Saturday, February 21, 2009

The Young Writer's Dilemma

I'm not sure if this problem exists in other arts, but in writing, people are generally expected to write around their real job.

There's a pair of crappy words. They exist for the sole reason of forcing writers to answer their calling in a few hours of free time. Believe it or not, writing (and learning to write) is work. So a successful writer is expected to have no life outside of work, period.

One can't go to college to learn writing, specifically - at least not in my corner of the US -, which means that young writers must dice their writing time even smaller, between absurd amounts of homework, a job to keep them alive, and the job they actually want.

Society needs writers, and yet does nothing to foster them. Our services are expected to be done well, for a cheap price, and around the obligations that make us normal citizens.

Christ, but I wonder if there isn't something easier out there--like digging ditches, or swimming to the moon.

2 comments:

veinglory said...

I am not sure what your point is? In any profession you have to be good enough to make a living, if not you need to have another job or someone else willing to look after you. Many people write for a living full time, they just have to spend a lot of that time writing what other people want--and only some of it writing what they want to.

von Klick said...

I guess my reaction stems from writing being such a draconian field. A mediocre plumber can make a really good living, as can a mediocre electrician, politician, lawyer -- even mediocre artists in other fields have various avenues open to them.

But there doesn't seem to be a place for the mediocre writer. Anyone can go train to become a mediocre plumber. Anyone can go train to become a mediocre writer. The difference is that the plumber will invariably find work, and the writer will be forced to retrain into a different field.

And this BAFFLES me, because so many people *HATE* writing. So many students come to me, bitching about how stupid their essay assignment is -- how come these people, upon entering whatever field they finally choose -- don't go out and hire wordsmiths?

Or do they? Am I just completely overlooking some massive and hyper-active writing market?

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