Jul. 9th, 2007
I'm a couple of weeks behind on my f-list and so, today, I read an old interesting fandom debate about PWP/non-con/sexualizing all relationships in fandom/plot/and characterization debate(I think that covers some of the issues in the debate). Anyway, as I read the debate and some of the discussion about writing erotica simply for the sake of erotica, I remembered a "How to Write a Sex Scene" essay I had read a few years ago. I thought the essay was insightful when I first read it, and I still do. And I think that the essay probably expresses (better than I could) what I would have believed during in the aforementioned debate.
I'm a couple of weeks behind on my f-list and so, today, I read an old interesting fandom debate about PWP/non-con/sexualizing all relationships in fandom/plot/and characterization debate(I think that covers some of the issues in the debate). Anyway, as I read the debate and some of the discussion about writing erotica simply for the sake of erotica, I remembered a "How to Write a Sex Scene" essay I had read a few years ago. I thought the essay was insightful when I first read it, and I still do. And I think that the essay probably expresses (better than I could) what I would have believed during in the aforementioned debate.
I'm a couple of weeks behind on my f-list and so, today, I read an old interesting fandom debate about PWP/non-con/sexualizing all relationships in fandom/plot/and characterization debate(I think that covers some of the issues in the debate). Anyway, as I read the debate and some of the discussion about writing erotica simply for the sake of erotica, I remembered a "How to Write a Sex Scene" essay I had read a few years ago. I thought the essay was insightful when I first read it, and I still do. And I think that the essay probably expresses (better than I could) what I would have believed during in the aforementioned debate.