Forum Transcripts

Dialect, Accent, and Foreign Language in Dialogue 6/27/06

Event start time:

Tue Jun 27 12:06:23 2006

Event end time:

Tue Jun 27 13:36:05 2006



Legend:
Questions from the Audience are presented in red.
Answers by the Speaker are in black.
The Moderator's comments are in blue.

mary rosenblum

Good morning all!

mary rosenblum

I hope you're having a good week and if you live in the DC area, I hope you're not treading water!

gskearney

If we're lucky maybe a few lobbyists drowned. LOL

mary rosenblum

Yeah, I wonder if business won't be a bit slow in the capital this week.

mary rosenblum

No worries about fires started by fireworks anyway.

mary rosenblum

I have had quite a few questions lately about the use of slang, dialect, regional accents, and foreign languages in prose.

mary rosenblum

So this seemed like a good time to talk about it.

mary rosenblum

This is the Tuesday Forum with me Mary Rosenblum LR Web Editor, fiction and nonfiction writer. We're talking about dialect in dialogue. If you're new here, remember that you need to click on the Ask a Question button or the word bubble next to the red question mark at the top of the screen, or use the ask a question icon in order to ask a question. Your regular send bar won't reach me! You can also type /ask in front of your question in your regular send bar to reach me.

mary rosenblum

Ideally, your characters are not you. Ideally they are not all white, middle class, Americans...at least not in EVERY story.

mary rosenblum

Ideally your characters do not talk like you...

mary rosenblum

especially if they come from, say, Louisiana or Baaaston, and you come from Nebraska.

mary rosenblum

One of the craft issues that is MOST overlooked by novice writers is how characters talk.

mary rosenblum

Novice writers tend to worry a lot about the words, but not about making each character voice distinct.

mermaid2499

Would it be wise to find such people to help get grip on the language?

mary rosenblum

Oh certainly! If you can do it, asking someone who speaks the language to translate bits of dialogue into his/her language...

mary rosenblum

is wonderful. A language course book only goes so far...and it offers you 'correct' speech...

mary rosenblum

rather than idiom.

mary rosenblum

But if you're using an obscure language or you simply can't find an informant, they you can 'fake it'. :-) And do it pretty realistically.

mary rosenblum

As far as dialect or accent goes...

mary rosenblum

talking to someone who has that accent will help you a lot.

mary rosenblum

Essentially, you listen for the rhythm of the words, the type of idiom that person uses, and the way the senteces flow...

mary rosenblum

so you can recreate it in your character's voice.

mary rosenblum

If you listen to someone with that accent for some time, you can begin to hear your character use that same accent.

mary rosenblum

And it becomes more a matter of writing down what you 'hear' in your head than consciously choosing to insert particular spellings or idiom.

mary rosenblum

This is the Tuesday Forum with me Mary Rosenblum LR Web Editor, fiction and nonfiction writer. We're talking about dialect in dialogue. If you're new here, remember that you need to click on the Ask a Question button or the word bubble next to the red question mark at the top of the screen, or use the ask a question icon in order to ask a question. Your regular send bar won't reach me! You can also type /ask in front of your question in your regular send bar to reach me.

mary rosenblum

When I first began writing and was wrestling with realistic dialogue that didn't ALL sound like me talking...

mary rosenblum

I found it very useful to sift through all the people I knew...

mary rosenblum

and find someone whose voice 'fit' my character...

mary rosenblum

and then imagine that person saying the dialogue the way I knew that person would say it.

mermaid2499

like NYC lol

mary rosenblum

Oh yes...that is pretty distinct. :-)

mary rosenblum

And not just for the way the words are pronounced but also for the rhythm of the words and the world view that's expressed.

mary rosenblum

Remember that you're not just concerned with HOW a character speaks, but also what world view those words express.

mary rosenblum

It will be yours if you don't consciously think about it.

mummsy

is it necessary to use single quotes around an oddly spelled word or phrase?

mary rosenblum

Not if the character uses it as normal speech.

mary rosenblum

Those enclosures make the word stand out.

mary rosenblum

If this is a character's normal word, there is no need to pick it out in any way.

