I’ll be taking a break from the Write Game from Nov. 13th to Dec. 2nd. This will give me time to do a presentation at NCTE in Orlando on Nov. 19th, and then stuff a turkey for the following Thursday. Why does everything happen at the same time?
I thought that since most of my readers are writers I’d give you a bit of preview of the presentation.
The title is Why Ain’t and Gotta Gotta be in Today’s Books for Kids and Teens and I’ll be chairing the session which will include:
Cheryl Herbsman (Breathing)
Erin Dionne (Models Don’t Eat Chocolate & The Total Tragedy of a Girl Named Hamlet)
Cynthea Liu ( Paris Pan Takes the Dare & The Great Call of China)
Kurtis Scaletta (Mudville & Mamba Point)
Carrie Ryan (Forest of Hands and Teeth & Dead Tossed Waves).
Am I in good company or what?
I took on the job of chair because of my background in linguistics, so I’ll be establishing the framework for this session about Literary Dialect.
So what is literary dialect anyway? It’s a way of speaking that marks regional, cultural, ethnic and social differences among characters in your books. In other words: accent, word choice, and grammatical usage. And there are many ways to approach capturing performance and putting it on paper.
In my latest WIP I wanted to characterize a character from Texas, but I didn’t want to clutter the page with the typical y’alls, so I used standard spelling, but in the attribute I described the character’s speech. Since this book will be in first person pov, it will be the protagonist who comments on the Texas accent. Here’s one example:
I like this technique because readers can hear whatever Texas accent they want.
In Sliding on the Edge I had a non-native speaking Vietnamese character and to capture his voice I omitted unstressed words that a native speaker of English would never omit. “The” is often barely noticed, but since it’s a morpheme (a unit in our language that carries meaning) if it’s missing we know. I chose to omit the for another reason as well. “th” is a rare sound in the languages of the world and often difficult for second language learners to articulate. Here’s how Tuan sounds in my story.
In The Princess of Las Pulgas I have a feisty character, named K.T., with attitude as her middle name. Here she is giving my poor MC a dose of that attitude.
K.T. isn’t stupid, but she likes to break as many rules as possible, including grammar. Here she mangles standard English by using the past participle, seen, instead of the simple past, saw. It doesn’t make the meaning unclear, but characterizes her perfectly.
If you noticed, the word, scratchin‘, is respelled and that will be the technique I’ll go into more at the conference. When I start blogging again in December I’ll go into it here as well. It’s an interesting technique that’s often used, but it’s controversial among linguists as well as writers. So come back in Dec. and I’ll share what I know about respelling.
Well, that’s enough. Happy Thanksgiving. Come back to visit when you’re full of good food and holiday memories. I look forward to your visit.
MG Higgins says
Hope you enjoyed the conference! Have a wonderful Thanksgiving and a well-deserved break.
Paul Greci says
Enjoy NCTE!! I wish I were going this year. Your presentation sounds interesting!! I'm sure it'll be fun.
dawnall says
Interesting post! Enjoy NCTE. And Thanksgiving. I'm teaching six days a week this semester so I'm ready for a break.
C. Lee McKenzie says
Thanks, everyone, for the visit. I'm getting the jitters just thinking about all that is coming up in the next few days.
Julie Musil says
Um, you're in excellent company! That's amazing. And I liked your examples, too. Sometimes when the writer tries to do the accent in the writing (too much) it's a distraction. Your tips are great.
Have an excellent turkey day, and we'll see you in December!
Jemi Fraser says
Great company indeed! Enjoy it all – sounds like you'll be a bit busy!
DazyDayWriter says
Loved the closing photo w/the Thanksgiving wish, Lee, and Orlando on the 19th sounds heavenly! Liked the info in your post, too, because when I've tried to write fiction (even a few stories for children lurking in my files) … I had no idea how to properly show geographic accents. I'll remember your advice and someday see if I can hire you to "fix" my picture books! (they may be beyond repair 🙁
Darby Karchut says
Lee, timely topic as I'm trying to capture an Irish cadence in one of my MG characters. You've given me some great ideas and tools.
Good luck with the workshop and Happy Thanksgiving!
C. Lee McKenzie says
Thanks all. I've found this topic very interesting, so I'll be sharing more later.
Linda Covella says
Really interesting, C. Lee. I wish I could be in Orlando to hear the entire discussion. Good luck!!
Sara Tribble says
Uh, good company?! Heck yeah! I know everything usually happpens in a rush, doesn't it? Oh well, turkey rules!