Monthly Archives: April 2011

What is Character?

by Sidney S. Stark

‘She doesn’t have any character,’ ‘Lord, what a character!’ or ‘It was really out of character’, all describe different traits within the parameters of personality, temperament and moral fiber. So clearly character can mean many different things to different people in various settings. But what does it mean to an author of fiction? Is it the same to some degree as the meanings we assign to it in everyday life or is there more to it?

That was the topic discussed at a lecture at the New York Society Library recently. The dialogue was between two highly accomplished and much lauded authors with different ideas on the subject. Meg Wolitzer and Elizabeth Strout are known for writing pages of fiction inhabited by wonderfully engaging people. Elizabeth gave me permission to use that adverb by the way. She loves judiciously placed adverbs. And since the characters these two women create are full of the wonder of life and its mysteries, I feel I’ve chosen the adverb with prudence.

The blurb announcing this lecture as ‘A Conversation About Character and Contemporary Fiction’ included a phrase asking ‘Who Are These People, and Why Do We Care?  It might have added the query, ‘Or Do We In Fact Care At All?’ We don’t have to like them, but we have to care. Both authors seemed to be in agreement about a few key ingredients that must be part of the ‘primordial soup’, as Meg Wolitzer put it, in order for us to believe in the validity of fictional characters. But there were definitely nuances to their analysis that took them in different directions.

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Spring in our Hearts

by Sidney S. Stark Whanne that April with his shoures sote (Sweet Rain) The droughte (dryness) of March hath perced (pierced) to the rote (root)… Canterbury Tales. Prologue. Line 1. The prologue to Geoffrey Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales (above) is familiar to most of us who remember it from our struggles in eighth grade English class.… Continue Reading

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Play it by Ear

by Sidney S. Stark The phrase ‘play it by ear’ has many nuances of meaning in both its literal and figurative iterations. The one we’re all most familiar with refers to the musical ability to perform a piece without notation. The furthest extreme of that version is probably represented by the prodigious skill of the… Continue Reading