So an anon over on CuriousCat a little while ago (come visit me, ask me questions!) asked about any headcanons I wanted to share and any tips I had about characterization. So I wrote a short essay, mostly about Optimus Prime and the different ways I like to write him. Thought I'd put it up here as well!
I feel a bit...weird about giving advice? or talking about my process? Because I still don't feel very experienced as a writer. But it's under the cut if you're interested!
Do I have any headcanons... I was trying to find one in particular to talk about, and what I realized is many of mine contradict each other. (Or they're going into fics that I don't want to spoil.)
And the reason for that is I think of characterization as something malleable. When writing fic, usually you're trying to keep things 'in character,' so that what you're writing matches up with the character archetypes of the source material. To do that you have to figure out which elements of that character are essential or recognizable. But there's always wiggle room to work with.
For example, you might say a key character trait of G1 Optimus Prime is that he's calm and collected. But is he calm and collected because he's a little repressed? Because he knows his troops need calm from him, so he relies on sheer will power? Because he has a deep well of self-confidence and wisdom? Because the power of the Matrix is helping him keep a clear head? Is it a combination of those things? Writing a faultlessly self-confident Optimus Prime is very different from writing an Optimus Prime who is hiding his doubts behind a facade of calm. I generally lean on the 'hiding his doubts' side, but I like a combination.
Once you pick even just one key trait and decide why it's there, a lot of other things fall out from that. If Optimus is holding himself together with will power, superglue, and the Matrix, then he's also a bit lonely, he isn't very open with others, he's reserved. In a story, breaking that facade is a whole character arc. If he's calm because he's faultlessly self-confident, maybe he's also a little arrogant, and breaking that open is a character arc (cough Last Mech Standing cough). And once you add other key traits in, you get a fuller perspective.
And those traits can contradict each other a bit. Like, Optimus is honorable. Optimus cares about others. Optimus loves playing basketball (that's canon!). And all of those are malleable too: what kind of morality/honor does he subscribe to? He's playful, well, why? When? How much? And what might push him to act 'out of character?' Which is so, so much fun to play with. For Optimus, Megatron is a great way to push him to act out of character. And that's canon! Is Optimus Prime the type to resort to low personal insults? No! Unless it's Megatron.
Which is one of my favorite tips—characterization is affected by context. What is your character like talking to their best friend versus talking to their worst enemy? Or their crush? Optimus talking to Ratchet is wildly different from Optimus talking to Megatron, for example.
I feel a bit...weird about giving advice? or talking about my process? Because I still don't feel very experienced as a writer. But it's under the cut if you're interested!
Do I have any headcanons... I was trying to find one in particular to talk about, and what I realized is many of mine contradict each other. (Or they're going into fics that I don't want to spoil.)
And the reason for that is I think of characterization as something malleable. When writing fic, usually you're trying to keep things 'in character,' so that what you're writing matches up with the character archetypes of the source material. To do that you have to figure out which elements of that character are essential or recognizable. But there's always wiggle room to work with.
For example, you might say a key character trait of G1 Optimus Prime is that he's calm and collected. But is he calm and collected because he's a little repressed? Because he knows his troops need calm from him, so he relies on sheer will power? Because he has a deep well of self-confidence and wisdom? Because the power of the Matrix is helping him keep a clear head? Is it a combination of those things? Writing a faultlessly self-confident Optimus Prime is very different from writing an Optimus Prime who is hiding his doubts behind a facade of calm. I generally lean on the 'hiding his doubts' side, but I like a combination.
Once you pick even just one key trait and decide why it's there, a lot of other things fall out from that. If Optimus is holding himself together with will power, superglue, and the Matrix, then he's also a bit lonely, he isn't very open with others, he's reserved. In a story, breaking that facade is a whole character arc. If he's calm because he's faultlessly self-confident, maybe he's also a little arrogant, and breaking that open is a character arc (cough Last Mech Standing cough). And once you add other key traits in, you get a fuller perspective.
And those traits can contradict each other a bit. Like, Optimus is honorable. Optimus cares about others. Optimus loves playing basketball (that's canon!). And all of those are malleable too: what kind of morality/honor does he subscribe to? He's playful, well, why? When? How much? And what might push him to act 'out of character?' Which is so, so much fun to play with. For Optimus, Megatron is a great way to push him to act out of character. And that's canon! Is Optimus Prime the type to resort to low personal insults? No! Unless it's Megatron.
Which is one of my favorite tips—characterization is affected by context. What is your character like talking to their best friend versus talking to their worst enemy? Or their crush? Optimus talking to Ratchet is wildly different from Optimus talking to Megatron, for example.
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Date: 2019-03-16 10:58 pm (UTC)I like your idea of a "Continuous Mess of Nonsense" lol. Optimus Prime contains multitudes, in a manner of speaking. But re: different 'versions' of the same character, a lot of what I find myself doing when writing fic is bridging the gap of the lack of information we have from the source material? For most non-book fandoms, you don't have any canon material told from the point-of-view of individual characters. In G1 we never get OP's inner thoughts. If I want to write a fic that's told from 3rd person limited, with internal monologue and thoughts and motivations, I'm pretty much making that up.
So I approach it as, the actions the character takes in canon are a fulcrum that their core personality revolves around. (Though, in fairness, there are a lot of things about G1 that I just wholesale ignore because...it's G1.) Like, you have a set of actions or statements, and you have to tie them together with a personality. The more detailed the set of canon actions etc, the less flexibility you have on defining the character's personality. So that's what I'm thinking about when I say 'wiggle room' about a character. (And I do still thinks that's true even in cases where you do get inner thoughts, to an extent.)
To go off for a bit about G1 OP—part of why I think his character is flexible is because we don't get nearly as much information about his motivations for *being where he is* in canon present day, than we do for most characters in leadership positions. Because he's the dockworker who wakes up in a new body and then, uh, surprise becomes the leader of their entire race? But none of that was *on purpose*—so how he feels about it is an open question.
And he could have any number of different feelings about that without contradicting canon necessarily: from 'this is a horrible burden and I wish anyone else were in charge' to him enjoying power and buying into his own myth—with lots of different possibilities in between.
(hehe @ 'Red-White-And-Blue Boyscout Values club' so true. I really want to write a fic that's focused on his humor but I haven't figured out the shape of it yet.)