mary rosenblum

This is the Tuesday Forum with me Mary Rosenblum LR Web Editor, fiction and nonfiction writer. We're talking about dialect in dialogue. If you're new here, remember that you need to click on the Ask a Question button or the word bubble next to the red question mark at the top of the screen, or use the ask a question icon in order to ask a question. Your regular send bar won't reach me! You can also type /ask in front of your question in your regular send bar to reach me.

tory

Rhythm? do you mean long vs short words? And how do you show fast or slow speakers?

mary rosenblum

Listen to how people talk.

mary rosenblum

Some people drag things out, punctuating their sentences with 'you know', 'ah', 'uh' or those other 'thinking pauses'

mary rosenblum

Others talk very fast, you know what I mean, there's just no time, none at all, and I really don't know why I'm standing around here talking to you, so I'd better get going.

mary rosenblum

You can change that rhythm by breaking that up and give it a totally different feel.

mary rosenblum

Others talk very fast. You know what I mean. There's no time. None at all. I don't know why I'm standing here. Talking to you. I'd better get going.

mary rosenblum

Others talk vaery fast. Oh, you know what I mean, like all the time. They kinda act like they've got no time, you know? None at all. They're like bouncing up and done, like they don't know why they're even talking to ya. It's like they can't wait to just take off, like, and get going.

mary rosenblum

All pretty much the same monologue. Three very different rhythms, three different voices.

mary rosenblum

That's rhythm.

mary rosenblum

And I have to imagine a very different character for each of those voices.

mary rosenblum

Your character voice conveys the character to the reader more powerfully than any other technique you can use.

mary rosenblum

So if your voice is featureless...your characterization is going to be weak, no matter what you have your character do, or what words you put into his/her mouth.

mary rosenblum

That's why a lot of novice writers have trouble with characterization.

mary rosenblum

We learn nothing from their voices.

mary rosenblum

And in real life, that is how you evaluate a stranger.

mary rosenblum

Generally, you hear them speak...that's your first impression, along with visual image.

mummsy

i had an editor return a short story begging me not to use them anymore

mary rosenblum

Oh, I'm sorry, mumsy. I'd say that you probably were sending them stories that they don't publish...

mary rosenblum

so there was no point in you wasting your postage.

mary rosenblum

New writers often misinterpret guidelines.

mary rosenblum

They're all pretty general.

mary rosenblum

This is the Tuesday Forum with me Mary Rosenblum LR Web Editor, fiction and nonfiction writer. We're talking about dialect in dialogue. If you're new here, remember that you need to click on the Ask a Question button or the word bubble next to the red question mark at the top of the screen, or use the ask a question icon in order to ask a question. Your regular send bar won't reach me! You can also type /ask in front of your question in your regular send bar to reach me.

mummsy

question was out of sequence mary, they told me not to use single quotes anymore

mary rosenblum

Oh, whew!

mary rosenblum

Sometimes, posts take a long time to show up on my screen.

mary rosenblum

Yeah, those single quote marks are only used very occasionally and generally in dialogue if your speaker wants to make a word stand out.

mary rosenblum

They distract the reader.

mary rosenblum

Which brings us to the issue of phonetic spelling and reader migraines. :-)

mummsy

should you mention that a voice is, for example, raspy? to get the idea across?

mary rosenblum

You're better off to just bring that raspy voice to the reader's attention and then remind 'em occasionally, mummsy...

mary rosenblum

it's the same problem as with dialect...

mary rosenblum

if you try to spell stuff phonetically, you get in the way of your story.

mary rosenblum

"Who're you?" the old man rasped in his whiskey voice. "Someone I know?"

mary rosenblum

And you might occasionally use 'he rasped' or have him hack and cough now and again...

mary rosenblum

to remind us of the sound of his voice, but leave it up to the reader to remember and 'hear' the correct tone.

mummsy

seems to be a fine line

mary rosenblum

Everything in writing is a fine line, mummsy.

mary rosenblum

too much is not good. Too little is not good.

mary rosenblum

You're learning to walk a tightrope as you write.

mummsy

but sometimes crossing it is fun, when it works

mary rosenblum

Hey, balancing on it is fun...when it works! LOL

mary rosenblum

Character voices DO need to be unique and if your character has a strong regional or foreign accent...

mary rosenblum

you DO need to make your readers hear it, and that does require phonetic spelling and perhaps quite a few foreign words.

