How’d you feel about stereotypes
in fiction? Do they annoy you? Or do they make you smile?


But what are stereotypes?
It’s a generalization about a group of people
where we attribute a clear set of characteristics. These can be positive or
negative. But I’ve learned that this “positive” and “negative” is personal to
one’s own self.
Some blond haired women hate being labelled as
“dumb”, others aren’t so bothered.
So why can’t we stereotype in
writing?
It’s lazy - like clichés,
stereotyping is too easy. Your character is blonde so she must be as thick and enjoy
shopping?
It’s offensive – stereotyping
evolved to be cruel towards typical groups. He’s fat so he must be lazy and
love hamburgers?
In A Proper Charlie I
deliberately made my gay man “typically” gay until layers were peeled away and
he was revealed as being frightened of failure and very possessive. Charlie, my
main protagonist, was ditzy but I gave her red hair. No, she didn’t have a temper
either!
I enjoy watching reality shows and love being proved wrong about a
stereotype. On the surface they exist. But dig deep and you have an individual.
A character.
Make your character an individual and you’ll have
real, flesh and blood person to write about.