Thursday, August 6, 2009

Guest blogger: Carollyne Hutter on Technology & the Writer




















With the myriad possibilities for "connecting" online--a full list would be too large to explore here--it's nearly impossible to know much less participate in many. How do you find the time? I for one am connected on Facebook, Twitter (both personally and for work), LinkedIn, this blog, several e-mail accounts, Youtube, various home-related things....See what I mean? At times, it's exhausting just trying to remember all my passwords and usernames. Makes you want to just give up, buy a cabin, become a hermit.

Are you frustrated by technology? Today's post is by member Carollyne Hutter, and as you'll see, it's about how writers relate, or should relate, to technology. It originally appeared on Leslie Pietrzyk's blog Work in Progress. Carollyne, take it away:

A friend sent an email that startled me. I stared for a few minutes at the screen before responding. I had asked him a reference question. He had written back: “It’s lucky you caught me. I only check my emails once a week.”

Once a week? As a freelance writer/editor, I have a close relationship with technology, particularly emails, since my bosses contact me 24/7 with their BlackBerrys.

My friend’s email spurred me to think how dependent writers are on technology, and yet many writers I know don’t include, or rarely mention, technology in their fiction writing. Their characters live in low-tech worlds.

When I decided to write a young-adult (YA) novel, I went around asking other YA writers how they deal with teens and technology. Most said they avoided it, yet many teens mainline technology all day. What gave the teen series Twilight a gothic, old-time feel to it was the lack of technology in the heroine’s life. To me, this absence of teen technology was much more bizarre than her falling in love with a vampire.

As writers, we really should embrace technology in our characters’ lives because our characters use of technology is such a telling detail—just as what clothes they wear, what cars they drive, what they keep on their nightstands are all telling details.

My friend’s comment about only checking emails once a week conjures up an image of a low-tech person, doesn’t it? Just like as the opposite presents a picture: I have a colleague who always checks his emails on his BlackBerry during meetings, even if it’s a small meeting of three people. Or how about this—a friend who appears as a typical suburban soccer mom actually has her own biting, left-wing political blog under a pseudonym. Very telling.

I can understand a writer’s hesitation to deal with technology. I used to joke that I set my YA, Homesick, in 1989 so I wouldn’t have to deal with teen technology.

But the strange thing is I miss technology. Brigit, the heroine of my YA, has to fax her boyfriend in Germany. How slow is that? Or when she needs information, she has to trot down to the library, instead of checking it out on the web. It’s actually been harder than I thought to leave out technology and go back to a time before cell phones, emails, and the Internet were popular. It’s probably been just as hard for me to exclude technology, as other writers tell me it is to include it.

About Carollyne Hutter: This is Carolynne's third appearance at First Person Plural. Check out her discussion of YA lit here. And Twilight here. For over a decade, she has been a freelance writer/editor in the Washington, DC area, specializing in international and environmental topics. Her website is http://www.hutterwriter.com/. Please visit the site to read Carollyne’s stories (including the opening chapters of Homesick), quirky essays, and nonfiction pieces. You can contact her at sayhi@hutterwriter.com.

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