Thursday, November 29, 2012
Author Tara Maya finds inspirations from multiple cultures in world history
Posted by
Tracy Falbe
at
8:18 AM
Three
Reasons I Chose Not To Set My Fantasy in a Euro-Medieval World
by Tara Maya
Here’s a shameful secret: Back when I started my Unfinished Song fantasy, I wasn’t trying to be fresh, original or
non-Western. In fact, I wanted to write a “classic” fantasy. I knew I wanted
actual pixies and faeries in it. I wanted it to be both epic and a fairytale—an
epic faerie tale. I knew I wanted the magic to be based on dancing and color,
and that the ability to dance the whole rainbow would be almost extinct in
their world. Other than that, I just planned to include all the tropes of the genre.
Young scion of farmers sets off on a quest, finds a magic doo-hickey, and turns
out to be the only one with the power to save the world. The setting was cliché
because I didn’t feel like investing the time in world-building for a mere “practice”
story. My original heroine, Dindi, was a peasant girl; my original hero, Kavio,
was a prince.
I wrote three chapters in this frame of mind, seat
of the pants, no plan, no world-building, not really taking the story
seriously. Surprise! I stalled.
It turns out I love world-building. It’s one of the
reasons I read and write fantasy. Without that investment in a unique and
gorgeous world, I just couldn’t find the enthusiasm I needed to write the story.
I set it aside for a while.
What knocked sense into me? I don’t know. A fairy
whispered in my ear that I needed to change the setting. It needed to be set in
a time I had never seen a fantasy set before: with Neolithic rather than medieval
technology. The Neolithic Era was a particular time period in human history,
but it also refers to a stage of civilization, and I use it in the later sense.
Neolithic, or “new stone age” technology means that the people primarily use
flint and obsidian tipped arrows and spears. They don’t have bronze or iron.
They don’t have swords. They don’t have castles. They don’t have scrolls or books
or libraries. They don’t have lamps or arches or sails. They aren’t cavemen,
however. They have sophisticated pottery, weaving, rugs, sewing and dyes. They
smelt gold. They don’t have kings or feudal lords or priests, but they do have
the beginnings of a more caste-divided society and hierarchy.
While I don’t know how this idea came to me, I do
remember how it energized me. The whole story excited me again. The early time
period worked for three reasons.
One, the main storyline was inspired by a Polynesian
myth, so this was a tip of the hat to that non-European setting. Two, it fit my
fancy that the events of The
Unfinished Song were the “original” and
“primordial” events which are the secret roots of all our fairy tales. We know
that the story of Cinderella as recorded by the Brother’s Grimm was not the
only or original story. What if it were a distorted version of something that
happened during the Dreamtime of the human race, when all myths and fairytales
were real? I don’t actually use the term Dreamtime in my story (which is from
Aboriginal legend), but I drew on that concept in how I thought about the
story.
Two, every culture around the world has gone through
a stage of Neolithic level technology. Some cultures, like Asia and Europe and
the Incas and Aztecs and great empires of West Africa, later moved on to more
sophisticated technologies, involving iron and feudalism, but everyone at one
timeused spears and swords. Every place on earth has immense, mysterious
monuments made from dragging big stones around. This meant that I could easily
mix and match my cultural inspiration. I could use Hopi agriculture, Celtic
pig-farming and musical traditions, Zulu warfare, West African Initiation
ceremonies, and so on. For the hero and heroine’s people, I drew strongly on
Hopi and Zuni cultures, which has led some readers and reviewers to think that
the entire culture is based on Native American history. One reviewer expressed
disappointment when horses turned up. That was actually a difficult choice for me,
and sometimes I do wish I had left them horse-less. However, I included it
because there are so many interesting horse-centered cultures in the world, and
I wanted to explore that with one of the tribes.
Three, the excuse to research obscure and exotic
Neolithic cultures ignited my enthusiasm for the story, and has kept me excited
about it ever since. The biggest problem with the standard fantasy pseudo-medieval-pseudo-European
setting is not that it is medieval or that it is European or even that it has
been done before. It is because the writer doesn’t take the time to study real
history (or “real” mythology) as a model, but simply bases their own world on
worlds in other fantasy books.
The result has much the same problem as cloning a
clone, or xeroxing a xerox. The quality fades the more derivative your product
is. The original research behind Kushiel’s Dart by Jacqueline Carey or The
Hallowed Hunt by Lois McMaster Bujold, shines through, and those stories don’t
come across as McClones of McFantasyLand at all.
I have a Master’s Degree in History, admittedly, so
that’s a clue about how deeply I adore history. I adore research in musty old
libraries and when I do internet research, it’s in JSTOR, not Wikipedia.
I’m a glutton for eight hundred page tomes on the
kinship systems of Melanesian islanders. I also love anthropology, archeology,
sociology, just about any –ology you can think of. I’m a nerd’s nerd, in the
liberal art’s spectrum of the Geek Rainbow.
This is not to say that there weren’t challenges in
leaving the beaten path. Do you know how many times I would have a character
about to open a door, or knock on a door, or slam a door before I remembered
that they don’t have doors! Oy. People! Invent hinges already! It’s also hard
to give my hero a truly Cool Weapon of Power when they don’t have swords. But
even challenges can create interesting opportunities. I gave a supporting
character a Singing Bow, which can also be made into a harp. This idea came
from a historian who speculated that the first stringed instruments were actually
bows that warriors plucked when they were sitting peacefully around the
campfire, bored and (almost certainly) drunk.
There’s so much human history and so many different
cultures to study for inspiration for fantasy which have yet to be mined. The
real is so much more fantastic and bizarre than most of what is portrayed in
fantasy and science fiction as exotic or alien. One of the reasons to read
these genres is to stretch our imagination and our empathy. We shouldn’t
shortchange ourselves by re-treading the same worn paths, but should be brave
enough to follow history back along rarely explored by-ways for inspiration.
Thank you for contributing to Her Ladyship's Quest.
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