la_marquise: (Horus)
la_marquise ([personal profile] la_marquise) wrote2015-02-20 07:36 pm
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Writing and silence: under the skin.

I had a lovely time at Picocon last weekend. It really is an excellent convention: enthusiastic, lively and full of energy and imagination. I'm very grateful to the committee for having me back. I enjoyed talking to them, too, and the joint panel I did with Ian MacDonald.

Even so, I came away anxious. Here's why: in the questions part of the panel, someone asked us both about gender and power and external pressures and how that intersects with writing. And I found myself saying, "I let them silence me. I let them cut off my hands."

This is the language that Requires Hate used regularly about writers, particularly white women, that our hands should be cut off or broken. And I understand where that comes from, I really do. The damage done by cultural appropriation and misrepresentation is incalculable. I believe to the core of my being that writers -- and especially white writers -- have an absolute responsibility *not* to appropriate, to misrepresent and distort and abuse the culture and lives of others. I do not believe I as a writer have any right whatsoever to help myself to the cultural property of others. It's wrong.

But when I answered that question at Picocon, I wasn't thinking specifically about cultural appropriation. I was reacting out of instinct and fear. Because what my 6 years as a published novelist have taught me above all else is to be frightened. There are those out there who will consider this a good thing, for good reason (there are too many white writers already, and the British have too much space). I was reacting to the internalised voices that tell me I have no right to write. But suddenly I was using the language of violence in this context.

Those voices have been with me a long time. Many writers are riddled with doubt about their writing. It seems to go with the territory, as well as being a product of each writer's particular experiences. They began, as far as I can remember, at university, when I first met the concept of the Important Unpublished Male Writer. Up to then, I'd written in mainly female space and felt safe enough -- I was young in my fanfic circles and the women in their 40s upwards who populated it were wonderfully kind and supportive. My mother was enthusiastic and always encouraged me to write. I had a couple of supportive English teachers, too (thank you, Mrs Parnham and Mr Buck). It was something I did, something that was mine, something I enjoyed and valued.

My Cambridge writing group contained some lovely people, but it was structured around the talent of men. I learnt fairly fast that I would never quite be good enough, because no woman could be. The published writers who were discussed and approved were all men: the women writers were spoken of with a faintly patronising air. They were a bit.... soft, weak, lesser. My boyfriend of the time all but patted me on the head and told me it was sweet I tried to write. I learnt to be silent about writing. When I found wider sf fandom, the atmosphere was exactly the same. Women were not expected to write, and if they did, they should be quiet about it. Selected women were okay: Bujold, McAvoy, Cherryh, but they weren't quite.... There was always a knot of men who were loud and ready to explain why a man would have been better.

I was born before the 1973 Equal Opportunities act. My formative years were in a context in which I officially inferior. My education continued that, even after the law changed. My experiences in employment continued it. As an academic -- and I am a good scholar -- I was nevertheless Not As Good As A Man. And writing.... Everyone knew what my writing was like, without reading a line. Syrupy, conservative, romantic, weak, slush. By 25 I knew I wasn't good enough and never could be.

I learnt to keep quiet. To this day, I hate to talk about my writing and feel deeply unsafe doing it. And then the internet got involved.

I have a bad habit of recalling and internalising negative comments. Fan space and university space had enough of those already. The net.... The second I was published, my writing became public space. Now, there are good things and bad to that. Published books belong to their readers and I am fine with that. The inside of my head, though... I wasn't ready to have that handed over to the world. I'm not talking here about regular reviews. Those are part of the profession, and academic reviews can be much harsher than fiction ones. I've had years of dealing with those. No, the problem was the people who demanded access to my thoughts or told me they knew them better than me, for all sorts of reasons. Some meant well. Most, however, spoke out of existing social and cultural assumptions.

Women aren't quite the same as people.
Women are inherently dangerous.
Women's thoughts, like their bodies, must and should be policed for deviance, and wrong thinking.
Women are public property.
Women have no right at all to any space that is not accessible to anyone at all who wants to see inside there.

I've learnt that, as an Anglo-Welsh woman, I have no right whatsoever over my native cultures -- they belong to the higher social classes, to men, and, alas, to many Americans and I have no right to mind. because that minding is in itself inherently evil.
I've learnt that even as an adult, I must never, ever, speak back to those who are more important than me, because they have more rights than I do.
I've learnt that every word I write is simultaneously both utterly worthless (because female and older female to boot, urgh, disgusting) and subject to complete and utter policing, because without having read a line (sometimes) complete strangers can judge me just because they want to.
I've learnt that it's true, I have no right to write, because I might be in someone else's way.
I've learnt that I should cut off my own hands. As far as RH is concerned -- and as I've said before, I bear her no animus at all in respect of myself, though I am very unhappy about how she has acted to others -- she doesn't need to police me. I've internalised the message. I need to be silenced.

