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Apr 2020

What were some of the subjects you had to research for writing your comic/novel? Do you recommend any of your resources?

I spent some time with a stack of sociology books, one of which helped me out a lot with my comic Living with a Monster- titled "Why Good Kids Act Cruel" it was a fascinating deep-dive into middle school cruelty and the psychology of bullying in that age bracket. It was a really helpful read for the sake of writing my characters early in my story (as they start at 12 years old and age throughout the series) :sweat_02:

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    Apr '20
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    May '20
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coughs I uh...had to research psychological trauma, abuse and gaslighting. Also had to research depersonalization, hallucinations due to mental trauma and cultural abuse.

...My novel is gonna be a happy story eventually! ...Somewhere. XD

Strangest research hole me ever fell into was probably "homosexuality among medieval Scandinavians."

Self-harm obviously, a bit of internet harassment culture which I already read for "fun", but the biggest things are medieval (up to 1600s) inventions and how they came to be. I didn't want too much anachronism for Splitting Image, but I had to know where I should be turning comfortable concepts into magitek, such as water and waste distribution, types of furniture, materials, and some pieces of the culture.

For example, medieval-era furniture didn't have a whole lot of cushioning because of christian ideas of laziness at the time - comfort means you're moving away from spiritual connection. Aeolia is VERY removed from any christianity influence, so it was interesting to put supposedly anachronistic cushioned chairs and the like there, while still keeping things like no crazy designs and looking sturdy to believably be something humans, elves, orcs etc. could all use if needed. Another example is houses - you couldn't have huge buildings with many stories unless they were full of pillars or made of stone, so I can explain poor people having two or three story houses with earth magic, but not push the suspension of disbelief with more than that.

Weirdest search was probably the history of underwear and sleeping garments. As someone who's only heard about pajamas for all my life and was ready to put them in with some simpler designs, the concept of a unisex chemise was very strange to discover.

oh gosh I had to research a lot of this for personal reasons.. I have an autobio comic so if I share experiences with these types of subject matters, I always wanna make sure I'm depicting stuff tactfully/respectfully :zipper_mouth: :sweat_02:

For a lot of my cosmic horror/thriller stories, I do a lot of mythology research (mostly from Roman/Greek myths). As I've come to find out, loooot of mythology is cosmic horror in nature. Entities being born from the void, Gods trying to eat the sun and moon. It's pretty good stuff!

My dudes, I had a three hour discussion with a cheesemonger about cheese. There is so much chemistry and science that goes into cheese, I had no idea. Then I watched videos about cheese from around the world, then I talked to the same person again, this time about goat breeds for milk yield vs. milk taste, and what the goats should eat for best milk taste, and why it's better to buy registered goats. Then we talked even more about the cheesemaking process, including aging caves and different kids of vats/pressing??

I'm going to have the most well-researched short story about lesbians on a farm EVER.

So, no, I can't really recommend any resources that would be useful to anyone else. Unless you want your characters to run a creamery. Then I got you covered.

hahahaha! omg I wish.

I was drooling during the entire conversation, absolutely craving some cheese. And of course I had no cheese in the fridge. Oh, cruel fate...

I'm guilty of just using Wikipedia for all of my stuff. I don't do deep dives since I tend to bastardize whatever I'm researching into a Frankenstein's monster of barely recognizable semblances.

For example, a dig into Norse mythology (on Wikipedia) had me turning Ymir and the Frost Giants into a fuzzy lemur-bigfoot hybrid, with absolutely no magical property XD

Currently I'm diving into this list of Yokai for both an RP setting and a possible Dragon Sparking novel!

As well as a dig into...this period from Japan's history

Well Japan...I'm sorry...but what kind of story I'm gonna tell will barely resemble any of that lore and history. For starters, no humans. All of the mortals are gonna be Dino people, while the ruling class will all be Yokai with ambitions to become Kami on a floating island shaped like the Gifu Prefecture ᕙ(°▜°)ᕗ

I won't even pretend to say I do deep research. It's all surface and whatever metal song I'm listening to at the time, smashed together!

HAHAHAHAHA.

I appreciate this post.

The most relevant stuff I've researched I think have been:

  • Medical drugs (anxiolitics mainly. I went for lorazepam thanks to a medic friend's advice) and its consequences if they're overused

  • Long term, almost complete isolation's consequences (which I discussed with a psychologist friend. Cheers for my very smart friends who help me out a lot lmao) (I obviously did my own research on both of these topics)

I tend to focus way more in characters and story than in worldbuilding. Now I really need to do research about military training tho.

Generally I'll google stuff or use Wikipedia.
Like I've been doing a lot of research into mythologies and the like, so for most of that I google stuff till I find some decent websites or use the reputable links on Wikipedia.

My latest weird research was 'the most valuable rock music records'. Did you know that a vinyl of Prince's The Black Album from 1987 has been sold for $27,500?

Other searches I've recently done: 'how to make a hickey', 'how quickly hickeys fade', 'how to make hickey fade faster', 'what counts as slander' and 'sunday lunch recipes'

I ended up reading up a lot of Bigfoot hunting websites looking for stories.