why is it that in many fantasy stories, humans are the focus?
- fruityloops
- cuneiform
- Posts: 98
- Joined: 04 Oct 2017 04:09
why is it that in many fantasy stories, humans are the focus?
it's been something that has since throbbed in my head the moment I worked on my setting. I've asked this question a lot before and the common answer is because,well, humans are relateable. we can't relate to an elf because they feel too flawless. we can't relate to a dragon because they're too overpowered. and, we also can't relate to an alien because, well, they're very alien. It does make me feel better that as long as i add human traits to a character, they can at least connect with audience just as much as human can. toy story and many others shown us how it was done, and they got a lot out of that.
so perhaps there is a market for stories set in a garden full of humanized bugs in a sword and sorcery fashion.
but for any of you fantasy writers and world builders, why do humans exist in your setting? is it because their easier to write or is there so much that you could do with them?
so perhaps there is a market for stories set in a garden full of humanized bugs in a sword and sorcery fashion.
but for any of you fantasy writers and world builders, why do humans exist in your setting? is it because their easier to write or is there so much that you could do with them?
- gestaltist
- mayan
- Posts: 1617
- Joined: 11 Feb 2015 11:23
Re: why is it that in many fantasy stories, humans are the focus?
For me, it boils down to one word: coherence. I'm a perfectionist, and if I include a creature that doesn't exist on Earth, I want it to make sense. While working on con-biology and con-evolution is fun, it's damn time-consuming.
I started one such a project - Scosya. I worked for months on the planet and climate, then for months on the evolution of creatures. I got to primitive vertebrates when I realized I would need at least a year or so of pure con-evolution before I get to a sapient species. It felt too daunting.
Now I have a setting with a terraformed planet and I have coherence without all the work.
I started one such a project - Scosya. I worked for months on the planet and climate, then for months on the evolution of creatures. I got to primitive vertebrates when I realized I would need at least a year or so of pure con-evolution before I get to a sapient species. It felt too daunting.
Now I have a setting with a terraformed planet and I have coherence without all the work.
- alynnidalar
- greek
- Posts: 700
- Joined: 17 Aug 2014 03:22
- Location: Michigan, USA
Re: why is it that in many fantasy stories, humans are the focus?
My main conworld is urban fantasy, so it's somewhat obligatory for there to be humans! The reason I'm in that genre in the first place is because I'm interested in the interaction between the real world/modern technology and the supernatural. I sometimes describe it as, "what if elves had cellphones and assault rifles?" That's the kind of thing I find fascinating. If there really were people with supernatural abilities out there--an entire species, my dalar--how would they interact politically with the rest of the world? What would they think of the internet? Whose side would they be on in the Cold War? For stories like this, you must set them in the real world, which means you must have humans.
I've dabbled in more, ah, "traditional" fantasy as well, but typically still have included humans... I think including humans is rather useful from a descriptive perspective, because your readers know what humans look like, so you can contrast other species with them. If my protagonist is an iskin, for example, the reader has no clue what that means. But if I have my iskin character looking at a human and commenting on how much shorter and stockier the human is, and how weird it is that they have brown skin instead of blue, and that they view gray hair as a sign of age instead of just a normal hair color... that's an excellent way to describe what an iskin is. (I put "traditional" in quotation marks for a reason, folks. I don't do dwarf-elf-human fantasy. Gimme them aliens.)
However, I don't think every story needs to go this way, and I don't buy the "humans are the only relatable species!!" thing. Let's be real--most of us are not writing truly alien nonhumans. We're writing characters that are distinct from humans in some way, but still familiar enough to empathize with and understand. (and it's difficult, if not impossible, for a human to write a totally alien character anyway. We're humans who think in human ways--we've never thought any other way!) So given all of this, anyone who thinks they can't write a relatable nonhuman isn't trying hard enough.
I've dabbled in more, ah, "traditional" fantasy as well, but typically still have included humans... I think including humans is rather useful from a descriptive perspective, because your readers know what humans look like, so you can contrast other species with them. If my protagonist is an iskin, for example, the reader has no clue what that means. But if I have my iskin character looking at a human and commenting on how much shorter and stockier the human is, and how weird it is that they have brown skin instead of blue, and that they view gray hair as a sign of age instead of just a normal hair color... that's an excellent way to describe what an iskin is. (I put "traditional" in quotation marks for a reason, folks. I don't do dwarf-elf-human fantasy. Gimme them aliens.)
