked about the piece does soothe my instinct to be nice. But it's also a way of getting an author in a frame of mind to accept my crit, because no matter how gently anyone points out errors and how generously they suggest ways for it to be fixed, crit's not constructive to a lot of people unless it offers one little thing that'll gratify the author's vanity, thus putting them in a frame of mind to listen, rather than see red or feel bad.

And it's because I'm arrogant. I'm only going to spend effort on you if I think you'll give me the attention and consideration and appreciation I feel I deserve.
My time, my effort, my work are things I deem valuable, and I refuse to waste them. The other thing that's valuable to me is my opinion; I rarely offer it unless I think it has merit. If you're going to spit on that opinion, if you're going to ignore or denegrate something I think is worthwhile, something that's important to me, why the fuck should I bother giving it to you?

I've seen some wonderful comments, posts, and essays about our responsibility to offer con crit. I've also seen some great rants and agitation about how we should be able to offer con crit, and about how there's lots of bad fic out there that needs to be critiqued. I find both of those points reasonable, interesting, and excellent, really, but after stewing on it for a while, I decided I didn't feel the same.

I'm happy with the way of things. I'm happy that I like and am proud of what I write. I'm happy there's fic I think's worse than mine, because it makes me feel better about myself. I'm happy that the really bad fic provides hours of endless entertainment and kind of morbidly fascinates me, in a way. I'm happy I'm too much of a lazy, self-absorbed and pompous bitch to be bothered by what's happening with those who I don't think write well; I'm happy other people think people-I-don't-think-write-well do write well, or else my goddamn bleeding heart would have to feel sorry for the badfic writers and would feel some obligation to help them; I'm happy I don't have to read them, see them, or think about them if I don't want to, much less offer swine the pearls of my con crit--yes, pearls, it's a gift, told you I'm a pompous ass, and you didn't believe me, did you. I'm happy I don't even have to give fics I don't consider swine-ish at all con crit, just because I'm lazy and selfish like that; I'm happy I don't have to do a damn thing I don't want to or get agitated about a single damn thing that's not my problem.

On that note, this is completely my take on con crit and what it means to me. It's all about me me me, and I'm not telling a single one of you how to think or act or anything like that. In fact, the reason I'm putting it out there is I'd love to hear more opinions of others' in this never-ending, scintillating debate. You're free to offer up your own opinion. You're also free to debate, or try to change my mind. Just because I'm a cocky stuck-up asshole doesn't mean I'll try to force my opinion on you, or be rude to you, or call your mother a hamster. Really.

[identity profile] mzzgoddessblue.livejournal.com 2006-03-01 09:14 am (UTC)(link)
Yeah.

What you said.

Only I couldn't say it so eloquently.

[identity profile] stultiloquentia.livejournal.com 2006-03-01 09:45 am (UTC)(link)
In a number of ways, we are scarily alike.

I want to read fics I like, and if I see problems in them, I want those problems to be gone. Offering sincere compliments about things I truly liked about the piece does soothe my instinct to be nice. But it's also a way of getting an author in a frame of mind to accept my crit, because no matter how gently anyone points out errors and how generously they suggest ways for it to be fixed, crit's not constructive to a lot of people unless it offers one little thing that'll gratify the author's vanity, thus putting them in a frame of mind to listen, rather than see red or feel bad.

Yes. Good concrit is a calculated act of manipulation.

Just because I'm a cocky stuck-up asshole doesn't mean I'll try to force my opinion on you, or be rude to you, or call your mother a hamster.

SNORT. Hamsters will never be unfunny.

[identity profile] scribesds.livejournal.com 2006-03-01 09:53 am (UTC)(link)
Why should I waste my time on you if I don't like you? Why should I waste my time on you if I don't know you?

At what point do you feel that you know somebody enough to comment? How do you get to know them, if you don't bother until you know them…

Personally, I don't like offering critism unless somebody specifically asks me. What gives me the right to tell somebody else that their story doesn't work? How do I know it's not because I just haven't understood it?

So, that makes me wonder - what makes a good story? Because, it seems that no matter how bad a story is, somebody will come along and state it's the best thing *ever*.
ext_5650: Six of my favourite characters (Default)

[identity profile] phantomas.livejournal.com 2006-03-01 10:11 am (UTC)(link)
(here via Kita)

Yes. To all of the above...with one difference...I still haven't learnt to resist and not offer when I see potential, because a potentially good story might mean a potentially good author...and I still fall for it now and then.

But in general, yes, what you said :) (especially re: the anonymous meme -writing/vidding/iconing- I ranted about the 'anonymity' concept, which, imo, doesn't help anyone, on either side).

[identity profile] swmbo.livejournal.com 2006-03-01 12:07 pm (UTC)(link)
That was absolutely beautiful, thank you! And your description of how to concrit and the reasons why resonate with me completely.
ext_1720: two kittens with a heart between them (Default)

[identity profile] ladycat777.livejournal.com 2006-03-01 01:06 pm (UTC)(link)
Have I mentioned I love your mind? I love your mind. I have a ... slightly different take on concrit, but it comes back to the selfish thing if along a different path.