Which leaves me precisely where? I don't know. There are days and weeks on end when I feel like I should stop writing altogether. There's hardly a day at all on which I feel safe to write. I used to feel it was okay to write just for myself, that I could if necessary go back to that private space and give up trying to be published. Now, I don't know. A Fire of Bones is under contract. I'm struggling to get a 100 words a day and I feel the book is worthless. This blogpost feels to me like the unsafest thing I can say, and yet I feel obliged to say it.

And the language I use of my writing has been turned against me. I am sitting here waiting to cut off my hands..

(Metaphorically.)

Edited to add: FFA, if you see this, there have been weeks when your comments have been one of the few things holding me together as a writer.

Skirt of the day: denim.

[identity profile] http://users.livejournal.com/la_marquise_de_/ 2015-02-23 11:27 am (UTC)(link)
12 years and counting, on the therapy front. It's slooow work, alas.

[identity profile] http://users.livejournal.com/la_marquise_de_/ 2015-02-23 11:29 am (UTC)(link)
Oh, yes. So much this. And then people in other shadows tell us to shut up, sometimes -- for reasons that are good and understandable, but nevertheless I want to say, sometimes, '*please* go and pressure the elite men', because somehow it's always women, of some kind or another, who are expected to make space, step aside, and do the hard work.

[identity profile] gillpolack.livejournal.com 2015-02-23 11:33 am (UTC)(link)
Always women and more often and not women who have lived in shadow.

And... you and I should pitch an anthology, for there are so many potential stories in this and it's so important.

[identity profile] http://users.livejournal.com/la_marquise_de_/ 2015-02-23 03:39 pm (UTC)(link)
WE should, you're quite right.
And yes on women from the margins.

[identity profile] anna-wing.livejournal.com 2015-02-24 02:06 am (UTC)(link)
Good luck. Walking away from the nastier bits of the internet and doing other things might help too. Long walks in Cambridge Botanic Garden, weeding your own patch, embroidery, making chain mail, whatever. I am learning the taiji sword form right now (Yang style), and once I graduate from the wooden sword will commission a jian from the Marquis, for continued practice.

[identity profile] rdmaughan.livejournal.com 2015-02-24 07:49 am (UTC)(link)
Not sure what I can add to the many who have already voiced excellent advice and feedback. So let me just say the world would be poorer without your input but please do whatever makes you happiest.

[identity profile] http://users.livejournal.com/la_marquise_de_/ 2015-02-24 04:54 pm (UTC)(link)
I've rather taken to the gym. Exercising is very soothing, somehow.
Taiji sword sounds very interesting.

[identity profile] anna-wing.livejournal.com 2015-02-25 01:51 am (UTC)(link)
I'm trying to do that 30-minutes-moderate-exercise-per-day thing. So either I walk part of the way home at night (which is perfectly safe to do here), or I dance for 30 minutes in the sitting room (the cats are much amused). Then I cool down with the sword exercise or the bits of it that I have learned so far. You can see the full form on Youtube - look for "Yang-style sword Master Tung".

A bit late, but ...

[identity profile] mojave-wolf.livejournal.com 2015-02-27 01:10 am (UTC)(link)
I think you are awesome, and I absolutely love your writing. Seriously. You are a unique, brilliantly talented writer.

While I've never met you in person, you also seem like a genuinely *good*, nice person. The world needs many more of those. And by all powers that be, the internet damn sure needs more such voices. So if you have the time and energy, don't let the idiots get you down.(and by "idiots", I mean, among other things, people whose entire leftist activism seems to consist of sniping at others, and in particular others who are also on the left but somehow someway did what every other person who ever lived has done and will do a million times, that is, phrase something in a way that lets some friggin idiot find a way to take offense at it)

And if someone ever makes you feel like you should be silenced, well, personally, I strongly recommend the Takeshi Kovacs School of Diplomacy. But whatever works. If you need a hand, give a shout!

(and lol at myself, because I don't post much anymore because most of what would motivate me to post on live journal these days would result in an angry rant likely to offend someone I consider a friend, as the left is pissing me off as much as the right these days, and so on and so forth. So, sorta silenced cause I don't want to embarrass my friends, and by friends I mean people I have never met in person and barely spoken to for years, ha ha!