However, I don't think every story needs to go this way, and I don't buy the "humans are the only relatable species!!" thing. Let's be real--most of us are not writing truly alien nonhumans. We're writing characters that are distinct from humans in some way, but still familiar enough to empathize with and understand. (and it's difficult, if not impossible, for a human to write a totally alien character anyway. We're humans who think in human ways--we've never thought any other way!) So given all of this, anyone who thinks they can't write a relatable nonhuman isn't trying hard enough.
Re: why is it that in many fantasy stories, humans are the focus?
I'd see this as as a morton's fork, unfortunately.
Prong one: your species are humans who wear strange hats. [/have wings /have bumpy foreheads /have pointy ears /are descended from lizards, etc]. The more you focus on these people, the more obvious it becomes that they are just humans who are wearing unusual hats, and that it's an ordinary story that an unimaginative writer has tried desparately to make look superficially original by setting it on The Planets of the Hats. This obviously looks very silly (it's expending a lot of effort yet having no real narrative effect, and it's so unbearably "what bad writers do" cliché), and raises the question why you don't just write the same story only not have them wear the hats. Plus, if the hats involve psychosocial aspects ('they're very logical', 'they're very violent', etc), focusing on them just demonstrates how stupid and poorly thought-through these hats are (no, not everyone in the species is always 'very logical', that's meaningless) - mental hats are just "my characters are all intentionally 2-dimensional! and all in the same way!".
So hat-people work best when they're seen at the peripheries, perhaps by offering an implicit (or explicit) contrast to the humans.
But prong two: your species are genuinely significantly different from humans. This makes it very hard to write stories for them that anyone is interested in reading, or can understand. Just think about how hard it is to write stories even just set in unusual real-world human cultures - how many footnotes you need to understand what's really going on in Shakespeare, for instance. The more alien (and hence interesting) you make your species, the more the narrative will have to diverge from conventional Western patterns, and the more infodumping you have to do to let your audience have any idea what's going on, and what the deeper sociobiological significance of everything is. This sort of story can be done well, but it's exceptionally difficult; I think it's been done in short stories, but I'm not sure there are any really good examples of it on the level of the novel.
So alien-people work best when they're seen briefly, through the viewpoint of someone we can actually understand.
Prong one: your species are humans who wear strange hats. [/have wings /have bumpy foreheads /have pointy ears /are descended from lizards, etc]. The more you focus on these people, the more obvious it becomes that they are just humans who are wearing unusual hats, and that it's an ordinary story that an unimaginative writer has tried desparately to make look superficially original by setting it on The Planets of the Hats. This obviously looks very silly (it's expending a lot of effort yet having no real narrative effect, and it's so unbearably "what bad writers do" cliché), and raises the question why you don't just write the same story only not have them wear the hats. Plus, if the hats involve psychosocial aspects ('they're very logical', 'they're very violent', etc), focusing on them just demonstrates how stupid and poorly thought-through these hats are (no, not everyone in the species is always 'very logical', that's meaningless) - mental hats are just "my characters are all intentionally 2-dimensional! and all in the same way!".
So hat-people work best when they're seen at the peripheries, perhaps by offering an implicit (or explicit) contrast to the humans.
But prong two: your species are genuinely significantly different from humans. This makes it very hard to write stories for them that anyone is interested in reading, or can understand. Just think about how hard it is to write stories even just set in unusual real-world human cultures - how many footnotes you need to understand what's really going on in Shakespeare, for instance. The more alien (and hence interesting) you make your species, the more the narrative will have to diverge from conventional Western patterns, and the more infodumping you have to do to let your audience have any idea what's going on, and what the deeper sociobiological significance of everything is. This sort of story can be done well, but it's exceptionally difficult; I think it's been done in short stories, but I'm not sure there are any really good examples of it on the level of the novel.
So alien-people work best when they're seen briefly, through the viewpoint of someone we can actually understand.
Re: why is it that in many fantasy stories, humans are the focus?
