Writing as !Business
Jan. 5th, 2012 12:00 pmI read this article by Kristine Rusch about writers and pay. I like Ms. Rusch's business writing quite a bit: she's generally sensible, knowledgable, and well-researched, although her math and assumptions are sometimes overly simplistic.
This particular essay was one of those where her assumptions struck me as especially ... peculiar. Her chief assumption is that the goal for all writers is to maximize revenue from their writing. The implication is 'If you are writing, and you are not maximizing your revenue from writing, you are clearly an idiot.'
And I find myself imagining a World of Warcraft goldseller writing a rant about how these crazy people who are playing WoW and not selling the gold their characters earn! What kind of idiots are they? Don't they know that their efforts are worth money? Don't they realize how many hundreds of hours they're throwing away for nothing?
Or a professional actor railing about the foolishness of amateur theatre: how could anyone perform in a production for free? Don't they realize that acting is a business?
Do you suppose landscapers marvel at the ridiculousness of people who choose to tend their gardens for free? Or movie critics are astonished that people pay to see movies, and then tell other people what they thought of the film for nothing?
I'd guess that the average American devotes more than half his waking hours to activities that he doesn't get paid for and doesn't care about getting paid for. There's nothing inherently foolish about doing something for free, and the fact that other people do get paid for the same activity doesn't mean you're an idiot. Your circumstances and goals may just be different.
ETA: lt's a bit unfair of me to single Ms. Rusch out on this -- she is, after all, writing about "writing as a business" and assuming that her audience is interested in making money by writing is fairly sensible -- that's her target audience, really. Still ... it's worth examining assumptions, sometimes.
Posted via LiveJournal app for Android.
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Date: 2012-01-05 08:10 pm (UTC)It does seem peculiar to me that some things are acceptable as hobbies even though professionals also do them, while other things are 'obviously' only done by people who want to make a paying career of them.
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Date: 2012-01-05 10:18 pm (UTC)I don't see in her writing any put-downs of people who write as a hobby. I don't see her addressing them at all, actually. Which makes sense, since she's not talking to them in a column about publishing/writing business.
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Date: 2012-01-05 11:06 pm (UTC)That ... comes across as pretty disparaging towards anyone who doesn't write for money, to me.
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Date: 2012-01-05 11:10 pm (UTC)To me, she was very clearly describing several Archetypes I see commonly in other 'we're trying to become writers who make money' circles. The Writer Who Wants to Be Validated is a big one in that crowd, and so are the other two, and oddly, these are pathologies created by the fact that they feel compelled to fit themselves into the weird "no one thinks what I'm doing is serious or important unless x, even though it's incredibly important to me" society we've created.
I wonder sometimes, if we had a society that lionized the arts more, if artists would feel less compelled to justify themselves. I suspect from what reading I've done of historical societies with more respect for artists that this would be so.
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Date: 2012-01-06 02:29 am (UTC)And sometimes information is tangentially useful, if only in the sense of clarifying one's thinking.
The expectation that artists should justify their art -- whether by making money, or receiving acclaim, or whatever -- is awfully tiresome, yes. v.v
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Date: 2012-01-06 02:55 pm (UTC)This reminds me of the furry artists who were proclaiming that artists underselling them were cutting the feet out of other artists striving to make a living. In a way they're right. In a way they're wrong. Like the economy, it's really too complicated to just Have an Immediate Opinion.
I am several years into developing my opinion. I'm not sure where I will end up. :)
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Date: 2012-01-06 10:26 pm (UTC)(Edited for redundancy.) :)