bartholen said:
Let's make the reverse and drop Gandalf in New York City. Depending on where he'd be in the plot of LOTR, first he'd likely try to communicate with anyone he knows. He'd try to figure out where he is and how to return to Middle-Earth. But he probably wouldn't be too much in a hurry to turn down an evening at a jazz bar, or seeing the sights.
How does that even work? Surely that's the sign of a shallow character. People may like to assume that they could legitimately survive in, say, 2nd Century Rome. But you know, we wouldn't. We'd die. And that's Earth, our own history. Beyond maybe the most hardcore of historical re-enactment types, no ... we'd be utterly lost, we would barely be able to communicate, we'd insult the wrong people, and we'd probably starve pr get the shit kicked out of us by approaching a reasonably dressed person and their bodyguards smacking you in the face with their torch... and
then starve.
So unless you want to write a story about Gandalf getting hit by a bus and ending up in the morgue instead of going te to toe with a balrog (there were multiples, not 'the',
a) ... I literally can't imagine Gandalf in NYC.
To make that even more plain to see ... how many homeless schizophrenia sufferers do you end up seeing on the street? And they at least have the benefit of experiencing our world in full. Gandalf is that
and with no other contextual knowledge.
He's a roadside pancake waiting to happen. Either that or he'll end up with 5 holes in him as soon as he unsheathes his blade after the police accost him. You get people being shot in the U.S. because they won't cross their legs, while lying on their belly, while being ordered to crawl 20 feet across the ground (seriously, how does anybody expect to be able to do that if you're even partly disabled?), all while some fucking arsehole with a rifle is threatening to gun them down... and getting off
without any charge.
They'll fucking shoot a crazy man flashing a sword at them.
Because that's our world. That's what happens in it.
I give Gandalf about
20 minutes... precisely because we know for a fact
none ofthat happens in his world.
Environment is everything ... if a character is so shallow you can see them just doing stuff outside everything that has instructed them to be as they are, then they're not a very well thought out character.
The fact that applies to us
in this world should inform that. People with traumatic childhoods carry that for the rest of their lives even when their socioeconomic situations change. I could grow up in the same suburb as another persn living in today's world, and not
truly be able to put myself in their shoes.
This is why writers have to research people before writing characters that might reflect them. The whole basis of 'positive representation' is when someone goes out of their way to perhaps channel the living experiences of minority groups that have
very specific, and alien events that happen to them due to that social perception of being a said minority.
I cannot just transport those characters elsewhere, or imagine them, outside the context of their environment ... because their environment
is everything to shaping their experiences. That is the definition of
deep characters. That you literally cannot imagine them being and feeling as they do in any other environment than the one they experience.