In The World, there are human analogues (Men), but they are not quite human. They are Yeola's equivalent race, and behaviourally and historically I guess they take the place of and are perhaps relatable enough to humans that when they appear in stories we don't find them too alien at all. But within The World, they have their own origin, their own place and their own destiny; they have a form and being different enough from humans that, though reasonably understandable by us, they are not immediately equivalent to us.fruityloops wrote: ↑13 Feb 2018 15:44 but for any of you fantasy writers and world builders, why do humans exist in your setting? is it because their easier to write or is there so much that you could do with them?
As for Morton's fork, I guess the choice there is to take the third prong: forget about the expectations of Western narrative and what a publisher or broad audience might want or expect. (Unless, of course, it's your plan to write for a living!) Do justice to a people who are very different from humans, tell their story, and let any reader willing to take the plunge reap the benefits to be had. How many readers wish to take that plunge might depend on exactly how alien the Others are. For example, in Yeola, while the races are different from one another (and I don't think it's just because of hats), it's no secret that they are also all of the same world. They are bound to share many traits in common. They are not truly "alien" with respect to the race closest to humanity by perspective. Well, I guess the Polupodes are. But, even there, some cultural parallels are shared, even if little else is in common.Salmoneus wrote:I'd see this as as a morton's fork, unfortunately.
While I don't mean to be particularly argumentative: I agree that most writers will choose prong 1 or prong 2; there are other choices that can be made and roads less travelled to tread.
- Creyeditor
- MVP
- Posts: 5091
- Joined: 14 Aug 2012 19:32
Re: why is it that in many fantasy stories, humans are the focus?
I think one possible solution might be to have the hat-people as your focus, but don't talk much about the hats. Maybe just don't mention them having any hairstyle difference, to stay in the metaphor.Salmoneus wrote: ↑14 Feb 2018 01:00 I'd see this as as a morton's fork, unfortunately.
Prong one: your species are humans who wear strange hats. [/have wings /have bumpy foreheads /have pointy ears /are descended from lizards, etc]. The more you focus on these people, the more obvious it becomes that they are just humans who are wearing unusual hats, and that it's an ordinary story that an unimaginative writer has tried desparately to make look superficially original by setting it on The Planets of the Hats. This obviously looks very silly (it's expending a lot of effort yet having no real narrative effect, and it's so unbearably "what bad writers do" cliché), and raises the question why you don't just write the same story only not have them wear the hats. Plus, if the hats involve psychosocial aspects ('they're very logical', 'they're very violent', etc), focusing on them just demonstrates how stupid and poorly thought-through these hats are (no, not everyone in the species is always 'very logical', that's meaningless) - mental hats are just "my characters are all intentionally 2-dimensional! and all in the same way!".
So hat-people work best when they're seen at the peripheries, perhaps by offering an implicit (or explicit) contrast to the humans.
But prong two: your species are genuinely significantly different from humans. This makes it very hard to write stories for them that anyone is interested in reading, or can understand. Just think about how hard it is to write stories even just set in unusual real-world human cultures - how many footnotes you need to understand what's really going on in Shakespeare, for instance. The more alien (and hence interesting) you make your species, the more the narrative will have to diverge from conventional Western patterns, and the more infodumping you have to do to let your audience have any idea what's going on, and what the deeper sociobiological significance of everything is. This sort of story can be done well, but it's exceptionally difficult; I think it's been done in short stories, but I'm not sure there are any really good examples of it on the level of the novel.
So alien-people work best when they're seen briefly, through the viewpoint of someone we can actually understand.
Creyeditor
"Thoughts are free."
Produce, Analyze, Manipulate
1 2 3 4 4
Ook & Omlűt & Nautli languages & Sperenjas
Papuan languages, Morphophonology, Lexical Semantics
"Thoughts are free."
Produce, Analyze, Manipulate
1 2 3 4 4
Ook & Omlűt & Nautli languages & Sperenjas
Papuan languages, Morphophonology, Lexical Semantics
- Thrice Xandvii
- runic
- Posts: 2698
- Joined: 25 Nov 2012 10:13
- Location: Carnassus
Re: why is it that in many fantasy stories, humans are the focus?
