Saturday, June 15, 2019
Words With Impact: Design Symbols as Images Goals
Workshop: Discover
Words That Sing
“Celebrate what you want to see more
of.” Thomas
J. Peters
Last week we looked at how one word in a title, or as a
character summary, can be strengthened into a metaphor for a broader
understanding. But before you can even do that it’s important to know what are
your themes and your goals for your story. For example, one of Osamu’s goals
for his work was to include a touch of humor or irony, especially when dealing
with difficult topics. He felt that especially when he tried to show culture
out of control or present the idea that technology had the potential to become
unstoppable he would lean into irony.
In the Tales of a
Street Corner all the characters were developed with humor and pathos as war
came to their corner crashing into their lives. And showed those who remained
self-centered and those who grew into selfless actions, like the naughty little
mouse who tried to save the bear.
Another key word image for Osamu in creativity was joy and fun.
“The fun of experimental animation is the
different perspectives people saw.” He appreciated the unique insights his
audience had and in turn their comments often sparked new ideas for him to
pursue. He worked diligently to create quality work, but did not expect
everyone to see only his vision. Once his work released it went free. That is
the gift of metaphor in any work.
In his short
film Mermaid he explored potentially
closed thinking through “the story of a
boy from faraway lands that likes fantasies.” The boy saw a mermaid.
Everyone else only saw a fish and went to great lengths to blast his idea of
out him. He too eventually saw the fish, but with Osamu’s tilt of angle the
last line went, “But the boy did not
forget the mermaid.”
Like a firecracker a familiar image might start off in plain
wrapping paper and then explode into showers of light.
Action Steps:
1. Read through a picture book the
next time you’re at the library or a bookstore but don’t read the words. Look
only at the visual background first. Then go back and read the story. How do
they complement each other? Does each page have a one-word tag? Funny, scary,
curious?
2. Now do a reverse action. Take
one of your chapter scenes and mark it off as if it were a picture book. Can
you identify a main image on each “page”?
Share: Did you find an image that surprised you? Can you
develop it further as a thread without it being forced?
Read deep, marcy
Labels:
Creative Writing Prompt,
Design Symbols as Images,
Discover Words That Sing,
Eight Communication Basics,
Free blog workshop,
Goals,
Words with Impact
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