And other things I don't post because I think they are too trivial to spend time on, even tho I used to spend time on, such as sports or movies or most often books I read & liked. So, again, silencing myself. You are not the only one. And please don't think I'm trivializing your issues with packs of malicious scumbags and a lifetime of hearing yourself minimized with my stuff; I'm not, I just don't have time to figure out how to say this right, so you're getting rapid fire stream of consciousness else you'd be getting two lines or nothing at all)

And then there's other stuff which presents me from saying things, like "if I have x opinion it will cause people to ignore me on y" (this would be more relevant to twitter than lj, since I don't post enough on lj to matter anymore) or what have you. And worries about things having an unfortunate affect on my ability to earn a living, tho that would take a truly extraordinary degree of obsessive malice . . . of exactly the sort that appears on the internet every day. So a wee bit of hypocrisy in me telling you not to be silenced. But seriously, if you decided to keep quiet about something, don't ever do it because you doubt your eloquence or personal worth. Because you are a fantastic writer and you are a fantastic person.

And now must go without proofing. Hope this is coherent.

Re: A bit late, but ...

[identity profile] http://users.livejournal.com/la_marquise_de_/ 2015-02-27 04:17 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you! And that makes perfect sense. I hope you do resume posting: I enjoy your posts.

[identity profile] jen-qoe.livejournal.com 2015-02-28 11:01 am (UTC)(link)
Another late one. :-)

Just wanted to say big hugs! And your words have always been very important to me - both your excellent fiction, and the in real life and internet interractions. You're one of the most supportive people I know, which I've always been very grateful for.
x

[identity profile] http://users.livejournal.com/la_marquise_de_/ 2015-02-28 11:15 am (UTC)(link)
Thank you! ANd hugs back.

[identity profile] bohemiancoast.livejournal.com 2015-02-28 12:15 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm late too, more hugs...

You need to know that your writing is fantastic... and your head squirrels are part of what makes it so. Artists who are certain their art is good are never as good as those who are wracked with doubt. Why? Who knows.

[identity profile] cathellisen.livejournal.com 2015-02-28 12:22 pm (UTC)(link)
Not a useful comment, I know but I hope you never cut off those hands, because I love your writing and you inspire me - you write the stories I *want* to read, and that gives me hope that our voices will get heard, one day, in some way.

[identity profile] cathellisen.livejournal.com 2015-02-28 12:28 pm (UTC)(link)
I wonder if this is in part due to our upbringing as women - we're very much expected to fight for others (think of the metaphor of the lioness defending her cubs) but not so much for ourselves.

We know we can be strong, but we're trained to be strong for others, to put ourselves forward only when we're in the defense of those weaker than us, never to stand up and say, *I* am right and I will not back down.

Anyway, you're awesome, i hope you know that.

[identity profile] fireun.livejournal.com 2015-02-28 12:29 pm (UTC)(link)
Your words are beautiful and important. You have always been a supportive and inspiring friend to me as well, personally and professionally. Looking to you and listening to you keeps me working and trying. You are so very important and the profession is better for having you.

[identity profile] valydiarosada.livejournal.com 2015-02-28 12:29 pm (UTC)(link)
Kari, I'm going to be utterly selfish and say, please finish your book, and please write more books after that. There is always room on my bookshelves for your fiction.

[identity profile] birdsedge.livejournal.com 2015-02-28 03:37 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm with Liz on this one, Kari. Your writing is beautiful. You are not only good enough, you are better than most. Your voice should be heard, your hands remain intact and active.

[identity profile] birdsedge.livejournal.com 2015-02-28 03:51 pm (UTC)(link)
Try being five ft and half an inch. (The half inch is IMPORTANT!) Maybe short people learn to go in low and hard because we have to.
Hugs.

[identity profile] birdsedge.livejournal.com 2015-02-28 04:15 pm (UTC)(link)
The fear that RH hands out is not constructive in any proper sense of the word. Be yourself, not what RH and her cronies say you should be. Some things are inflated out of all proportion. She's made us all jumpy about things that we were already sensibly aware of. So you're white, so you're female, so you're British, so you're tall (and gorgeous)... SO BLOODY WHAT! You still have an equal right to air. Own what you are, respect others and live your life as you want to live it, not according to anyone else's dictates. Be heard!

[identity profile] fastfwd.livejournal.com 2015-02-28 05:37 pm (UTC)(link)
Girlfriend, courage is not being fearless.

Courage is feeling the fear and proceeding anyway.

Keep going.

[identity profile] swisstone.livejournal.com 2015-02-28 07:32 pm (UTC)(link)
I evidently missed this entirely. It's a very admirable piece of writing and reflection. You're one of the historians who I admire most.

(Anonymous) 2015-02-28 09:29 pm (UTC)(link)
I am out of this loop but my response is fuck em all.
You have things to say, say them. There are people who want to hear what you say, speak to them. It is not your fault if other people aren't talking or if talking are not being heard. Your silence will not make those voices louder. There is a lot wrong with the world it isn't fair but the fact that others aren't eating doesn't mean you should starve. You can try to help without making yourself disappear.

[identity profile] http://users.livejournal.com/la_marquise_de_/ 2015-03-01 03:06 pm (UTC)(link)
You are awesome yourself.
And yes, upbringing is a lot of it.

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