So, you’ve got an idea for your character and plot for HSC creative writing, but in what setting and context should this take place?
Your character should be a product of your story’s context as it ensures believability.
What do I mean by this?
Let’s jump into how to develop a setting for your HSC English creative writing piece!
Consistency is Key
How to Develop Your Setting for Your HSC Creative Writing Piece
Consistency is Key
Your character needs to be consistent with the context and setting!
For example, the British television show, ‘The Hour’, was based in London, 1956.
When dialogue between two characters contained the phrase, ’I’m your biggest fan!’, language historians rioted (Yes, there are such things as language historians!).
Why?
The phrase ‘I’m your biggest fan!’ was not used back in 1950s England by upper-classed British men, and consequently disrupts the flow of the historical story as it is historically incorrect.
It makes the characters and story less believable.
Your setting and your characters should work alongside one another.
They still may be different in the values they hold, but that is usually a product of their environment.
In Testament of Youth, Vera Brittain becomes a feminist in the early 1910s not because she has been raised to be one, but because she has observed the privilege of education given to her younger brother, Edward.
In the previous article, we explored develop your character and used a couple of examples.
Let’s have a look at two characters again for this article to demonstrate the importance of setting.
1. Steve Rogers/Captain America from Captain America: The First Avenger (2011 film)
Living in the 1930s and 1940s, Steve was very familiar with the whole idea of the ‘Nazi threat’. As a product from his time, he was imbued with a sense of duty and service, both which motivated him to join up to the Army.
In the Avengers timeline, Steve’s preservation in the ice for 70 years makes him dated; he still is ‘very 1940s’ in the way he approaches conversation and how he does not understand contemporary pop-culture references, (“I understood that reference!”) to the point of carrying around a notebook of things he needs to ‘catch up on’ (it includes Thai food, the Moon Landing and the band Nirvana).
2. Jason Brody from Far Cry 3 (2013 video game)
Far Cry 3 takes place is set in 2012 on a fictional tropical island called Rook Island, located somewhere in the Indian and Pacific Ocean. The island has native inhabitants with a distinct culture, but also violent and ruthless pirates.
Jason Brody is your typical slacker who went to college in Los Angeles and ended up doing a series of odd jobs here and there afterwards. As a bloke who likes to make the most of life and is a bit of a daredevil, it makes sense that he would go parachuting to a ‘deserted island’ for fun. His older brother, whom was in the military, was prepared to kill for survival and holds a ‘do or die’ attitude from the beginning. Jason, whom was not trained to do so, understandably freaks out.
How to Develop Your Setting for Your HSC Creative Writing Piece
As we explored in the last article, the best way to think about your character’s setting is to interview them.
Grab a pen and paper or laptop and answer these questions to help you develop your setting for your HSC creative writing story:
- Who are your character’s friends and family? Who do they surround themselves with?
- Who are the people your character is closest to? Who do they wish they were closest to?
- Where was your character born?
- Where have they lived since they were born?
- Where do they call home?
- Where does your character go when they’re angry?
- What time period is your character living in?
- What type of clothes do they wear?
- What does your character do for work?
- What is the weather like where your character lives?
From here, you can start to have a good think about your character and what they’d be like if you met them in real life. Getting into their frame of mind is the best way to curate their point of view.