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General Tabletop Discussion
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The importance to "story" of contrivance
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<blockquote data-quote="TwoSix" data-source="post: 6961335" data-attributes="member: 205"><p>No, I thought that would be obvious, but I gather not. I'm just saying that most of what happens in the real world is boring, and ultimately most of what happens isn't worth retelling. It's the incidents in real life that are so odd and coincidental that they would appear contrived in a work of fiction that make for compelling nonfiction, specifically history. (Obviously there is a lot of interesting nonfiction that has nothing to do with the telling of specific events.) </p><p></p><p>Authored fiction doesn't have the luxury of being generated by the near-infinite churn of historical events, so its contrivances have to be created. It creates a weird dynamic because we tend to look negatively at contrivances in fiction that would appear simply coincidental in historical nonfiction.</p><p></p><p>Oh, and re: editing, my email notification with the quote doesn't contain the mansplaining line either...maybe there was a weird posting thing happening.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TwoSix, post: 6961335, member: 205"] No, I thought that would be obvious, but I gather not. I'm just saying that most of what happens in the real world is boring, and ultimately most of what happens isn't worth retelling. It's the incidents in real life that are so odd and coincidental that they would appear contrived in a work of fiction that make for compelling nonfiction, specifically history. (Obviously there is a lot of interesting nonfiction that has nothing to do with the telling of specific events.) Authored fiction doesn't have the luxury of being generated by the near-infinite churn of historical events, so its contrivances have to be created. It creates a weird dynamic because we tend to look negatively at contrivances in fiction that would appear simply coincidental in historical nonfiction. Oh, and re: editing, my email notification with the quote doesn't contain the mansplaining line either...maybe there was a weird posting thing happening. [/QUOTE]
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The importance to "story" of contrivance
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