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Why should I think you're not writing it, but I am???Yes, this confirms to me that you seem to be writing stroke smut but just hate the stigma of stroke smut. Personally I wouldn't worry about it. The masses out there looking to read stroke smut do not give a shit that it is called stroke smut, so if I wrote it I wouldn't care neither. Your readers won't be looking down on you for it so why would you look down on your own genre yourself?
Did you "confirm" this by actually checking out AG31's portfolio here? If not, why make that assumption here? What you "confirm" isn't really supported in the cited quote.
It's not a new genre. It's just a new, not loaded name for an existing genre. Erotica that pays little attention (I'm working on refining that) to plot and character, but aspires to meritorious writing. If you call it "smut" you're pre-judging it as not artistically worthy.
Why should I think you're not writing it, but I am???
I don't think this is true. "Smut" may have that meaning in your head. But I do not think it has a negative connotation for many. Anecdotally, I see the Gen Z folks almost always call their stuff "smut" and not "erotica". And linguistic trends usually flow generationally "upwards".If you call it "smut" you're pre-judging it as not artistically worthy.
That's the thing, though - "smut" as a word contains cheap, pornographic, unartistic connotations with it. It contains connotations of teenagers writing shitty fanfics about their favourite TV characters.Yes, this confirms to me that you seem to be writing stroke smut but just hate the stigma of stroke smut. Personally I wouldn't worry about it. The masses out there looking to read stroke smut do not give a shit that it is called stroke smut, so if I wrote it I wouldn't care neither. Your readers won't be looking down on you for it so why would you look down on your own genre yourself?
It seems that there are as many types of fiction as there are people writing it. Thus I'm a little unsure of what we've been getting at in these two threads. I know I've apologized a couple of times because I haven't read anybody else's work here in months. Yet I will once it a while do some self-promotion by adding a link to my own. I can't really explain why that's happened. Only so many hours in a day, maybe?It's not a new genre. It's just a new, not loaded name for an existing genre. Erotica that pays little attention (I'm working on refining that) to plot and character, but aspires to meritorious writing. If you call it "smut" you're pre-judging it as not artistically worthy.
That's the thing, though - "smut" as a word contains cheap, pornographic, unartistic connotations with it. It contains connotations of teenagers writing shitty fanfics about their favourite TV characters.
I don't think it's a bad thing to classify your own work as something other than smut. It's not a matter of readers looking down on it, it's a matter of correctness. You can write what AG calls simple erotica while still maintaining a sense of literary quality and depth. I would argue this isn't the same as straight up smut.
It's not a matter of insensitive labelling; it's a difference in what people consider 'smut.' This is a spectrum, and a subjective one at that.Yea, I'm just not that pretentious. It's just a label.
Unless you omit any description of your characters' personalities, you have created characters with traits. Those traits will inevitably lead you to writing a plot even though you might not think that's what you're writing. That's because you'll have to write things like why your MC does what he or she does and how the other characters react. That's the very definition of a plot.This definitely has possibilities. Thanks!
Edit: Although, do intimacy (ElectricBlue) and self-acceptance/dignity (my MCs) qualify as sexual character traits? I feel like they do, but I'm not sure I can sell it.
Could be true. Heaven knows the world is a-changin'.I don't think this is true. "Smut" may have that meaning in your head. But I do not think it has a negative connotation for many. Anecdotally, I see the Gen Z folks almost always call their stuff "smut" and not "erotica". And linguistic trends usually flow generationally "upwards".
Head over to AO3, look at all the 100+ chapter labors of love the author has tagged "smut". I just don't think "smut" is a tainted word.
Launching a discussion of the need for a new term has uncovered a lot of opinions about stories without emphasis on plot or character. Some people think it can be artistically worthy. Others don't. So think of the term conversation as short hand for the style conversation.I think at some point the desire to create a precise taxonomy of erotic literature is just not worthwhile. The issues raised are interesting, but IMO the interesting way to discuss the issues is to ask other authors, "What kinds of elements do you like to include in your stories and why?" rather than to try (fruitlessly, IMO) to find just the right labels for different approaches. I don't bother dividing things into smut or art or erotica or porn. They're stories. There are good stories and bad stories of every type.