I'll answer the question in the subject as simply as I can: Because we are humans, that's why. We know about ourselves, and therefore it is easiest to understand a story about ourselves. Basically, as Sal said above, any story with a non-human race in it might as well be about humans anyway if the writer wants that race to be the main focus and have problems and ideas that its human readers would understand without excessive exposition.
To me, the better question is: Why would you not use humans?
To me, the better question is: Why would you not use humans?
Then what's the point?Creyeditor wrote: ↑14 Feb 2018 02:27I think one possible solution might be to have the hat-people as your focus, but don't talk much about the hats. Maybe just don't mention them having any hairstyle difference, to stay in the metaphor.
- Creyeditor
- MVP
- Posts: 5091
- Joined: 14 Aug 2012 19:32
Re: why is it that in many fantasy stories, humans are the focus?
You make these relatable for people, still different, without lampshading it.
Creyeditor
"Thoughts are free."
Produce, Analyze, Manipulate
1 2 3 4 4
Ook & Omlűt & Nautli languages & Sperenjas
Papuan languages, Morphophonology, Lexical Semantics
"Thoughts are free."
Produce, Analyze, Manipulate
1 2 3 4 4
Ook & Omlűt & Nautli languages & Sperenjas
Papuan languages, Morphophonology, Lexical Semantics
-
- sinic
- Posts: 221
- Joined: 01 Sep 2010 15:31
- Location: UK
- Contact:
Re: why is it that in many fantasy stories, humans are the focus?
Tolkien is an interesting one here - in spite of their quirks, the "relatable" characters in The Lord of the Rings are the hobbits, whereas the actual human cultures seen are somewhat more alien to our own.
The Man in the Blackened House, a conworld-based serialised web-novel
- k1234567890y
- mayan
- Posts: 2400
- Joined: 04 Jan 2014 04:47
- Contact:
Re: why is it that in many fantasy stories, humans are the focus?
We are all humans. Period.
Also I kinda wanna make a novel completely written in conlangs with no human characters...and the beings of the world don't have gender or sex-changers without sexual dimorphism(which would reduce their human-ness, romance is a major part of humanity)...e.g. a story of hermaphroditic aliens written in the language of the alien.
Also I kinda wanna make a novel completely written in conlangs with no human characters...and the beings of the world don't have gender or sex-changers without sexual dimorphism(which would reduce their human-ness, romance is a major part of humanity)...e.g. a story of hermaphroditic aliens written in the language of the alien.
I prefer to not be referred to with masculine pronouns and nouns such as “he/him/his”.
Re: why is it that in many fantasy stories, humans are the focus?
Well, get started!k1234567890y wrote: ↑10 Apr 2018 21:47Also I kinda wanna make a novel completely written in conlangs with no human characters.
I would suggest an English translation so other people can read and appreciate.
- k1234567890y
- mayan
- Posts: 2400
- Joined: 04 Jan 2014 04:47
- Contact:
Re: why is it that in many fantasy stories, humans are the focus?
although I intend not to have English translation at first lol making a totally alien-oriented novel XDelemtilas wrote: ↑13 Apr 2018 01:46Well, get started!k1234567890y wrote: ↑10 Apr 2018 21:47Also I kinda wanna make a novel completely written in conlangs with no human characters.
I would suggest an English translation so other people can read and appreciate.
I prefer to not be referred to with masculine pronouns and nouns such as “he/him/his”.
- eldin raigmore
- korean
- Posts: 6353
- Joined: 14 Aug 2010 19:38
- Location: SouthEast Michigan
Re: why is it that in many fantasy stories, humans are the focus?
E.R. Eddington’s “The Worm Ouroboros” is set on the planet Mercury. All the action happens between members of various Mercurian races/nations/species. Only the narrator is human (and indeed English). He can’t interact with the main characters; it is somewhat (but not entirely) as if they are a dream to him and he is a dream to them.k1234567890y wrote: ↑13 Apr 2018 01:58 although I intend not to have English translation at first lol making a totally alien-oriented novel XD
There have been many other successful aliens-only stories of all lengths.
IIANM Tolkien wrote LotR at first in his conlangs, and translated to English in order to publish. I could be wrong.