mary rosenblum

Orson Scott Card taught us a good method at Clarion that I've used successfully...

mary rosenblum

and that is to concentrate on the dialect or accent for a short stretch.

mary rosenblum

Go ahead and spell everything phonetically. Use a lot of foreign words. Make your reader work, but give them a strong sense of the character voice...

mary rosenblum

and then back off. Maintain the rhythm and syntax of that voice, but use only the occasional...

mary rosenblum

phonetic spelling to remind the reader of the voice...or the occasional foreign word.

mermaid2499

like grill'd chedda not my way of saying grilled cheese

mary rosenblum

Yeah.

mary rosenblum

And once you're gone through that 'immersion' section where you spell out the sound of the character's words...then..

mary rosenblum

you can just drop in the occasional grill'd chedda and we'll keep on hearing that accent.

tarsus

If a character has a long drawl, how do you indicate this, I mean without saying ...he drawled?

mary rosenblum

YOu know, tarsus, saying 'he drawled' is generally less intrusive than phonetically spelling out a long drawl.

mary rosenblum

Or you could spell out that long drawl for a paragraph or two and then, from then on, just remind us once in awhile, 'he drawled'.

mary rosenblum

This is the Tuesday Forum with me Mary Rosenblum LR Web Editor, fiction and nonfiction writer. We're talking about dialect in dialogue. If you're new here, remember that you need to click on the Ask a Question button or the word bubble next to the red question mark at the top of the screen, or use the ask a question icon in order to ask a question. Your regular send bar won't reach me! You can also type /ask in front of your question in your regular send bar to reach me.

mary rosenblum

If you want a prime example of what NOT to do, I suggest you read Brian Jacques Rosewall books.

mary rosenblum

Now I love his books, and I"m not normally fond of anthropomorphic animal stories, but he does a great job.

mary rosenblum

BUT...he has these moles.

mary rosenblum

And they speak with a thick cockney accent.

mary rosenblum

And he does every single awful word in phonetic spelling with a swarm of ' ' '

mary rosenblum

and you have to stop and figure out how to say the words and THEN figure out what the moles are saying ...

mary rosenblum

and it does slow the story down to a crawl.

mary rosenblum

I've heard MANY complaints about the moles from readers over the years.

mary rosenblum

Did it keep his books from being bestsellers? No.

mary rosenblum

But if ALL of his characters had talked that way, I suspect they would not have been as popular as they are.

mummsy

so there are no hard and fast rules

mary rosenblum

The Do, please, use your private message feature to chat during the forums. It gets hard to read for those people with slow servers, if there is a lot of chat.

mary rosenblum

The only real rule is that the story needs to work.

mermaid2499

Do the rules change depending on genre

mary rosenblum

Well, when you get into the literary/experimental end of things, authors play more with punctuation.

mary rosenblum

Cormac McCarthy's All the Pretty Horses uses a lot of spanish with no attempt to help the reader figure out the conversation through context.

mary rosenblum

He also leaves out the quotation marks. :-)

mary rosenblum

But the amount of phonetic spelling and/or foreign words you use is pretty much a subjective matter of balance.

tory

Mary you mentioned listening to tapes of a foreign language to catch rhythm. Would you still get rhythm from tapes that are to TEACH the language. Are there long enough sections of foreign narrative to catch the rhythm or do you need say books on tape something in that language?

mary rosenblum

Mostly it's a matter of getting an understanding of how the sentences go together.

mary rosenblum

For example in chinese, there are no tenses.

mary rosenblum

I go to the store now.

mary rosenblum

I go to the store at four o'clock.

mary rosenblum

I go to the store yesterday.

mary rosenblum

I don't think anybody but English uses contractions.

mary rosenblum

Do, please, use your private message feature to chat during the forums. It gets hard to read for those people with slow servers, if there is a lot of chat.

mary rosenblum

This is the Tuesday Forum with me Mary Rosenblum LR Web Editor, fiction and nonfiction writer. We're talking about dialect in dialogue. If you're new here, remember that you need to click on the Ask a Question button or the word bubble next to the red question mark at the top of the screen, or use the ask a question icon in order to ask a question. Your regular send bar won't reach me! You can also type /ask in front of your question in your regular send bar to reach me.

