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Challenge Ended
Swear on Your Life
How do you feel about swearing in books? Do you swear in your writing?
Ended March 8, 2024 • 6 Entries • Created by AJAY9979
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Swear on Your Life
How do you feel about swearing in books? Do you swear in your writing?
Profile avatar image for rlove327
rlove327 in Philosophy

Character is Everything

"Do you swear in your writing?" is not really the apt question. It is more illuminating to ask, "Do my characters swear?"

Some do. Some don't.

My story "Rideshare" follows an angry, shallow, and lonely young corporate type . Here he is, drunkenly offering his Uber driver money to hang out with him:

“Look… Luis—glad your fucking nametag’s there—Luis, Bill Murray is the coolest guy in the world. Hands down. There’s this night out in LA, Bill Murray is going to a club or a movie or wherever the fuck a Bill Murray goes, and he takes this cab and the driver says he plays the saxophone, but Bill Murray talks to him and learns that he never gets the time to play. So Bill Murray says, drive to your apartment and get your fucking saxophone, and then they drove to a parking lot someplace and Bill Murray pays this guy for a whole night so he can just listen to him fucking play the saxophone on the hood of the cab. Now I’m not as cool as fucking Bill Murray, but I got some cash, man. How much you make in a night?”

He's glib. He's boastful. He makes a show of how impressive and manly he is because he tries, desperately, not to reveal what he really feels. (Full story here: https://www.sleetmagazine.com/selected/love_v13n2.html) He swears the way a child would, peppering his speech with an excess of profanity that does not make him as tough as he thinks. The Uber driver never swears once. He is a family man, empathetic and grounded. They are different people; if they are to be real, they need to talk differently.

By way of contrast, here's William Mumler in my yet-unpublished novel, justifying his practice of photographing people with deceased spirits:

Mumler watched the flame, coming forth steadily from the brass.

“Jonah told as destined. He gave the people the message they needed from the Lord,” Mumler said. “The Almighty knows all: my sins, your sins, what will become of us, what would become of Jonah and the Ninevites. Though He knew He would spare the city, He suffered Jonah to spread the message of its destruction. A small untruth in service of a greater truth.”

He appealed to Guay’s unmoving face. “Prophets must serve the truth. That is what I have learned. One cannot choose to be a prophet, Mr. Guay. One cannot choose even the details of the message. The truth chooses the prophet. There are spirits, manifesting in this new age. We must serve that truth, or we will be swallowed.”

If a profane syllable left that man's tongue, his entire character would crumble like a clay-footed statue. In a moment of crisis that could destroy everything he holds dear, my Mumler might use the word "damn," though if anyone heard, he would feel shame.

The character, the narrative, the style determine the language I use in my writing. I am perfectly content to write an academic analysis, or to drop an f-bomb if it makes a joke funnier. I'll write that businessman out on a bender or that photographer who reads his Bible nightly. My task is to write them true.

Challenge
Swear on Your Life
How do you feel about swearing in books? Do you swear in your writing?
Profile avatar image for flashgordon
flashgordon in Philosophy

you smash your thumb with a hammer

and words spew

what words

come from those you've heard

surrounded by raised up with

ones your pa said when his thumb was smashed

like Ralphie when hubcap nuts fly

there are times situations moments

when self-censoring isn't possible

sure there are better ways to express anything

synonyms poecilonyms adequations comparables

acceptable even in synagogues mosques temples

more eloquent descriptive accurate precise fitting

but sometimes fuck

just says it all

most succinctly

Challenge
Swear on Your Life
How do you feel about swearing in books? Do you swear in your writing?
Profile avatar image for jems
jems in Philosophy

A life determined

We swear when we plan a life for a particular cause ahead. We swear, We pledge, We take oaths, all for some reason. It maybe duty, it maybe love or it even maybe slavery. We accept it as a part of our life. We swear when we need, want or wish something. We swear to make us realize the importance. We swear, We swear, We swear for our lives to take a path, a way, a mode, etc.,

Challenge
Swear on Your Life
How do you feel about swearing in books? Do you swear in your writing?
Profile avatar image for MamasDarkSide
MamasDarkSide in Philosophy

Maybe.

From all the words,

Within our language,

Cursing is all you can manage?

Paint that piece,

With what it truly deserves,

It’s your expression,

Now muster up the nerve,

Resilient, detailed and bright,

Tell the naysayers,

“Go To Hell” tonight!

Challenge
Swear on Your Life
How do you feel about swearing in books? Do you swear in your writing?
Profile avatar image for Sylas13
Sylas13 in Philosophy

Swearing Is An Expression of Emotion and Should Be Used Sparingly

Swearing is an expression of great emotion and should be used sparingly, with the notable exception of some works of screenplay such as television shows or animated works.

In my eyes, swearing is an expression of a fair deal of emotion as swear words are often cast as taboo and unacceptable in common discussion. Proper utilization of swear words calls for intriguing analysis of characters who are expressing their feelings, whether angry or sorrowful. If used as but another figure of speech, as littered as metaphors or idioms, swear words lose any impact they could have had; if a character who never swears lets a word slip in a time of weakness, you will think "Oh, this is a real time of weakness."

Because of my own personal beliefs and views, I tend to hold back on swearing in my writing, but if appropriate, a word can slip. Additionally, if a character's arc is to be redeemed from a lower portion of life, transitioning from sailorhood swearing to awesome abstinence would be a commendable metaphor for their transformation. Nonetheless, I hold back on swear words in my own writing.