And yeah, you're gonna hear this if you want to or not, sorry!

But for me, if I offer concrit, it's because I liked your story and I want it to be better. Sometimes that means you're newbie author who has potential but lacks certain knowledge/training and I can offer that. Sometimes it's because there's something in a story that was excellent other than X, which threw me right out and I'd like to go back in, please, so here's how to fix it. Sometimes it's something else entirely. But the end result, honestly, is that if I am offer crit on your story (and I agree about making sure you give one, serious, unqualified compliment, although I don't know that I've always done that), it means your story was good enough to be critted by me. So, you know, selfish. And possibly arrogant *g*

But I think a lot of people forget that people aren't going to offer concrit on something they don't like or feel is a waste of their time. They're going to go do something else that makes them happy, not offer real, genuine concrit. Bitching I can't account for :)

But yeah. This post? Was a thing of beauty.

[identity profile] stoney321.livejournal.com 2006-03-01 01:18 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes, yes, and I think you and Dody should give all the concrit. Um, to me. Because I'm selfish, too.

(and currently I'm going through the one you pointed out and the one Dody pointed out and reworking them and it's an exercise in getting me to quit doing that thing. You know. the thing I do.)

And last night I stumbled across rain hard cum drops in a fic, and the author has used that before. There's no way to critique that. There's no way. (Mostly because I've tried and she just REALLY likes the way she knits words together. Oooooookay.)

[identity profile] filmnoir6.livejournal.com 2006-03-01 01:23 pm (UTC)(link)
I agree wholeheartedly with what you have to say about con crit for all of the reasons you stated. Some people often do not recognize the constructive part of that phrase and only focus on the criticism part and that is unfortunate.

[identity profile] spuffyduds.livejournal.com 2006-03-01 01:45 pm (UTC)(link)
Very nice and well-thought-out. (And funny.) And you're way more energetic/thoughtful than me about criticism. If I really like something overall I tend to be so blown away that I can't come up with anything that should be changed, and am even kind of incoherent about the compliments. (And if I really don't like something I tend to slide past without a word...I'm southern.) But I'm glad you're out there, being more together!

[identity profile] lostakasha.livejournal.com 2006-03-01 02:41 pm (UTC)(link)
I never really thought much about liking a person as a criteria for effective crit, but you're right -- here in the rarified microcosm of fandom, it really is essential.

I'm happy with the way of things. I'm happy that I like and am proud of what I write. I'm happy there's fic I think's worse than mine, because it makes me feel better about myself. I'm happy that the really bad fic provides hours of endless entertainment and kind of morbidly fascinates me, in a way.

I applaud your fearlessness in saying in public exactly what I have said in private to kindred souls.

That said, I'm a little bothered by the way you're framing yourself here.

You're funny and self-deprecating, which is wonderful, but I don't think you need to be -- or necessarily should be. There's no arrogance in anything you're saying. Time, effort, work, and our opinions are intrinsically valuable. There's no arrogance in expecting that to be mutually understood. That's just reasoned, adult behavior. And as for being too lazy and self-absorbed to waste your time reading purile shit? That's industrious self-awareness.

I guess I'm still hung up on that age-old 'smart women with opinions = arrogant bitches' dynamic. It's alive and well on LJ, but I don't have to like it.

So there. I'm con critting the way you crit yourself. Now... will you marry me?

[identity profile] ba4ever.livejournal.com 2006-03-01 02:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Yup yup yup.

*nods emphatically*
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[personal profile] gloss 2006-03-01 02:46 pm (UTC)(link)
I keep missing the fact that con crit is the subject of perennial debate; my flist just doesn't seem to go on about it all that much. Huh.

That said, your post, for the most part, nails most of my feelings about the issue. A fic and its author have to be willing the time and effort that concrit involves, and those are both quantities that can be really difficult to discern.

So while I'm uncomfortable with your criterion of when I like the author in question, not just as an author, but as a person - because how can we *know* a person on LJ??? And, secondly, it raises all my hackles about the high value of socializing versus fic-quality - I do understand where you're coming from.
spikewriter: (Default)

[personal profile] spikewriter 2006-03-01 03:37 pm (UTC)(link)
(Here via Kita). In a word, yes. I especially like your guidelines for what you offer as concrit because they're clear, precise and are what any writer should hope for from a critique.

I also like your standards for when to leave concrit because it is also important. Good concrit takes a serious investment on the part of the person offering it, which is exactly why I appreciate it when someone does take the effort to leave some. Yes, how you feel about a person has a great deal to do with it -- I've worked in several critique pools where there were people whom I would never leave crit for because they rubbed me the wrong way (which leaves me with a built in bias) or had shown they weren't actually willing to listen to what anyone had to say. If they aren't, why should I waste my time?

The arena itself is important -- I've always been open to concrit on my fic. The only reason I'm not asking for it at the moment is because I'm concentrating on my original fiction, so I'm turning to a different arena/group of people for critiques and am learning there are some definite adjustments that need to be made.