mary rosenblum

And you can use actual conversations, Tory, as long as the context is pretty clear.

mary rosenblum

If your character enters a room and someone greets him or her in another language...

mary rosenblum

and that person bows, say, and responds...

mary rosenblum

99% of your readers will assume that is a greeting.

mary rosenblum

If your character asks in Portuguese, 'pass me the bread please' and your POV passes her the bread basket...

mary rosenblum

no problem.

mary rosenblum

BUT if your characters discuss their plans to murder the innkeeper in Romani and then go off to do other things...

mary rosenblum

your readers missed it.

mary rosenblum

If your POV is going to speak another language quite often in your book, it's not really a good idea...

mary rosenblum

to make that voice too stilted or 'different'...

mary rosenblum

since you want your readers to focus on what is going on rather than how things are said.

mary rosenblum

Simply dropping all contractions from your sentences will make them sound just a bit 'different'...

mary rosenblum

without distracting the reader from what is being said.

mary rosenblum

Don't worry about the language when you're working on the first draft.

mary rosenblum

That's something to fine tune when you're working on revisions.

mary rosenblum

And then get feedback from your readers.

mary rosenblum

It's always a good idea to give your readers specific questions to answer AFTER they read your ms.

mary rosenblum

Readers don't necessarily know what you're concerned about when they give you feedback.

mary rosenblum

This is the Tuesday Forum with me Mary Rosenblum LR Web Editor, fiction and nonfiction writer. We're talking about dialect in dialogue. If you're new here, remember that you need to click on the Ask a Question button or the word bubble next to the red question mark at the top of the screen, or use the ask a question icon in order to ask a question. Your regular send bar won't reach me! You can also type /ask in front of your question in your regular send bar to reach me.

mary rosenblum

And of course, one way to get around the 'translation' issue is to have a character who does not speak the language...

mary rosenblum

who can demand translations.

mary rosenblum

But you really do not have to learn the language in order to use it in a story or book.

mary rosenblum

Although it is a good idea to either search for a language website or buy a simple conversational phrase book...

mary rosenblum

so that you get a sense of how the language sounds and the way the words are arranged.

mary rosenblum

But even more important than foreign language or dialect...each character should sound different.

mary rosenblum

That can be harder than giving a character a strong accent.

mary rosenblum

You really do need to get to the point where you 'hear' your character's voice all the time.

mary rosenblum

I actually do carry on mental (or out loud when nobody is around) conversations with my characters...

mary rosenblum

quite a lot before I start writing...

mary rosenblum

so that the character's voice comes to me automatically when I write his/her dialogue lines.

mary rosenblum

And as I said earlier in the forum...

mary rosenblum

carbon copy character voices are one of the most common..if not THE most common...novice writer problems.

mary rosenblum

Ideally, you should be able to remove every tag line from your story (tag line = Jane said) and...

mary rosenblum

still know who is talking.

mary rosenblum

You know, if you have a long commute to work, that's a great time to practice dialogue. :-)

mary rosenblum

I do that while driving quite a bit.

mary rosenblum

If nothing else, drivers will see you talking to yourself and decide that maybe they should give you LOTS of space. :-)

mermaid2499

Should we take out the tag lines and see if we can tell

mary rosenblum

Yes, mermaid! That's an EXCELLENT exercise.

mary rosenblum

I have students at workshops do it at times.

mary rosenblum

I used to do it a lot when I was first writing...just to see if my dialogue was distinct.

mary rosenblum

Often it was not.

mary rosenblum

It takes practice to evolve distinct voices easily.

mary rosenblum

It's work when you first start out.

mary rosenblum

But character = voice.

mary rosenblum

If the voice is you, so is the character, no matter what trappings you give that person.

mermaid2499

Do actions make it easier to avoid the tag lines

mary rosenblum

Yes, mermaid. I really encourage action tags whenever possible.

mary rosenblum

You simply avoid 'said' and all those other 'saidisms'.

mary rosenblum

"I

mary rosenblum

"I'll be there in a second." Judith grabbed her coat and scribbled a note for Kathy.

mary rosenblum

Who said 'I'll be there in a second'?

mary rosenblum

And no 'said' is needed.

jackie7777

Totally off the subject - Forum topic - how do you choose your characters natiionality, race and creed? I am working on a novel. I do not have a race in mind. When I started writing - they had no color. Race is important - I know. But it will change the entire dynamic of my story.

