L1aei
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2025
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So... new question here! I am once again, but this time I would not at all be surprised I'd watch this thing die quietly in a ditch somewhere; no hard feelings if you all want to avoid this topic like The Plague. 
I've been witnessing over the years... decades, really, something that pops up in a lot of serialized webnovels, here, and big Blockbuster-worthy series alike. Some stories include situations that ain't just dark or edgy, but the kind of stuff that would be straight-up illegal or seriously messed up in real life. I don't mean for shock value necessarily, but as part of the setting, the culture of the world, or, fuck, a character's backstory (insert Guts from Berserk here).
And that's where my moldy gray-matter starts squirming in front of the line in the sand.
Because there's a whole field on this side of the line in the sand... we're all standing on the moral high ground here. But crossing that line is where things get messy, because, well, that's the difference between depicting something and endorsing it, right? And that line gets blurry depending on framing, level of detail, and whether the scenes treats the hot topic as serious and harmful, romanticized, casual, sensationalized, or presented without consequences.
That means I'm here asking about a writing standpoint before crossing that line, not a moral panic stance. Like, when your story includes subject matter that's legally or ethically wrong in real life, how do you handle the portrayal? Do you all simply fade to black instead of showing it directly? That'd be cool, let the implications fill in the blank. Or do you rely on implication or aftermath rather than the act itself? I mean, do you make sure the emotional and psychological consequences are centered, such as using narrative distance so it doesn't feel voyeuristic or do you lean hard on tags and content warnings to flag readers?
Basically, how do you keep it from sliding into this feeling of exploitative territory while still being honest about the world or character you're writing?
And for those who are not writers, you readers and the rare reviewers, what makes the difference, for you, between this being a difficult but meaningful part of the story and this feeling like it's here for the wrong, damnable reasons?
I'm not interested in shaming genres or pretending dark fiction shouldn't exist; it does, as I've already said earlier, I've seen it here. I repeat, it's here. Conflict, harm, and ugly parts of humanity have always been part of storytelling and I don't bash on it. I'm more interested in responsibility in execution; the tone, framing, narrative consequences, and all that not-so-fun stuff.
Where do you draw your toes in the sand with your own work, and what do you use to stay on the right side of the dunes because, let's be real here, this is like stepping on a minefield.
One more time, I do not expect anyone to comment on this. This is topic is radioactive, but I want to learn how to handle it properly. I'm damn certain others may read over what you all say. Maybe they'll see what may have to be revised in their own series? Who knows.
And, mods, feel free to redact this if you believe it deserves it; I know I'm blowing the lid off of quite a few novels that may or may not contain liable content. But, again, if we make others aware on how to handle these without it blowing up the place, that's good, right? So, while I get suited up in the EOD outfit, let's here it.
I've been witnessing over the years... decades, really, something that pops up in a lot of serialized webnovels, here, and big Blockbuster-worthy series alike. Some stories include situations that ain't just dark or edgy, but the kind of stuff that would be straight-up illegal or seriously messed up in real life. I don't mean for shock value necessarily, but as part of the setting, the culture of the world, or, fuck, a character's backstory (insert Guts from Berserk here).
And that's where my moldy gray-matter starts squirming in front of the line in the sand.
Because there's a whole field on this side of the line in the sand... we're all standing on the moral high ground here. But crossing that line is where things get messy, because, well, that's the difference between depicting something and endorsing it, right? And that line gets blurry depending on framing, level of detail, and whether the scenes treats the hot topic as serious and harmful, romanticized, casual, sensationalized, or presented without consequences.
That means I'm here asking about a writing standpoint before crossing that line, not a moral panic stance. Like, when your story includes subject matter that's legally or ethically wrong in real life, how do you handle the portrayal? Do you all simply fade to black instead of showing it directly? That'd be cool, let the implications fill in the blank. Or do you rely on implication or aftermath rather than the act itself? I mean, do you make sure the emotional and psychological consequences are centered, such as using narrative distance so it doesn't feel voyeuristic or do you lean hard on tags and content warnings to flag readers?
Basically, how do you keep it from sliding into this feeling of exploitative territory while still being honest about the world or character you're writing?
And for those who are not writers, you readers and the rare reviewers, what makes the difference, for you, between this being a difficult but meaningful part of the story and this feeling like it's here for the wrong, damnable reasons?
I'm not interested in shaming genres or pretending dark fiction shouldn't exist; it does, as I've already said earlier, I've seen it here. I repeat, it's here. Conflict, harm, and ugly parts of humanity have always been part of storytelling and I don't bash on it. I'm more interested in responsibility in execution; the tone, framing, narrative consequences, and all that not-so-fun stuff.
Where do you draw your toes in the sand with your own work, and what do you use to stay on the right side of the dunes because, let's be real here, this is like stepping on a minefield.
One more time, I do not expect anyone to comment on this. This is topic is radioactive, but I want to learn how to handle it properly. I'm damn certain others may read over what you all say. Maybe they'll see what may have to be revised in their own series? Who knows.
And, mods, feel free to redact this if you believe it deserves it; I know I'm blowing the lid off of quite a few novels that may or may not contain liable content. But, again, if we make others aware on how to handle these without it blowing up the place, that's good, right? So, while I get suited up in the EOD outfit, let's here it.