Subject: I agree to certain extent.
Author:
Posted on: 2015-03-23 19:02:00 UTC
When you write, you want to write new and exciting; bold and fresh. Keep the reader on their toes with a story that isn't bland or mundane with the similar and used. Adding diversity in your characters can do that... provided you know what you're doing.
Write for the story's sake is one of my mantras. I'm currently working on both Star Wars and a Harry Potter fanfictions. (No worries, I'm keeping them well away from any of the main canon plots or characters.) Both main characters are women. One is manic-depressive. The other is high-anxiety.
While I think these traits add an extra dimension to the story in giving them struggles to fight and overcome, I don't add said traits in for the sake of having them. It works for their backgrounds, because, honestly, if they didn't have these issues from where they came from then the characters would be less believable.
I think writing based on cultural norms isn't harmful, but only if you're writing for believability. Having a tribe of Ewoks on the planet Kashyyyk like it's really NBD will throw everything into disarray, and, from what I can tell, is one of the many continuum issues we resolve in our missions.
Same thing with human cultures. Write to include diversity, but keep it withing socially normative expectancy. If you go against said expectancy, explain how this came to be so it doesn't throw the reader through a loop and out of the story. You have a black Moslem living in a Augustinian convent in the 14th century? Tell (through the story, not as an aside) why/how this came to be, because, for those monks, a black Moslem in a convent is not the norm.
Stay away from completely unbelievable situations.
Probably rambling at this point, but I hope I'm at least being understood. I think diversity is good, but I favor believability more. If done in good taste and without smacking the reader over the head with blatant diverse overtones for the sake of being diverse, and not not actually tell a story (unless that was the point of the story), shakes me out of the narrative and, TBH, annoys me.
Cheers.
~Jas'