mary rosenblum

Oh, that's a great question, Jackie, and does kind of fit since we're talking about language/dialect here.

mary rosenblum

Nationality matters. Race matters. Economic status matters.

mary rosenblum

And they all change how your character will interact with the story.

mary rosenblum

I think about it. I play 'leggo' with my character...what if she's Chinese?

mary rosenblum

What if he's black?

mary rosenblum

Gay?

mary rosenblum

What if she's Hispanic?

mary rosenblum

I think about what issues each change adds to the story...

mary rosenblum

how it complicates the plot I've come up with...

mary rosenblum

and what new conflicts it raises.

mary rosenblum

Then I decide what's going to work best for this particular story.

jackie7777

I want the story to focus around the story line not the people.

mary rosenblum

Well, Jackie, plot and character and setting are integral parts of story.

mary rosenblum

You really can't leave any of those three 'story legs' blank without harming your final story.

mary rosenblum

Some stories are highly plot driven...but even they need real characters in order to work.

mary rosenblum

Cardboard figures really don't give you something that is strong enough to catch an editor's eye.

mary rosenblum

Believe me, a lot of work goes into a story that isn't evident on the printed page!

jackie7777

I mean I want my readers to see the story - not because they were a certain color but because the story was so impelling.

mary rosenblum

Well, sure. Race is only going to be an issue in your story if you make it an issue.

mary rosenblum

If your character happens to be African American or a Latina and it's not an issue in the plot, it won't be an issue...it'll just be part of this character's background.

mary rosenblum

In many of my stories, the ethnic background, religion, or what have you, is simply part of who this character is...

mary rosenblum

it plays no major role in the plot...

mary rosenblum

but of course, it does affect that character's world view...just as economic background, childhood, education...

mary rosenblum

and the like affect that character's world view.

mary rosenblum

To step up onto a soapbox for just a moment here...

mary rosenblum

the slush piles are full of stories whose characters are all middle class, caucasian Americans.

mary rosenblum

Editors really do love it when you give your characters a bit of diversity.

mary rosenblum

It does add to characters..

mary rosenblum

if they are different.

tory

Mary, also way off topic: Regarding word count. I've seen many novels that have a short quote at the beginning of each chapter. Are those counted in the word count even though they are not the author's words?

mary rosenblum

Word count in novels really doesn't matter except in terms of general length.

mary rosenblum

You don't get paid by the word...

mary rosenblum

and the real issue is number of pages...

mary rosenblum

because that affects the cover price of the book.

mary rosenblum

So if a market says they want 70-80,000 word drafts...

mary rosenblum

they want a certain number of pages in the book.

mary rosenblum

If your quotes bump your page count over their limit, they'll ask you to reduce the words.

tory

A contest I'm entering is very specific about word count, and I don't know if I should or should not count them. Guess I'll write them. :-)

mary rosenblum

You'd better.

mary rosenblum

Either that, or edit out enough words so that it fits their word limit.

mary rosenblum

You can edit out a LOT of words in a novel ms! And never miss one of them!!!

mary rosenblum

Oh...cool...fedex just arrived with my bookmarks for the new novel...

mary rosenblum

They look great! I'm very pleased.

mary rosenblum

Well, this has been a fun Oregon Hour

mary rosenblum

Whether you use dialect, foreign languages, or slang, make each character sound unique and you'll stand out in the slush pile.

mummsy

what's it called mary?

mary rosenblum

The book? Horizons. You can see the cover up on amazon.com, although it won't be out until November.

beryl

This session has moved me out of my (ho-hum) comfort zone. Thank you so much, Mary.

mary rosenblum

Oooh, good! I'm always pleased when something works. :-)

mary rosenblum

Thanks for coming all!

mary rosenblum

I'll post the transcript in the usual place...

mary rosenblum

Writing Craft: Forum Transcripts.

mary rosenblum

Thanks for coming all!

mary rosenblum

Join us tomorrow, same time, for our casual chat...

mary rosenblum

when we get to gether to talk about...anything. :-)

mary rosenblum

Have a great day!

mary rosenblum

Nice to know that the 'armament' seems to work, anyway.

 

Return to Forum Transcripts