Group
writing exercise:
Think
of a popular nursery rhyme of children’s story. Most stories will
have a couple of main characters and some secondary characters.
Humpty Dumpty had a king, a whole army of men AND their horses
involved in a failed attempt to rebuild him. Take one of these
secondary characters.
With
10 minutes on the clock, write out the story in first person from the
perspective of this secondary character, but don’t mention the
characters’ names. After the timer has sounded, read out your
stories one at a time. See how long it takes for the group to realise
what story each person has chosen. Here’s what I conjured:
So
he rolls in, me young lad, tears in his eyes and all. Once he’s
stopped all his blubbering, it turns out it’s all over some girl-
not the accident. He’s in a bad shape, mind. Summat wrong wi’ ‘is
‘ed. Can’t remember where his bucket is, so that’s us wi’ no
water for stew tonight. I tries to comfort ‘im, but he’s not
‘avin’ it. I do what I can wi’ him, well, he’s me son an’
all. So I starts rummaging through the cupboards for bandages an’
antiseptic.
We
ran out o’ all that ages ago, though, so I grabs what I can. Bit o’
vinegar should disinfect the wounds. Well, you’d think I were
murderin’ him, the way he were squealing.
His
cuts are ‘orrible deep, like, so I wrapped ‘em up tight around
his head. We ‘ad no bandages, like I said, so I pulled the brown
paper wrappin’ from the kitchen over the wounds, and said “keep
that pressed on, lad.”
Teach
him to go playin’ wit’ local harlots.
I take
it you figured it out pretty quick. The group told me I’d made my
vignette too easy. Interestingly, two other members of the group used
Jack and Jill for their story. They pointed out, though, that in the
original rhyme, Jack bandaged his own head. There’s no mother
figure in this rhyme.
The
purpose of this exercise was to think about stories from another
perspective than the norm. This technique could be applied equally to
popular nursery rhymes or historical occurrences.
James
Ellroy's American Tabloid, for instance, describes a group of FBI
agents whose dirty dealings result in the planning and executing of
JFK’s assassination.
Forrest
Gump weaves American history, pinning the events to the wanderings of
a learning-disabled bloke from the Deep South.
Hitch-hiker’s
Guide to the Galaxy revealed that Earth’s evolution was nothing
more than the development of a supercomputer intent on figuring out
the meaning of life.
With
that in mind, however, it’s clear that I completely messed up the
original story. The popular version has no mention of the mother.
Other versions do include her though- and she’s a big, mean woman.
Well, I guessed that about right!
Pic courtesy dacotahsgirl, Flickr
No comments:
Post a Comment