Anyway if you want anyone else to read your story you’ll need to write or translate it in or into some natlang or some highly successful auxlang.
My minicity is http://gonabebig1day.myminicity.com/xml
- alynnidalar
- greek
- Posts: 700
- Joined: 17 Aug 2014 03:22
- Location: Michigan, USA
Re: why is it that in many fantasy stories, humans are the focus?
With regards to Tolkien--not that I've ever heard. The History of Middle-Earth books go into extensive detail about his drafts, and although I've only read The Return of Shadow and that several years ago, I don't recall a mention of him writing LotR in anything other than English.
Re: why is it that in many fantasy stories, humans are the focus?
Familiar is the default. Anything new needs to be specifically imagined, and explained.
That can be done well to create wonderful stories, but if it is not the goal of the story, it can be a huge amount of effort that might be just as easily focused on other things that the author feels is more important to that specific story.
Just my view on it.
That can be done well to create wonderful stories, but if it is not the goal of the story, it can be a huge amount of effort that might be just as easily focused on other things that the author feels is more important to that specific story.
Just my view on it.
Re: why is it that in many fantasy stories, humans are the focus?
IIRC, that's an in-universe explanation, i.e. "the Red Book of Westmarch" was, in-universe, originally written in Westron by Frodo and Bilbo, and then translated into English by Tolkien. In our world, "the Hobbit" and "the Lord of the Rings" were just written in English.eldin raigmore wrote: ↑16 Apr 2018 01:58E.R. Eddington’s “The Worm Ouroboros” is set on the planet Mercury. All the action happens between members of various Mercurian races/nations/species. Only the narrator is human (and indeed English). He can’t interact with the main characters; it is somewhat (but not entirely) as if they are a dream to him and he is a dream to them.k1234567890y wrote: ↑13 Apr 2018 01:58 although I intend not to have English translation at first lol making a totally alien-oriented novel XD
There have been many other successful aliens-only stories of all lengths.
IIANM Tolkien wrote LotR at first in his conlangs, and translated to English in order to publish. I could be wrong.
Anyway if you want anyone else to read your story you’ll need to write or translate it in or into some natlang or some highly successful auxlang.
You can tell the same lie a thousand times,
But it never gets any more true,
So close your eyes once more and once more believe
That they all still believe in you.
Just one time.
But it never gets any more true,
So close your eyes once more and once more believe
That they all still believe in you.
Just one time.
- alynnidalar
- greek
- Posts: 700
- Joined: 17 Aug 2014 03:22
- Location: Michigan, USA
Re: why is it that in many fantasy stories, humans are the focus?
The Hobbit was definitely written in English first--the famous story about its origin was that Tolkien was stupendously bored reading student papers one day, and on a blank sheet happened to write down "In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit", without having any idea what a hobbit was or why it lived in a hole.
- fruityloops
- cuneiform
- Posts: 98
- Joined: 04 Oct 2017 04:09
Re: why is it that in many fantasy stories, humans are the focus?
really late reply, but i kinda understand what you people are coming from. maybe the solution is a nice balance between alien and familiarity that people would actually like it without putting humans in the forefront.
- k1234567890y
- mayan
- Posts: 2400
- Joined: 04 Jan 2014 04:47
- Contact:
Re: why is it that in many fantasy stories, humans are the focus?
another idea: write a human anthropologist entering an alien world, making records about the alien culture and history.
but just like quantums...when it comes to a culture, what we observe is not the culture itself, but the culture exposed to our method of questioning.
but just like quantums...when it comes to a culture, what we observe is not the culture itself, but the culture exposed to our method of questioning.
I prefer to not be referred to with masculine pronouns and nouns such as “he/him/his”.
Re: why is it that in many fantasy stories, humans are the focus?
Not even Tolkien got far enough with his conlangs to write a novel. As far as I know, his most developed language is Quenya, with about 2500 words.
Edit: 25000.... big difference, but still, I know that fans of Tolkien have run into gaps when trying to translate various things.
Edit: 25000.... big difference, but still, I know that fans of Tolkien have run into gaps when trying to translate various things.
Kavunupupis, šiŋuputata.
When I see you pointing at me, I know I'm in trouble. (Play)
When I see you pointing at me, I know I'm in trouble. (Play)