Subject: Didn't mean to imply a lack of creativity on authors' parts.
Author:
Posted on: 2014-05-31 14:40:00 UTC

I just see creativity as a different process than is typically understood. I know this is becoming a cliched thing to say, but when I write, I don't feel that I'm causing anything to happen. Instead, I'm just recording things that happened--I can't explain how I know they happened, but I do know. (Simplest explanation: Agent Doc seems to be a version of me from another Earth, so I'm in tune with his mind and what happens to him. Then again, Vania is more and more becoming the real main character of my spin-off, so, eh.)

In point of fact, during a very restless night's sleep that I just woke up from half an hour ago, I flat-out dreamed a new interlude that I'll need to write down the line. Since dreams are not conscious thought, how did I "make" those scenes up? Far from devaluing creativity, I'm suggesting that writers/creators of any story have such a strong imagination that they are able to see beyond the mundane reality of their world (for given values of mundane in some worlds) and see things far outside their immediate experience and familiarity. To use a Middle-earth analogy, the author's mind is traveling past the curve of their own world and heading "east" to another level of existence.

As to the Department of Dead Author Electricity Generation: Professor Tolkien would have a strong connection to Middle-earth regardless of whether or not it came out of his head or he mentally discovered it. Heck, perhaps there are a handful of different versions of each other in DoDAEG, from different versions of Earth.

But again, this has just been my feelings on the subject; I never expected anyone else to agree to it, or to suddenly subscribe to the Church of Fiction Doesn't Exist.

Reply Return to messages