Would it be smut if they weren't sweaty? or lascivious? Just curious. Not that it speaks directly to the thread.but my sex scenes are still rutty sweaty lascivious glorious smut, even when they're sweet and emotional.
Could be. But tell that to the people that claim that plotless stories are just "strokers." They've got a diferent definition of "plot." You've introduced the subtlety quandary I'm facing with "character" into the world of "plot."Unless you omit any description of your characters' personalities, you have created characters with traits. Those traits will inevitably lead you to writing a plot even though you might not think that's what you're writing. That's because you'll have to write things like why your MC does what he or she does and how the other characters react. That's the very definition of a plot.
I think I can imagine what it might be like in prose, but for me it would be soulless, mechanistic. The worst kind of tab A into slot B porn, ultimately boring. Ikea assembly line sex. Anti-erotic, even. And if I attempted to write it, such a scene would inevitably grow a soul, become human.The first is easy to do - think of a three-second gif consisting of nothing but a closeup of a penis moving in and out of a vagina, repeat endlessly. That is one extreme - full-throttle sexuality with zero character or plot. I'm not sure what the prose version would be, but it will do.
I agree with you. The little 750 word vignettes demonstrate that all the time, those intimate moments that can burn you with heat, smouldering with lust, and all she's done is brush lint from your suit before an interview. But to describe that, you must have life in your characters, not cardboard.Going to the other extreme, can one write a story which is exceedingly erotic without explicit sex? I think so. It would be far more difficult to write, but could definitely leave readers red-faced and aroused. The thing is, I cannot conceive of it being done without plot and characterization both.
Not three seconds. But I've used that as a base a few times, relating the submissive's emotions in high heat while the penis was moving in and out in the background. You can even work some plot in there, I think.Having thought about it, my two cents.
Let's go to two extremes.
The first is easy to do - think of a three-second gif consisting of nothing but a closeup of a penis moving in and out of a vagina, repeat endlessly. That is one extreme - full-throttle sexuality with zero character or plot. I'm not sure what the prose version would be, but it will do.
I'm not trying to pigeonhole stories. I don't care if we never label a single erotica story. I'm just trying to substitute "simple erotica" for "stroker" as a knee jerk label when people do feel the need. This thread is asking for help in the expanded definition of "stroker/simple erotica."Bottom line is that it's all 'valid'. I fully agree (as usual) with Simon when he said we have better things to do than trying to pigeonhole stories. It's an interesting philosophical question, perhaps, one worth asking, but not one which should influence writing or reading.
Can you give us the link?The only story I've written where I said, "Let's see what happens when EB tries to write a stroker," gave me one of my most fabulous characters and a slice of her sexual life.
I think I'm going to declare this the winner.How about this:
"Erotica that doesn't pay significant attention to plot or non-sexual character traits."
This comment by Omenainen keeps coming back to me as an example of how much times have changed.and I surprised to find out that you are close to ten years older than I am. Does that make us of the same "generation?" I suppose that means that we remember certain things that the majority of people on here have no living memory of, or may not know about at all. It certainly varies a lot, and I'm not trying to knock anybody, but I've sometimes found that people I know have no idea of what I'm talking about.
As a disclaimer, neither of us have read Story of O, and based on the Wikipedia article we’re not inspired to. You refer to it as an “important classic of erotica”, but from the description that seems based more on “nothing better was available at the time” than “this is the pinnacle of all things sexy in a written word.” A lot of classics that were interesting or scandalous or ahead of their time, at their time, would not be considered very highly today. I can’t fathom what would be erotic in that, but then it’s not my kink.
I think you've read it, and the sequel:Can you give us the link?
Going to the other extreme, can one write a story which is exceedingly erotic without explicit sex? I think so.