Friday, May 04, 2007
Write no lies
A journalism teacher recently raised a question on a listserv. He said he had some colleagues who thought it was acceptable to use composite characters and dress up the setting in a story.
How depressing.
After all the scandals in recent years involving reporters, memoirists and historians who have been caught lying, it is disheartening to hear that some teachers think it is all right to deceive readers. Take note, please. These rules will save your honor, your self-respect and maybe your career:
The minute you make anything up or embellish setting or anything else, you’re writing fiction.
The rules hold in all forms of nonfiction, including narrative. Some writers think that narrative gives them license to play loose with the facts. It doesn’t. Narrative requires reporting that is every bit as rigorous as straight news writing and requires the same unyielding standards of accuracy.
Labels: composite characters, nonfiction ethics, plagiarism
It's Gwen Patton, from the Pink Pistols. If this reaches you, please contact me at firstspeaker@pinkpistols.org
It's been a long time, old friend. I'd like to renew our contact.
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