Good post.
my_daroga: Peter O'Toole in Lawrence of Arabia (lawrence)

[personal profile] my_daroga 2006-03-01 03:58 pm (UTC)(link)
I love what you say here; I think this is a completely rational, practical take on this matter (which, frankly, I can't see the need for debate over). On some level I think all human (and animal, for that matter) interactions are about some form of give-and-take. I'm not going to quote that old Churchill chestnut about wives and their prices, because that's not really what I mean. Relationships in any sense are two people hopefully getting something out of what they put in.

So arrogant? Stuck up? May be, but it may be that's a reasonable position. As much as we might want some communal ideal of everyone helping everyone else, we don't have the time in our real lives to make that work, let alone a semi-anonymous fandom situation.

So bravo--I applaud your explanation.

And I cringe, slightly, when I remember I've given you my baby. Not because I'm afraid you'll tear it to pieces--it deserves it--but because now that I've read more of you I wonder about its worthiness for your crit!

[identity profile] semby.livejournal.com 2006-03-01 04:41 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes, indeed. Well said! Thank you.

[identity profile] a2zmom.livejournal.com 2006-03-01 06:56 pm (UTC)(link)
I can't believe it. I just lost my entire post. And for the second time. I will try to recreate it later, but now I'm all moody.
ext_7254: (Default)

[identity profile] ravenwings-7.livejournal.com 2006-03-01 10:00 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh yeah? Well, your father smelt of elderberries!
What? You said you wouldn't try to call our mothers hampsters? Oops. Sorry, my bad.

And I really admire your con crit philosophy. I wouldn't even want con crit from someone who didn't think my fic was worth reading, or from someone who didn't have the same or similar taste in fic as me. So bravo for being arrogant and selfish, in my opinion, it makes the fandom world a kinder place.

BTW, I find your essay-like posts to be quite entertaining and thought provoking, so I'm going to friend you now so I can keep up with them.
rahirah: (Default)

[personal profile] rahirah 2006-03-01 11:03 pm (UTC)(link)
Looking back, stories that drive me to talk about them (as oppsoed to ones where I'm offering concrit because the author and I have a mutual beta agreement, or because I'm editing a zine they're submitting to, or because they specifically request me to comment) are stories that are good, but which leave me going, "But...but!" This is probably evidence of some deep malfunction on my part...

[identity profile] spiralleds.livejournal.com 2006-03-02 12:05 am (UTC)(link)
Nodding and saying, "Oh, yeah" all over the place.

I agree with both starting with a pure compliment about something the fic does well as well as ending the contact with the assurance that it is due to liking the fic and the writer of the fic that you are taking the effort to comment. While one cannot control the reaction of another, most people are more likely to be receptive to the middle part and less likely to wig when there are positive bookends. When I leave concrit, I always strive to include a positive.

Commenting on characterization - probably the area most likely to drive me nutty and the one I'm most reluctant to comment on. In part because it seems more often than not when I've seen others do it they receive the "Well, that's how I see the characters!" or "Well, this is my!verse and it's AU because I didn't like the way they did the character in canon."

The thing is, your rant is so thorough,it answers my own question about commenting on characterization in two ways - 1) Do I know the author well enough to know if the author cares about characterization? (It doesn't matter if I'm thinking, which I am wont to do, that Soandso is a good writer, if only the kept their characters canonically consistent in characterization!, the writer isn't going to become that way unless they want to be that way. 2) If point 1 is true, point to reactions and interactions in canon to make a point.


Take a look at that anon crit meme. I saw authors of every shape and type shutting down, tuning out, and getting defensive at critiques of their works, and I saw just as many saying "Yeah, I know I do that; too bad isn't it, but it's the way I write and I'm not going to change or think about changing" (except not in so many words).

Wordy McWord. I was hopeful the anon con-crit meme it wouldn't become another format where those who are already receiving praise elsewhere received even more praise ( a la - cool kids gushed over), that those leaving crit would do it well and that those receiving it would take it well. Sadly, more often than not, no. There were folks leaving con-crit that was completely useless, "Your Xander is such a Marty-Stu!" without leaving any sort of specific examples in the fic or in canon to show the character is ooc. And while there were some authors who were good about saying, "Could you give me a more specific example." or "Good point." or "I'm working on that in my newest fic." or "I'll keep that in mind, thank you.", there were way too many who said, "Well, that's my vision of that character." or "That's my writing style (and I'm not interested in changing 'cus I like it)!".

[identity profile] librarian2003.livejournal.com 2006-03-02 01:32 am (UTC)(link)
God, tkp, I love you for this!

And you know, often, people are what they are. They can do something, or they can't, and all the suggestions in the world won't make a difference. I'd love to be able to paint, but even if someone employed Michelangelo to teach me, it would still look like the daubings of a five year old. So, to offer a proper concrit, even with the con bits, can undermine confidence to the point where the person stops writing. Even bad writing, if it gave the author pleasure, is a good thing.

So, I'm with you, kid...

This is different, as you say, to betaing for someone you 'know', or dropping a note of thanks where, on the whole, you've enjoyed a piece of work, for the bit of entertainment you've had.

So - no concrit, but thank you for the entertainment!

Jo

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