Jul
13
2011

Reblogged from therotund :

"Saying you’re “a writer” because you 1- enjoy writing and 2- think you’re pretty neat makes you no more a writer than going to a clurb and gyrating to Usher makes you a dancer or that having a small herb garden makes you a farmer.
A writer is someone is someone who gets paid or has gotten paid to write. Otherwise it’s a hobby."

these go to 11.: ugh thought catalog

Really though? I don’t think it’s that simple.

Voices that are marginalized and dismissed in other areas of public discourse are also often marginalized and dismissed by the publishing/media industry. “Writer” is not a professional designation wherein everyone who does the work has the opportunity to receive a paycheck for their skill, talent and professionalism.

Writers who get paid are writers who get paid. Writers who don’t get paid are writers who don’t get paid. The former doesn’t negate the existence of the latter.

(via federov)

I’m going to have to co-sign on this response.

(via meowsense)

Not to mention that, given exploitations in the industry, many excellent writers, including those published on international platforms, actually are not getting compensation for their work, so claiming that pay is the sole metric to use when determining whether someone is a writer has…problems. 

(via meloukhia)

Yeah - that’s why we have the designation “professional” writer. We need that modifier to distinguish writers who do writing on a professional level (and even that varies hugely) from writers who simply write.

You don’t need to be commodified to be a writer. Or any other kind of artist, no matter how much the consumer-based economy tries to tell you so. Writing is what makes you a writer.


There is, I admit, a certain irony to me saying this because even though I have published a book and gotten paid and write for media outlets and promote other writers’ works like I’m an authority, I have a hard time considering myself A Writer.

And, frankly, people chalk it up to Imposter Syndrome but I chalk it up to shit like this where there’s a false and arbitrary standard that is dependent upon whatever the particular exclusionary writer wants to make their standard. The more people don’t take themselves seriously as writers or artists, the more elitist we can be. The more we condition people to believe they cannot possible BE writers or artists, the fewer writers and artists we will have in our society. And that’s a goddamn tragedy.

(via therotund)

What’s funny is that I don’t see nearly as much of this shit among other people in the arts. I have a slew of musician friends that either don’t make money from their music or make a pittance from a few gigs a year. But they don’t hesitate to call themselves musicians, and no one else seems to mind them doing so. Same thing with friends of mine who are visual artists. What is it about writing that makes people feel obliged to demand an income statement before claiming or using the moniker “writer”?

(Source: thoughtcatalog.com)

  1. fresno-jobs reblogged this from therotund
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  15. choronda said: This loosely reminds me of the misuse of the title ‘architect’. Not someone who actually designs buildings, but someone who plans out some strategic idea or plan. For example, Karl Rove being the ‘architect’ for Bush’s campaign. Annoying.
  16. b3positiv3 reblogged this from leatherandmetal and added:
    Wow. This brought tears to my eyes. And I don’t think it’s just overwrought emotion. I think I’ve fallen into the trap...
  17. cupcakesnotbombs reblogged this from madamethursday
  18. ashleybethard reblogged this from egryan and added:
    Really? Because I can point to an entire list of really great writers I know who have been
  19. orobolicious reblogged this from therotund

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