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Sunday 24 February 2013

How do your inspirations affect your writing, and is their influence beneficial for a piece?


As an eleven year old I started writing short stories about a suave secret agent, sometimes explicitly Bond, sometimes with the name changed, and it was the sense of writing into a world that I was so enamoured by which sparked my initial excitement for writing. I can’t honestly say that I’ve written any Bond related stories/scripts in quite a number of years, and yet recently I noticed that I was able to trace the Bond influence through the scripts that I write now, even if it’s only in the tiniest of details.

This shouldn’t come as any great surprise. Of course our inspirations and influences affect our writing, it’s an inevitable fact, just as it is that the rest of our culture also shapes our work.  The question then is, is it a good thing to pick out the influences from a person’s work, or should it remain a detached and solitary piece? My answer is undoubtedly yes. All texts whether fictional or not are connected through Barthes’ tissue of quotations. Take Emily Dickinson for example, her references to Shakespeare in ‘Drama's Vitallest Expression is the Common Day’ only serve to enrich the text, connecting it and her other work to pre-existing stories and associations and allowing it to interact with a whole history of work and criticism. 

Not that it is possible, but if a writer managed to cut their piece off from any associated texts then it would only be a death knoll for their writing. A text lives and breathes through its interaction with other works, it’s what makes it exciting. Why would you deprive your writing of that?

9 comments:

  1. Interesting points and I like the personal paragraph about Bond at the start :)

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  2. There were a few places where commas needed to be replaced with ';' <- those things (can't remember their name right now). Other than that, though, it was a good insight. :)

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  4. I think as writers we do assimilate our major influences, those who find to be the 'best' or our favourites, into our writing. Its natural and necessary. You write about Bond character(s) whilst I wrote about Pokemon trainers. Either way, I think its how we let those influences shape us :)

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    1. Glad that you agree! Everything influences our writing, but yes the major influences are often the things that we consciously allow into our work.

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  5. Intelligent writing as ever! Love the Bond references and the general structure of the post. Short paragraphs that all make relevant points and then sum up nicely at the end. Good one :)

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