Romance/Love: July 27, 2011 Issue [#4518] |
Romance/Love
This week: History of Romance Edited by: StephBee More Newsletters By This Editor
1. About this Newsletter 2. A Word from our Sponsor 3. Letter from the Editor 4. Editor's Picks 5. A Word from Writing.Com 6. Ask & Answer 7. Removal instructions
I thought I'd take a look at how romance has developed through the years and how it's changed to appeal to readers. |
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If you look to the oral tradition about the power of love and it's ability to conquer all, then romance has been around for a long time.
What do classic fairytales like Cinderella, Beauty and the Beast, and Snow White and the 7 Dwarfs have in common? HEA. Happily Ever After - a must in any romance novel.
The romance novel, as we know it, however, didn't appear until the 19th century. Jane Austen and the Brontë sisters wrote a class of novels known as "domestic fiction," which typically featured an impoverished, yet gutsy heroine. On the gothic side of the house, Ann Radcliffe was writing romance with castles, mad relatives locked in the attic, and ghosts. This came to be known as "gothic romance."
Jane Austen's novel, "Pride and Prejudice" has had several adaptations created for the movie and the TV screen, which speaks to her ability to create compelling romantic characters that have resonated throughout time.
In the 1950's, Mary Bonnycastle and her husband, Richard, started a fledging publishing company - Harlequin. What made Harlequin a ground breaker in romantic fiction was their distribution. They made their books available where women shopped - including supermarkets and the drug store.
However, romance wouldn't be where it is without Barbara Cartland. She had a larger than life personality with her pink clothes, large hats, and her treasured Pekingese. Her stories tended to be short and also non-sexually explicit. A titled nobleman meets a young, inexperienced woman and they fall in love surrounded by historical intrigue. In 1991, she was named a Dame of the British Empire for her body of work. She died in 2000 at the age of 98.
In the late 1970's romance up'd it a notch with more sexually explicit scenes. Many writers soon discovered "sex sells." Kathleen Woodiwiss' "The Flame and The Flower" comes to mind.
Covers evolved, too. Handsome men and beautiful ladies found themselves replaced by Fabio in the mid-80's. Currently, the pendulum has swung back in favor of covers that are now focused on the story inside.
Today's romances cover a variety of topics speaking to the sophistication that modern readers now possess. Today you have "beta" males and "alpha" females tackling modern problems, yet the emotions are the same now as they were in Jane Austen's time. You can still find greed, betrayal, happiness love, and loss - just in a different setting which is reflective of the time period and values the romance was written in.
So fess up - who is your favorite romance writer and why?
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Love letters have been written throughout the ages. I thought I'd share some with you today:
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Have an opinion on what you've read here today? Then send the Editor feedback! Find an item that you think would be perfect for showcasing here? Submit it for consideration in the newsletter! https://www.Writing.Com/go/nl_form
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Here's some feedback from my NL dtd: 29 JUN 2011
LinnAnn -Book writer
My favorite romantic comedy is a movie, lol, American Dreamer. A lady writes a winning entry to a contest, goes to Paris, jerky husbnd left home, she gets injured and wakes up the heroine in the mystery novels. Her fantasy gets mixed in other peoples realities. There was an ending that wasn't and half the theater got up to leave and there was .. 'surprise' more of the movie .
Thanks for the effort to put this out.
love,
LinnAnn
Sarder
Thank you so much to have a nice opportunity to read and learn many writing resources and special thanks for your guidline to write a good romantic comedy poetry. In a nutshell, I learnt a lot from this weekly newsletter, but still I am going through this newsletter to finds more things.
Ellie Mack
Great advice! The characters definately need a goal even if their goal happens to be totally derailed by the hero or heroine showing up in their lives. The dialog is imperative to moving the story forward.
On a side note, I have to agree with Hypermommy; a guy speaking perfect grammatical english in a small hick town outside Lubbock is more jarring to me than the Alpha male Highland warrior that speaks with a sexy burr. It takes skill, as some have pulled it off and others not so much.
Helen McNicol
My favourite Romantic Comedy writer is Marian Keyes. She has a wonderful knack for making you laugh out loud. Her characters are always wonderfully colourful. She can be forgiven her often cliche endings because of the journey she takes you on beforehand. Thoroughly recommended as research material for anyone considering writing humourous chicklit!
StephBee is a 911 Dispatcher for LAPD. Her latest release is a steampunk romance entitled, "Victorian Scoundrel" with Desert Breeze Publishing.
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