
Writing Excuses Writing Excuses Season 3 Episode 1: World-Building History
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Jun 1, 2009 In this podcast, the hosts discuss the iceberg principle in writing history, where 90% is unseen by readers. They also talk about Worldbuilder's Disease and how to avoid it. The episode focuses on writing interesting history, finding conflict, and avoiding oversimplified causality. A writing prompt is given to write an encyclopedia article about a war with 5 distinct causes.
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Avoid Info-Dump in History
- Avoid info-dump by focusing only on the parts of history important to your story.
- Know which historical details matter to characters and plot before developing background extensively.
Iceberg Principle in History
- The 'iceberg principle' means most historical details remain unseen to support the story's visible tip.
- Not all writers need to create vast unseen histories like Tolkien; balance depends on your work's scope.
Use Small Details as Historical Weight
- Include minor, seemingly unimportant details to enrich your world and make it feel fuller.
- Showing historical weight through casual details convinces readers there's a richer world beneath the surface.
